Book on Spirituality of Aging

In doing some research about the spirituality of aging, I came across an author and a book that I want

to share with you.  He too talks about aging as a spiritual practice.Here’s an interview with him.

Have you noticed there are certain things you can’t do as easily as you could when you were younger? Have you ever felt resistant to the inevitable changes that come with age? Have you put thought into your own mortality?

And have you considered that perhaps all of this can contribute to a greater sense of spirituality?

Buddhist author and teacher Lewis Richmond tackles these questions and more in his book Aging as a Spiritual Practice: A Contemplative Guide to Growing Older and Wiser.

Although I am in my thirties and not yet approaching my senior years, I was interested to read this book because I often feel this desire to cling to youth, coupled with a fear of what it will be like when it inevitably slips away.

I appreciated Richmond’s refreshing perspective on the benefits of growing older, and his honesty about his own experiences with illness, aging, and transformation.

From the book jacket:

Incorporating illuminating facts from scientific researchers, doctors, and psychologists on aging’s various challenges and rewards; Richmond explores the tandem of maintaining a healthy body and healthy relationships infused with an active spiritual life. Using this information, we can pay attention to our own experience of aging through the lens of our emotions, and adapt accordingly, inspiring opportunities for a joy that transcends age.

The Giveaway

To enter to win one of three free copies of Aging as a Spiritual Practice:

1. Leave a comment below.

2. Tweet: RT @tinybuddha GIVEAWAY and Interview: Aging as a Spiritual Practice http://bit.ly/wgW7zs

If you don’t have a Twitter account, you can still enter by completing the first step. You can enter until midnight PST on Friday, January 20th.

The Interview

1. In many ways, we live in a youth-driven culture. Do you think this has affected our ability to embrace aging, and recognize and appreciate the benefits?

Yes, to some extent. When I did my early research for the book, I found that most of the books about aging were actually about postponing aging—exercise, diet, yoga, cosmetics, and so on.  This emphasis mirrors the consumer culture which advertises these remedies to older people, who then internalize the message that it is important to stay and look young as long as possible.

The honoring of elderhood as an important life stage both for oneself and for one’s community is a legacy of a previous era—though I think it is coming back, and I hope to contribute to that renaissance.

2. What are some of the other factors that contribute to our fear of aging?

Fear of illness, fear of death, fear of dementia, fear of being poor—these were all known by ancient Buddhist writers as universal “great fears,” at a time when the average life expectancy was probably 35.

So it is natural to fear these things, but it is also possible to courageously face up to them and not let them have the last word. Each adversity brings opportunity, each fear offers gifts.

I try to strike that balance in the book. Research shows that flexibility is a key ingredient for the success of the “extraordinary elderly”—people who do not let their worries and fears stop them from enjoying life to the fullest.

3. What, would you say, are the some of the benefits of growing older?

In the book I cite a large research study concluding that on the whole people in their fifties and sixties are less stressed than people in their thirties. The study of 300,000 people was adjusted for socio-economic status, finances, gender, race, religion and many other things, so this result is real.

Why, the researchers asked? They had no firm answer, but they suspected that it was because people who have lived longer have more experience dealing with adversity. Life experience is a hard-won treasure; there is no shortcut to it.

My own respondents cited many other benefits—freedom to wear what they wanted, grandchildren, travel, pursuing long-deferred dreams, giving back to community. I would add to this list the perspective to contemplate spiritual values and the deep meaning of it all.

4. What advice would you offer to someone is struggling to embrace aging in fear of being devalued by society?

I would say, “Don’t let others define you. Be who you are.” Or as my Buddhist teacher Shunryu Suzuki often said, “Stand on your own two feet.”

Also, enjoy the friends you have and don’t hesitate to make new ones. Friendships of long standing are a powerful bastion against the facile opinions of a youth-obsessed society.

5. In your book, you wrote about coming to terms with the irreversible changes that age brings—things we lose that we simply can’t get back. While this is true for all of us, some people seem to accept this more readily without letting it lead to bitterness and depression. What do you think enables some people to accept this, while others resist and grieve their former selves?

