News

# Opinion: What is the secret to aging well?

#
Opinion: What is the secret to aging well?

Intergenerational connection could be a defining feature of American resilience

Here’s the million, or let’s say, billion-dollar
question: What is aging well and how do you do it? What’s the secret elixir?

There are expert presentations on a Ted
Talk playlist: How to
Make You Feel Good About Getting Older
.
And there are droves of self-help books, exercise regimes, healthy diet gurus
and lines of cosmetics that this query has spawned.

That’s where Marc Freedman, founder and chief executive of Encore.org and the author of “How to Live Forever: The Enduring Power of Connecting the Generations,” comes in.

Freedman is one of those experts on the
longevity revolution who makes you stop and listen. Really listen. Trust me on
this. In his latest book, out in paperback this week, he explores longevity,
youth, purpose and happiness, and the role older people can play in giving back
to the next generation.

He’s not a disciple of retirement. As he told me in an interview: “All too often, individuals are left to their own devices when it comes to finding a new sense of purpose in a postretirement period that could be as long as the middle years in duration. Many feel like they are all alone in navigating the new terrain, practically and emotionally.”

Learning to age well requires an
emotional shift. More yesterdays than tomorrows has a way of adding an urgency
to this stage of life. “Time is more precious.” Freedman says. “Questions of
purpose and legacy are more prominent. That can sound depressing, but for many
people it is a powerful source of motivation for making the most of this
period.”

I spoke with Freedman about his
book, “How to Live Forever,” and his views of aging well. The highlights of our
conversation are below and have been edited and condensed.

We now have more people over 60 in this country than under
18. How can we make an aging society work?

America is becoming a much more multigenerational society,
with five generations alive at the same time. This is no temporary blip; it’s a
permanent shift. Some see this transformation producing a zero-sum battle
between old and young over scarce resources, but this dystopian scenario runs
counter to much of human history. 

Actually, there’s good reason for optimism. Anthropologists now believe it was the role of grandmothers caring for young children (and allowing mothers to gather more food) that served as the turning point in our becoming human beings in the first place. And developmental psychologists studying both ends of the age spectrum today are discovering that the needs and assets of younger and older people fit together like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Just ask any grandparent.

Now’s the time to build on these inherent and complementary
assets. Let’s find new ways to bring the generations together to forge bonds,
find joint purpose, and bridge divides. Intergenerational connection could be a
defining feature of American resilience in the 21st century.

How has the pandemic affected the generational divide? 

Let’s face it, a powerful message to our generation — I say
this as a 62-year-old — has been “stay home, stay safe — and stay out of the
way.” That message has reinforced ageism and the age segregation that has grown
so rampant in American society. It’s driven a wedge between generations, within
families and in communities.

At the same time, by separating us, the pandemic has
awakened a deeper appreciation for our essential interdependence across age and
led to calls for the creativity that will be needed to bring young and old
together again when it’s over.  

You call for dramatic innovation in the ways we bring
generations together. What are you seeing in the past few years that excites
you?

We’re going to need to be as creative in bringing people together across age as we’ve been in splitting them apart, an imperative all the more urgent in the context of COVID’s toll. The good news is that innovation is already under way.  

I recounted many examples of innovative practices in How
to Live Forever
, but I’m even more heartened by the wave of innovation I’ve
witnessed since the book was first published two years ago. One of my favorite
examples is Nuns and Nones,
originated by a group of young changemakers, spiritually-inclined but
religiously unaffiliated (the “nones”), who sought out older Women Religious
all over the country (the “nuns”) for guidance about living a good life and
leaving the world better than we found it.  

Nuns and Nones also underscores how much of the push toward
generational connection and collaboration is coming from young people. Young
social entrepreneurs are behind Nesterly, a homesharing
platform that brings homeowners with room to spare together with college
students who need affordable rents; Big & Mini, a
community that’s reducing isolation by helping to create intergenerational
friendships; and Mon Ami, an app that’s being
used by governments and nonprofits to mobilize large-scale volunteer efforts.

And there are so many more. I encourage folks to take a look
at our 15 new Gen2Gen Innovation Fellows.
The work they’re doing gives me confidence about our future.

How can individuals age-integrate their own lives, even in
the pandemic?

It all comes down to a pair of priorities: proximity and
purpose. How’s that for alliteration! 

By proximity, I mean finding ways to encounter individuals of different ages and generations, whether in the course of daily life or even via Zoom. To resist the scourge of age segregation. And by purpose, I’m talking about the need to make these intergenerational connections in ways that reinforce common, shared interests that animate our lives. 

We could go a long way to finding proximity and purpose in
this country, for example, by creating intergenerational service programs aimed
at connecting youngers and olders to use their complementary skills to solve
local problems — like contact tracing, feeding the hungry, educating children,
and rebuilding after disasters. 

But there’s one more way to age-integrate that anyone can do
right now, no infrastructure needed. In a word, listen. One of my mentors, in
his 80s at the time, once told me it’s a lot more important to be interested
than to be interesting. It’s certainly one of the keys to bridging
difference, across age as well as many other divides.  

Does it matter that we now have the oldest president in the
nation’s history?  

It’s a striking paradox: Just as we’re pushing more and more
older people to the sidelines during this time of pandemic — increasing not
only loneliness but its close cousin, purposelessness — we’ve also witnessed
the leadership of so many older men and women. 

The nearly 80-year-old Dr. Anthony Fauci has served as a voice of calm reason and deep knowledge throughout the battle with COVID. Elder icons like the late Congressman John Lewis and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg continued their life’s work to build an equitable society with deep passion to the very end. And now we have the oldest president-elect in American history.

Some express legitimate concerns about a gerontocracy holding on to power at the expense of younger people. All the more reason that our elder leaders, starting with the new president, should take this moment to call the generations to common purpose, to ask old and young alike to roll up their sleeves to create a stronger, more cohesive society together, and to make the most of the multigenerational moment already washing over us.

Thanks for your time, Marc. My personal favorite takeaway. “It’s a lot more important to be interested than to be interesting.”

Kerry Hannon is
a leading expert and strategist on work and jobs, entrepreneurship, personal
finance and retirement. Kerry is the author of more than a dozen books,
including 
Great Pajama Jobs: Your Complete Guide to Working From HomeNever Too Old To Get Rich: The Entrepreneurs Guide To Starting
a Business Mid-Life
Great Jobs for Everyone 50+,
and 
Money Confidence.
Her on Twitter 
@kerryhannon

If you liked the article, do not forget to share it with your friends. Follow us on Google News too, click on the star and choose us from your favorites.

For forums sites go to Forum.BuradaBiliyorum.Com

If you want to read more News articles, you can visit our News category.

Source

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button
Close

Please allow ads on our site

Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker!