Ageism vs the Healthy Aging Process

AGEISM
Until recently, aging was regarded with disdain, with an expectancy of waning vigor and even social uselessness. But the stereotypes are changing and seniors are becoming more and more interested in true-life long learning, healthy lifestyles and even political and social activism. We are truly seeing a population reinventing itself. In many of our own minds, however, ageism still exists.

Why Survive: Being Old in America
.Robert Butler, in his insightful, ground-breaking best-seller, Why Survive: Being Old in America (Harper & Rowe, 1975), defines ageism as:
“. . . a process of systematic stereotyping of and discrimination against people because they are old, just as racism and sexism accomplish this with skin color and gender. Old people are categorized as senile, rigid in thought and manner, old-fashioned in morality and skills . . . Ageism allows the younger generation to see older people as different from themselves; thus they subtly cease to identify with their elders as human beings. . . . Ageism, like all prejudices, influences the self-view and behavior of its victims. The elderly tend to adopt negative definitions of themselves and to perpetuate the very stereotypes directed against them, thereby reinforcing society’s beliefs.” (pp 12-13)

Fear of Aging
Instead of acknowledging aging as a normal, natural process that can and ought to purify us and help us to continue our spiritual growth, ageism teaches us to fear our aging process. Society teaches us starting when we are very young to deny it and as we reach middle age and older, to do all that we can to prevent it. In fact, there is a whole new longevity field that presents itself as ‘anti-aging.’

The process of aging itself, strikes most individuals as a burden, a problem to be dealt with rather than a vehicle to learn the spiritual lessons we may have missed in our younger years.

In counteracting the negativism of ageism, as well as in developing their own personal spirituality of aging, older adults (in midlife and beyond) may wish to reflect on
Universal spiritual principles:

1. Living in the now — the present moment. The past is important; it has shaped us and brought us to the present moment. Memories, especially the good ones, need to be treasured and brought to consciousness from time to time. Good memories help provide a sense of wellbeing and validate one’s life. Painful memories remind us that there is still work to do. The future is not yet, and while planning needs to be done and relishing up-coming events can give one a reason for “getting out of bed,” the reality is that life is not lived in the future. It is in the present moment that we encounter our God. God is not a god of the past; nor is God a god of the future. God is God of the present moment. Memory lapses may be God’s way of calling us to the present moment.

2. God is near and God is Good. Deliberately engaging in memory work helps to bring home the realization that God has always been at work in the course of one’s life. Oftentimes, it is only as we look back over life’s events that we recognize how we have been aided by grace in so many circumstances of our lives. . It is sometimes only in retrospect that we can see how things that seemed to be random, actually fit perfectly in the plan of our lives. Life Review serves to help us live in a continual space of awe and gratitude.

Life Review can also be a springboard to new possibilities. There can often be a seed of new opportunity in paths we once chose not to take.

Memory work also reminds us — sometimes painfully — that there is much messiness in life and that before our life is complete, we may want to clean up loose ends. A significant part of our “letting go” is completion or release of those loose ends, perhaps especially in the delicate art of mending broken or damaged relationships.

3. It is in giving that we receive. The aging process in midlife (& beyond) is a calling, not to a time of crisis or social uselessness, but to a time of increased self-development and spiritual growth. In the past, midlife was seen as the beginning of the end. Sociologists are now calling this period a time of ‘sage-ing’ where people are taking their place as elders rather than as the elderly. Our society will be a better place as this new group learns to use this wisdom in service, or what psychologists like Erikson and Jung have called, generativity. Women and men somehow wrestle with the mystery of suffering in their lives and in our world. Old age gives one the precious opportunity to leisurely pray about and reflect on this great mystery and possibly integrate it in our lives each one in his/her own unique way. The invitation is universal and to the point:

A spirituality of aging focuses in on the aging process itself as the ordinary human process that our soul uses to bring us to closer to God. The process of aging itself is the grist for the mill that allows that experience to grow.

Are you fearful of aging?

We’re Getting Older
When Social Security first came into being in 1935, our life span was thought to be about 70 years at most.  Now, we have learned so much medically and nutritionally that people are living far longer.  In 1776, someone born in the US was expected to live to about 35. Lifestyle and technical advances have more than doubled that figure.  The National Institute of Aging projects that by the middle of the next century, life expectancy will be nearly 92 for women and 86 for men.

Today, more than 35 million are over the age of 65 (that’s about 1/7 th of the population) and with the baby boomers coming of age, the Census Bureau in the US predicts that the over 70 million born between 1946 and 1964 will reach retirement age.

 

Until recently, ageing was regarded with disdain, with an expectancy of waning vigor and even social uselessness. But the stereotypes are changing and seniors are becoming more and more interested in true-life long learning, healthy lifestyles and political activism. We are truly seeing a population reinventing itself.  In many of our own minds, ageism still exists.

Dr. Robert Butler, in his insightful, ground-breaking best-seller, “Why Survive: Being Old in America” (Harper & Rowe, 1975), defines ageism as:


“. . . a process of systematic stereotyping of and discrimination against people because they are old, just as racism and sexism accomplish this with skin color and gender. Old people are categorized as senile, rigid in thought and manner, old-fashioned in morality and skills . . . Ageism allows the younger generation to see older people as different from themselves; thus they subtly cease to identify with their elders as human beings. . . . Ageism, like all prejudices, influences the self view and behavior of its victims. The elderly tend to adopt negative definitions of themselves and to perpetuate the very stereotypes directed against them, thereby reinforcing society’s beliefs.” (pp 12-13)

Are YOU ANTI-Aging?
Instead of acknowledging aging as a normal, natural process that can and ought
to purify us and help us to continue our spiritual growth, ageism teaches us to
fear our aging process. Society teaches us starting when we are very young to
deny it and as we reach middle age and older, to do all that we can to prevent it.

In fact, there is a whole new longevity field that presents itself as ‘anti-aging.’

Want to learn an alternative way of viewing aging? What if there really were spiritual lessons to learn
through the process? Would you want to know what they are? Click here to find out more

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!

 

Spirituality of Aging e-book available now

So many people in midlife and beyond have a fear of aging.
Society hasn’t helped this.
Ageism is still a factor in our experience and advertisers
keep telling us we need to be using products that are anti-aging.

I don’t know about you but I’m NOT ANTI – aging….
In fact, every day I experience new growth when I look at
what the aging process is teaching me.
 
I’m excited to tell you that my new E-Book is now available. It’s all about the
reflections I’ve been having on the aging process itself.  Rather than bemoan
the fact that my bones are creaking and my memory waxing and waning,
I decided to look at the meaning behind it all. And, low and behold, I began
to discover that the Aging Process itself is not a matter of continual
decrepitude – but an opportunity to grow spiritually. WOW!

That changes the game considerably.
If you are in MIDLIFE or BEYOND, this is an important issue
to consider right now.

I’d love to share this e-book with you and get your help in fleshing it out
even further into a full manuscript. Please comment when you have read it.

Get your copy here