There is a good deal of scientific research about this which I cite in my book. Optimism turns out to be somewhat genetically pre-determined, but it can also be cultivated, even by lifelong pessimists.

To some extent the Buddhist-oriented contemplative exercises I offer in the book are partly a means to cultivate optimism. “Reframing”—the capacity to see a difficult situation in a more positive light—is a measurable factor for increased happiness as you grow older.

If your bad knee means you can’t jog anymore, take up swimming! Or more deeply, rather than dwelling on the losses of aging, focus on its fresh opportunities. I interviewed many professionals—doctors, nurses, geriatric specialists, psychiatrists—who make this approach the main focus of therapy for their elderly patients. They tell me it really works.

6. You also explored how elders formerly had certain roles to play in society, such as passing on stories, sharing wisdom, and caring for their community’s children—roles that are less relevant in our modern culture. Do you believe that creating a strong internal sense of purpose is an essential part of healthy aging?

I firmly believe that “elderhood” is innate, and I tell several true elderhood stories to illustrate that. In other words, elderhood is designed to awaken in us at the very time we and our community need it.

I think the wisdom aspect of all religions—Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism, and others—come out of this lore of elderhood, passed down through innumerable generations.

At one time the community recognized elderhood in all its facets and honored it. Now each of us has more responsibility to create our own domain of elderhood. That’s one of the reasons I wrote the book, to offer tools for that.

7. What are the main ways in which aging can actually help us deepen our sense of spirituality?

Aging means, first and foremost, the growing awareness that our time is limited, that everything we love and care about, including our precious selves, is destined to pass away.

One of the main things Buddhism teachers is that this need not be a depressing realization. On the contrary, knowing our own and others’ fragility is a great gift aging brings, because we can clearly see how precious everything is, and how important it is to take care of what we have.

Aging is also a time for a more patient, quiet life—a natural environment for a spiritual and contemplative attitude. That’s why each chapter of my book offers a contemplative exercise, and the last three chapters describe a “day away”—a guided one-day personal retreat.

8. In your book, you shared some of your own experiences dealing with illness and facing death. What are the top lessons you’ve learned about coming to terms with our own mortality?

I had cancer when I was 36, and a brain infection at 52 which no doctor thought I could survive.  From a medical point of view I am a walking miracle. I still wake up every morning with a sense that I am lucky to be here at all. That is the great gift of my otherwise terrible illnesses.

Another gift is how I can help others who are ill; they come to me and consult me simply because I have been there. These days I do not fear death. For two weeks I was in a death coma, though I was aware and conscious inside my head. I had no fear there. I felt comforted and filled with light.

At one level my illnesses and their long recoveries took 8 or 10 years out of my life. At another level they have been my greatest teacher. Would I like those 8 or 10 years back? People ask me that and I have no answer. We only live once.

9. What is the main message you hope readers take from Aging as a Spiritual Practice?

I want people to come away from the book feeling good about growing old. I have blog respondents who say things like “Aging sucks. It’s terrible. The wrinkles, the fatigue. I hate it!”

 

OK, I understand. But read the book. I acknowledge that point of view; I have a whole chapter about it. The bad stuff is not the whole story. The whole story is far richer, it is the tapestry of the whole human adventure, start to finish.

Our species has been birthing, living, aging, and dying for perhaps a million years. We know how to do a whole life and that wisdom is written into our hearts and our DNA. Look within, all that knowledge is there.  Look without, and see the whole human community traversing this terrain together.

One thing we get to learn as we live out the fullness of our life is how important love is. Focus on that, and aging is not so bad, really. In fact, it’s pretty good!

