You’re Never Too Old to Be an Activist
And never too old to learn how
When I launched my website, “Could You Be a Kidney Donor?”, at the age of 70, I thought I wanted simply to encourage people to consider living donation. By sharing my story of donating a kidney to my son, plus information and resources, I was hoping to make a difference and maybe even save lives. Not being very tech savvy (I can hear my husband chuckling as he reads this), I had to learn to speak a new “language” in my 70s.
But I think now that subconsciously, I also had another goal: to inspire other people, particularly those of retirement age — and especially women — to get outside their comfort zones for what they believe in, whether it’s by dipping a toe into social media, phone banking, talking to community groups, meeting with members of Congress, or donating a kidney. (In my case, I did the last one first. The decision was easier.)
I made this discovery when I came across a New York Times article about a truly inspiring woman I interviewed for a magazine article when I was in my 20s. Maggie Kuhn, younger then than I am now, had been a social worker in Philadelphia. She had to take mandatory retirement (very common back then) at 65 when she still had so much more to offer. Maggie continued to be an activist, notably against injustices experienced by older people (she hated the term of the day: senior citizens), but also as a fighter for social justice in general. Even when I interviewed her, she was only 67 but she proudly embraced the…