Examining Your Own Attitudes About Age
Virginia Bola, PsyD
A common complaint of the mature is that, in American
society, there is far too much focus on youth. We collectively spend
a fortune on attempting to look younger and fighting the natural results
of gravity, sun exposure, and the poisons that have seeped into our
bodies through years of unhealthy eating, drinking, smoking, lack of
exercise, and self-neglect.
"Getting old is the pits" we all want to mumble as we get up slowly
from the floor, recalling how we used to spring upright without a second
thought. We feel more secure in lower heels and often forget the principles
of good posture, our shoulders rounding forward into an aging stoop.
We walk past a shop window and are shocked by the figure we see: "That
can't be me. It's my mother (father)!"
We can fight the biological ravages of aging only so far. Depending
upon our budget, we can buy anti-aging creams, vitamins, cover-ups,
special makeup, have HGH injections at a few thousand dollars a shot,
or a complete makeover by an exclusive (and expensive) plastic surgeon.
Some of us, despite the desire for eternal youth, settle into our senior
years overweight, wrinkled, stooped over, but content.
If we have limits on what we can do to look physically young, we have
an unlimited ability to think young. If we progress into maturity with
a positive attitude about aging, we can make sure that we are as productive,
attractive, and youthful as our bodies allow. No, we will not have the
taut unlined skin of our teens and twenties, nor the athletic energy
we recall so fondly, but we will maintain our self-respect, our pride,
and a vital sense of our own value.
How many of the following negative attitudes have you already unconsciously
adopted?
1. "Getting older means I can't be active anymore."
In a limited sense this is true. If you performed heavy labor as a youth,
it is unlikely that you now want to lift hundreds of pounds throughout
the day. If you stood on your feet waiting tables or in retail, your
feet and legs will warn you to cut back. However, with the additional
free time you gain as children leave home and you look forward to, or
move into, retirement, you have the opportunity to expand your activities
which was impossible when you were over-committed to work and family
needs. Daily walking will keep your joints lubricated, your cardiovascular
system healthy, and your mood upbeat. Buy a pedometer and gradually
increase the distance you walk. Practice good posture by walking tall
as if there were a string in your head pulling you up, up, up. Check
out your community for swimming classes, tennis lessons, tai chi, or
yoga. All will leave you feeling younger, more vibrant, with little
chance of injury. If you have long participated in vigorous physical
activity, such as jogging, aerobics, softball, or racquetball - keep
doing it. There is no reason to cut back on activities you enjoy until
they become absolutely medically contraindicated, if ever.
2. "I get a headache when I have to read something technical or try
to figure out my computer. I just don't concentrate as well as I used
to."
The human brain is amazing and inspiring. Its intricacy and ability
set us apart from the other creatures of our planet. It has the capability
to keep functioning, and growing, throughout our life cycle. Only when
we choose to ignore it, or fail to use it, does it slip into dormancy
and slowly wither. Nurture your mind as you did your children. When
they thought they would "never get it" at school, you encouraged them
and stuck with them until they mastered their assignments. Relish new
mental challenges and give yourself that same patient coaching. You
may need to read technical information several times before you really
understand it. Spend free hours exploring your computer and researching
what it does and how it can best work for you. Work on crossword puzzles
and word games to maintain your memory and expand your vocabulary. Learn
about a new subject which has always interested you but which you never
had time to thoroughly explore: history, astronomy, holistic health,
genealogy, horse race handicapping, geography, anything that catches
your fancy. The goal is not the subject you study but the mental exercise
it affords which will, in turn, improve your mood, provide the daily
excitement of new discoveries, and allow you to feel productive and
valuable to your prime audience: yourself.
3. "It's time to start acting my age."
What does that mean? Shall we allow our age to be determined by an arbitrary,
man-made calendar or by how we feel? Some of us seem "old" by fifty.
We give up trying new things, we slow down our activity, we stop thinking
creatively. Many of us at sixty or seventy feel as we have always done
and are shocked when we look closely in a mirror and see that we have
changed. How could our appearance be so different when we still see
ourselves as young and vibrant as ever? If we can act the age we feel,
calendar age no longer matters. If we love to dance, should we stop
because of a date on a calendar? If we like to work, should we be forced
to retire when we have so much to offer? If we feel at our best in shorter
skirts and high heels, must we start changing our wardrobe to present
the image of a dowager? If we like to play rough and tumble sports,
should we move to the sidelines and let the "young set" take over? Are
we doomed to wear shawls and scarves and sensible shoes when we don't
feel any more "sensible" that we did for the past 50 years? No way!
Let our inner attitude shine in public as brightly as it burns within
our minds.
Human beings have few limitations. The limits that exist are often self-imposed.
A positive attitude about yourself, your refusal to allow the calendar
to stifle your physical and mental reach, and frequent self-examination
of the myths of aging to which you may be falling prey, can transform
the destructive social concept of aging into bright new opportunities
for change, growth, and fulfillment.
About the Author
Virginia Bola is a licensed clinical psychologist with
deep interests in Social Psychology and politics. She has performed
therapeutic services for more than 20 years and has studied the effects
of cultural forces and employment on the individual. The author of an
interactive workbook, The Wolf at the Door: An Unemployment Survival
Manual, and a monthly ezine, The Worker's Edge, she can be reached at
http://www.drvirginiabola.blogspot.com
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