 

Gospel According to Starbucks

The Gospel According to Starbucks – Living with a Grande Passion, Leonard Sweet (This book has not been authorized by Starbucks Coffee Company
Brewed for Thought – The Gospel According to Starbucks – introduces the life you’d gladly stand in line for……you don’t stand in line at Starbucks just to buy a cup of coffee. You stop for the experience surrounding the cup of coffee…..
Too many of us line up for God out of duty or guilt. We completely miss the warmth and richness of the experience of living with God. If we’d learn to see what God is doing on earth, we could participate fully in the irresistible life that he offers.
You can learn to pay attention like never before, to identify where God is already in business right in your neighborhood. The doors are open and the coffee is brewing. God is serving the refreshing antidote to the unsatisfying, arms length spiritual life – and he won’t even make you stand in line.
Leonard Sweet shows you how the passion that Starbucks has for creating an irresistible experience can connect you with God’s stirring introduction to the experience of faith
Questions for Conversation with yourself and others by Edward Hammett –
The Brew of the Soul – Questions to stir the BREW, an acronym that stands for Being Real Engages the World. As you pursue a life of grande passion and EPIC faith, reflect on the personal meaning behind each word (Being Real Engages the World).
Being – Think about what it means fully into the person God made you to be:
1) Who do you want to be now?
2) What is creating who you are?
3) What distracts you from being all you can be?
4) What will move you from where you are to where God wants you to be?
Real – In being who God made you be, think about what it means to be real
5) How much of who you are now is who you want to be?
6) What is going on in you and through you that you are not proud of?
7) What would have to change in order for you to be more real?
8) What would make your life more pleasing to God?
9) What is the best version of yourself? How often do you see it?
Engages The – Think about the effect your life has
10) What places in your daily life intersect with your life mission
11) Who are the people in your path who fuel your life mission? Who are the ones who drain your life mission?
12) What do you want to do to achieve your life mission that you are not currently doing? What or who could help you do that right now?
World – Think about your life mission in terms of the people in your sphere of influence and the world that surrounds you.
13) How are you currently impacting the world you work in?
14) What impact are you having on your family? On your community?
15) Who specifically in your world needs encouragement, love, or hope
16) Where does your greatest passion intersect with the world’s greatest needs?

Baby Boomers -Growing Older – over 50

Actresses and authors join forces to celebrate ‘honest, empowering’ book on growing older

Some of the world’s most beautiful female celebrities over the age of 50 are making a public plea for women to stop their fight for eternal youth.

Isabella Rossellini, Jane Fonda and Gloria Steinem, among others, have been inspired by 50 is the New Fifty, a new book from Suzanne Braun Levine, founder and former editor of Ms, the ground-breaking feminist magazine. Fonda called the book “useful, comforting and smart”.

“The assumption is that youth – or at least younger – is the ideal state and that, given a choice, no woman in her right mind would relinquish it. I have found the opposite to be true,” said Levine. “They say 50 is the new 30, as though they are getting a new lease on youth. That is not it at all.”

Tomorrow she will be joined by Rossellini and Steinem in New York to discuss her book. “This honest and empowering book is the antidote to all those anti-ageing creams and glum pronouncements about life after 50,” said Rossellini, who was fired as spokesperson for Lancôme in 1995 soon after she turned 40 because managers considered she had become too old. “This book explains why for me, and for so many other women, this has turned out to be the most free, creative and rewarding time of life,” she said.

Steinem became a spokesperson for issues about ageing in 1974, on her 40th birthday, when a reporter said “Oh, you don’t look 40?, and Steinem famously replied: “This is what 40 looks like. We’ve been lying for so long, who would know?”

Levine said: “Fifty is an exciting new stage of life where women are feeling more comfortable, more masterful, more full of hope and energy than they felt in their 30s. I haven’t met a single woman, truly, who would like to go back to her life when she was 30. We might like to go back to our lives when our bodies were a little different and we could wear belts, but otherwise, in terms of life experience, women are finding that their 50s and their 60s and even their 70s are a very exciting and authentic time.

