Read Live Long, Die Short Online
Authors: Roger Landry
And there’s something else going on here. Years of playing roles as parent and child have left an indelible mark on both you and your children. There are expectations that come with those roles. Even as you age, your children expect you to be the solid, responsible, think-of-others-first person you were during your parenting years. Drift from this expectation, make efforts to grow or explore undeveloped areas of your personality, and you risk a family in chaos, and even suspicion that you are heading down the road to dementia! This can easily limit spontaneity and growth and therefore is potentially deadly to successful aging, even outweighing the social-connection benefit provided by the family.
So, whether we blindly adopt an unenlightened society’s view of aging or the risk-averse view of those close to us, we short-change our growth and potential, and “act our age” all the way to decline and “usual” aging. In childhood we heard the admonition to act our age. In adulthood childish or adolescent behavior could have severe consequences, such as loss of job and relationships. But as an older adult, it’s time to reconsider. The difference here is that acting our age for older adults is too restrictive and based on faulty assumptions. To age successfully in our current society, then,
requires
us to
never act our age
. It is not acting childish, but childlike. It is to do what Margaret Mead told us she did on her own aging journey: “I was wise enough to never grow up, while fooling most people into believing that I had.”
It’s not easy. As we age, we settle into comfort zones made very hospitable and inviting by our experiences. We’ve learned the “right” way of doing
things, which quickly becomes the “only” way of doing things. We are more aware of the consequences of taking chances and easily adopt a conservative approach and attempt to eliminate all risk of failure, embarrassment, or criticism. We forget that to have a pulse is to be at some risk, that victory is sweeter when more is wagered.
Don’t misunderstand. In Tip Five, I spoke about reducing your risk of disease and injury. And we should do that. But to avoid risk altogether is impossible and, when the most likely negative outcome is only embarrassment, avoiding risk is selling yourself short. Taking calculated risks, taking risk where the potential outcome is growth, joy, increased competence, and reduced risk of decline—that is an acceptable, even recommended, risk. In fact, I strongly recommend to my presentation audiences that they do something that scares them every day. It doesn’t have to be bungee jumping or parachuting (although if that is where your heart is, go ahead—find a way to minimize the risk and go for it!). It must, however, take you out of your comfort zone. Remember,
we cannot grow if we don’t change.
Change involves fear, especially if we take on too much. When you challenge your physical, mental, and emotional self, you grow. Your immune system, your brain, your muscles cannot help but respond to the challenge. You will be better and you will feel fulfilled. The challenge is clear: act your age and you risk suspension of growth. No growth equals decline as we age.
Dr. Ellen Langer, a Harvard University researcher, conducted a now famous study back in the late seventies. Using older men as subjects, she immersed them in an environment from twenty years earlier. Room trappings were from the fifties. Conversation about fifties-era topics was in present tense. Recorded radio programs were fifties vintage. This immersion resulted in the men acting in ways similar to their twenty-years-younger self: walking more, carrying their own luggage, doing things that had previously been done for them. The results after
only one week
were stunning: vision, hearing, cognitive skills all improved. Even photos of the subjects before and after the study improved, with subjects looking younger. What were Dr. Langer’s conclusions? This work and a large body of research since this initial study convinces her that when we are aware—mindful of what we are doing and what expectations we have for ourselves—our bodies will follow; that is,
our bodies will attempt to align with those expectations.
2
To the extent we think of ourselves as more capable, or healthier, or growing, our bodies will attempt to reflect that view. Our bodies reflect our minds. The words of famous motivational speaker Brian Tracy—“You are what you think about”—reflect Dr. Langer’s research conclusions. Her research has moved us way beyond euphemisms about being better if we try. We become better when we think of ourselves as younger, or more active, or more capable. Our brains begin to rewire to be consistent with a younger person. So, again, if we “act our age,” within a context where being old is defined as declining, it’s more likely that that is exactly what will happen. If, on the other hand, we act younger, more optimistic, more confident about what we are capable of, we will indeed grow and limit decline.
As I explained in the introduction to this book, Chuck Yeager taught me this many decades ago. Grandma Moses knew this when she began her painting career in her late seventies; Frank Shearer knew it when he celebrated his hundredth birthday by water skiing in Acapulco; Nola Ochs shouted it out to us as she received her undergraduate degree at ninety-five and master’s degree at ninety-eight!
Perhaps F. Scott Fitzgerald was telling us much the same in his 1922 short story “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” the basis for the 2008 movie of the same title, which starred Brad Pitt. Benjamin Button is born an old man and ages backward. Fitzgerald’s powerful ability to articulate his sharp social insight provides us a story that holds our society’s sclerotic views of aging up in sharp relief. Benjamin Button’s experiences as a withered child and a robust older man challenges us to question our most entrenched concepts of aging.
You remember Ethel. She is the theatrical dynamo we met earlier, who still writes a column for a New York publication targeted to older adults, and is involved with the Ms. Senior America pageant. When Ethel tells me “I never use a script,” she is referring to her television talk show she hosted for many years in New York City. Hearing her story, however, I believe the words characterize something more significant. Ethel doesn’t use a script for her life. Not society’s script for an older woman, not her friends’ script for their peer group, not anyone’s. She follows her bliss, as Joseph Campbell told us to do. She does this spontaneously and fearlessly. How else could she have agreed to compete for Ms. Senior America at age sixty? Why else
is she singing and directing a Broadway-type show at age ninety? How can she want to help others and to try new things after being widowed twice, surviving cancer, and being the caretaker for her husband? Yes, Ethel shows us how to age in a better way as she fully accepts her chronological age while raging against what she “should” be doing at ninety.
Masterpiece Living Pearls for Never “Acting Your Age
”
There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle; the other is as though everything is a miracle.
—ALBERT EINSTEIN
Nothing can give you joy. Joy is uncaused and arises from within as the joy of Being.… It is your natural state, not something that you need to work hard for or struggle to attain.
—ECKHART TOLLE
W
hen I was in my medical training, I was taught that if I could not bandage it, sew it up, treat it with medication, cut it out, or otherwise physically modify it, then it was not for me to attempt to heal. Only several decades later and after a career in preventive medicine did I learn what my medical school professors either didn’t know or were reluctant to discuss. We cannot be truly healthy unless we are spiritually healthy. Yes, paying attention to our physical selves is a must, the foundation of our interaction with the world. Our intellectual component also needs our
attention if we wish to experience our world fully. Social connection is key to reducing our risk of losing our independence. But spiritual health, I have come to believe, is the glue of it all, the road map of our journey, the thing that makes it all make sense. Viktor Frankl agreed: “The spiritual dimension cannot be ignored, for it is what makes us human.”
1
Dr. Harold Koenig, a physician at Duke University and an international authority on spirituality and health, tells us that spirituality is “the personal quest for understanding answers to ultimate questions about life, about meaning, and about relationship to the transcendent.”
2
What is particularly appealing about Dr. Koenig’s definition, unlike the hundreds of other attempts to define spirituality,
is that he believes it is a quest and not so much the destination.
Seeking answers to questions such as Why am I here? What is my relationship to other living things and to the transcendent? What is my purpose? What is the meaning of my existence?—this constitutes that quest. Seeking such answers is a spiritual journey, fundamental to who we are as humans, not something arbitrarily chosen by people with time on their hands. French philosopher Pierre Teilhard de Chardin grasped this concept: “We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings having a human experience.” Perhaps, then, based on Koenig’s definition, spiritual health is found in seeking answers to the fundamental questions of life.