“To listen to the society we live in, you would think that you have to stay young – and look young – to be happy. And we literally buy into that message, spending millions on age-defying cosmetics, surgery, drugs and making a book that promises to teach us ‘How Not To Look Old’ a bestseller,” she added. “We live in a society that is very ageist. Certainly the most significant victims have been women. Now we are creating a whole new age for women that really defies the stereotype that as women get older they should be invisible, they should sit by the phone and wait for an opportunity to baby-sit for their grandchildren. I think our experience is going to change the perception of women in this society.”

Steinem, author of Doing Sixty and Seventy, a book on age stereotyping and the unexpected liberation that comes with growing older, called Levine’s book a battle cry. “No more pretended youth!” she said. “Suzanne shows us the wisdom and joys of living in our own personal present. For women who have been pressured into living the past over and over again, this book is the first true age liberation.”

“If each of us stops trying to hide her chronological years, we will liberate the future for all of us,” said Levine. “Susan Sarandon – who is in her 60s – is one of the sexiest-looking actresses around; no one would mistake her for a 30-year-old. Or Helen Mirren, 63, whose persona bespeaks maturity and whose bikini self impressed many of us a few months ago. Madonna, the one-woman reinvention operation, just turned 50. As she builds and hardens her body, she is looking a bit like an android, but she isn’t hiding her age.”

Mary Eileen Williams, founder of the feistysideoffifty website, also welcomed Levine’s book. “Without a doubt, there’s a revolution going on and older women are leading the charge,” said Williams, a counsellor who has specialised in helping baby-boomer women deal with life planning and career transition issues. “We baby-boomers are known for spearheading sweeping social reforms, making news and breaking the mould for what is viewed as the ‘typical’ female experience. And we gals certainly aren’t about to stop that now.”

Still Doing It: The Intimate Lives of Women Over Sixty — Midlife Message

Women’s Web is pleased to share with its readers books written by women, for women, and about women. Women of the Silent Generation—those born between 1925 and 1944—may not be going silently into the night. In fact, they’re still doing it, still loving it, and getting better at it.

Still Doing It: The Intimate Lives of Women Over Sixty

Women of the Silent Generation may not be going silently into the night.

According to the NIH National Institute on Aging US age pyramid, projections are that in 2030, there will be 33.75 million women but only 29.25 million men between the age of 65 and 84. In other words, older women will continue to experience the same “partner gap” as today in finding eligible men after divorce, death of a husband, or having never been married.

Despite the imbalance, we might learn from the experiences of some women of the Silent Generation—those born between 1925 and 1944—who have decided to explore new ways of living, showing us that despite those prevailing stereotypes of the elderly with bath chairs and canes, the golden years are for many just that: golden.

Still Doing It: The Intimate Lives of Women over Sixty
(Avery, October 2008) celebrates the lives of some of the daring, outspoken and sensual women of the Silent Generation who are actively embracing new challenges, new careers, and new types of romantic relationships and sexual experiences. Based on extensive interviews and research by authors Deirdre Fishel and Diana Holtzberg, producers of the award-winning documentary film of the same name, the book explores the lives and loves of an incredible group of women in their 60s, 70s and older—women who are confident and wise and willing to take on risks—and relationships—they may never have imagined, whether with much younger men, multiple partners, or other women.

Among those we meet are

  • Harret Somers Zerling, age 80, a bohemian and artist with a penchant for younger men. Though mostly straight, she was also the one-time lover of Susan Sontag.
  • Lainie Cook, 66, a beauty sings the blues at Joe’s Pub in New York City.
  • Elaine Isom, 81, a funny and high-spirited African-American woman and great-grandmother who still feels sexual, despite two bouts with cancer.
  • Shelley Leinhardt, 66, an intensely fit and gorgeous woman who left her husband in her fifties to join the rocky world of singledom. She recently returned from doing humanitarian work in Africa.
  • Marnie Hensel, 76, a champion skier into her seventies before switching gears to earn her Masters in health coaching. She’s jumped out of a plane and has 6 grandchildren and a new boyfriend 15 years her junior.

As women continue to live longer and healthier lives, their appetite for sex is slow to fade and for many, sex is an essential part of their well-being. The women in this book have raised kids, been in long-term relationships, lost spouses, been divorced, come out of the closet, and even found love in the nursing home, but they are all living life on their own terms.Still Doing It: The Intimate Lives of Women over Sixty
takes on myths and misconceptions and provides the tools and inspiration for women of all ages—partnered, single, straight or gay—to reinvent themselves, enjoy their bodies and take risks at all stages in life. Stimulating and eye-opening, this book shows that older women are still doing it, still loving it, and still getting better at it.

Books to help through Midlife

Amodeo, John. The Authentic Heart: An Eightfold Path to Midlife Love. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2001
Andrews, Cecile. The Circle of Simplicity: Return to the Good Life. New York: HarperCollins, 1997.
Berner, Jeff. The Joy of Working from Home: Making a Life While Making a Living. San Francisco: Berret-Koehler, 1994.
Breathnach, Sarah Ban. Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy. New York: Warner Books, 1995.
Brock, Fred. Retire on Less Than You Think: The New York Times Guide to Planning Your Financial Future. New York: New York Times, 2004.
Bronte, Lydia. The Longevity Factor: The New Reality of Long Careers and How It Can Lead to Richer Lives. New York: HarperTrade, 1993.
Chopra, Deepak. Perfect Health: The Complete Mind/Body Guide. New York: Three Rivers Press, 2001.
Diamond, Jed. Surviving Male Menopause: A Guide for Women and Men. Naperville, IL: Sourcebooks, 2000.
Dychtwald, Ken. Age Power: How the 21st Century Will Be Ruled by the New Old. New York: Tarcher/Putnam, 1999.
Dychtwald, Maddy. Cycles: How We Will Live, Work, and Buy. New York: Free Press, 2003.
Edwards, Paul and Sarah. Working from Home: Everything You Need to Know About Living and Working Under the Same Roof. New York: Tarcher, 1999.
Elgin, Duane. Voluntary Simplicity: Toward a Way of Life That Is Outwardly Simple, Inwardly Rich. New York: William Morrow, 1993.
Evans, Susan B., and Joan P. Avis. Women Who Broke All the Rules: How the Choices of a Generation Changed Our Lives. Naperville, IL: Sourcebooks, 1999.
Gottman, John. The Relationship Cure. New York: Three Rivers Press, 2002.
Hendricks, Gay and Kathleen. Conscious Loving: The Journey of Co-Commitment. New York: Bantam Books, 1992.
Hendrix, Harville. Keeping the Love You Find. New York: Pocket Books, 1992.
Howells, John Howells. Retirement on a Shoestring. Guilford, CT: Globe Pequot, 2004.
Hudson, Frederick. The Adult Years: Mastering the Art of Self-Renewal. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1999.
Lasser, J. K. Your Winning Retirement Plan. New York: Wiley, 2001.
Love, Patricia. Hot Monogamy: Essential Steps to More Passionate, Intimate Lovemaking. New York: Plume Penguin, 1995.
Northrup, Christiane. The Wisdom of Menopause. New York: Bantam, 2001.
Orman, Suze. 9 Steps to Financial Freedom, The Laws of Money, The Lessons of Life. New York: Three Rivers Press, 2000.
O’Shaugnessy, Lynn. The Retirement Bible. New York: Hungry Minds, 2001.
Pierce, Linda Breen, and Vicki Robin. Choosing Simplicity: Real People Finding Peace and Fulfillment in a Complex World. Carmel CA: Gallagher Press, 2000.
Sheehy, Gail. Silent Passage. New York: Pocket Books, 1998.
Tan, Robert. The Andropause Mystery: Unraveling Truths About the Male Menopause. Houston, TX: Amred Consulting, 2001.
Warner, Ralph. Get a Life: You Don’t Need a Million to Retire Well. Berkeley, CA: Nolo, 2002.
Wolin, Steven J., and Sybil Wolin. The Resilient Self: How Survivors of Troubled Families Rise Above Adversity. New York: Villard Books, 1993.