ageism

Ageism: Easy to Fall Into, Even if You're Aging

I met a woman recently whose mother is 95 years old and lives at home. She and her sister have been trying to convince their mother to attend a professionally run day center, like JABA's Respite & Enrichment Center, so that she isn't so isolated at home and they aren't so worried about her being there when they are not. It would also provide a much-needed respite from their caregiving duties. But their mother refuses to consider that option, telling her daughters that she "doesn't want to sit around all day with a bunch of old people."

The woman smiled and shrugged, included a few anecdotes about how independent and stubborn her mother was, and left it at that. I thought about the wonderful older adults I've met at JABA's Respite & Enrichment Center over the years, and the equally wonderful people caring for them. I thought of all the activities, the outings, the music events, the visits from young people in the community I've witnessed, and while I understand the attitude (my own mother was the same way), even identify with that independent spirit, the "sit around all day with a bunch of old people" comment really bothered me. I felt certain their mother wouldn't feel that way if she spent time at the center.     

How is it that someone who has faced the challenges of aging can still be so ageist?  And why weren't the daughters recognizing it as such? 

Given how most of us grow up with negative ideas about aging, and are bombarded with marketing that promotes "anti-aging" products, research, and regimes designed to "defy" or "fight" aging as if it were a disease, and are constantly reading news about problems associated with aging populations, it's amazing any of us can remain positive about aging. What's more, we like to glorify outliers, seniors climbing mountains or starting new careers, when in reality someone's biggest challenge might be learning how to optimize the use of a cane or walker or live independently after a stroke. And even without all the negative messaging and exaggerated expectations, coming to terms with aging can be difficult. Decline is real. Mortality is real. Those are not easy things for anyone to accept. Not to mention the deep stigma about being dependent or a burden.

So, it's not unnatural to have negative feelings and fears about growing older. And like our 95-year-old mother, it's not unnatural to respond negatively to the sight of frail or disabled elders, especially if they are our peers, as it can remind us what might lie ahead. It's not unnatural to want to distance ourselves from the idea of decline and death. And it's not unnatural to wince at the sight of those frailer and less mobile than ourselves. Todd D. Nelson, a renowned psychologist who studies ageism, has called it a "prejudice against our feared future self."  

But here's the thing - viewing aging negatively is aging us, hurting others, and even killing us. Researchers at Yale University have found that people with negative age beliefs earlier in life were more prone to heart attacks, strokes, and dementia later in life. Indeed, research has shown that those with negative age bias die nearly 8 years earlier than those with more positive views about aging, and that being the target of ageism or age bias can accelerate physical decline. But it doesn't have to be that way.

"Ageism is the least-challenged and understood form of discrimination," wrote Dr Kay Patterson, Australia's outgoing age discrimination commissioner, in a recent article. "I have seen this translate into lack of interest or will by governments, businesses, and the media to invest time and resources into addressing age-related issues."

As Patterson points out, this can lead directly to elder abuse in our society, and to the marginalization and oppression of both younger and older generations. 

Patterson called ageism "pernicious and pervasive," pointing out that it can occur because of both malevolent or benevolent intentions, and even be internalized against ourselves. However, she also said research has shown that attitudes about aging can be "easily shifted" by even brief ageism awareness sessions, and that "contrary to the perception of cynicism and resentment between generations," there's a mutual understanding of life issues that exists between people of different age groups, and a real desire to support each other. 

"We are more alike than we are different," said Patterson.  

David McNair handles communications, media relations, and social media efforts for JABA.  This article originally appeared in the August 30, 2023 print edition of C-Ville Weekly.

Message from Marta: Embrace what every age and stage of life brings

“Like racism and sexism, ageism is not about how we look. It’s about what people in power want our appearance to mean. Ageism occurs when a group, whether politicians or marketers or employment agencies, use that power to oppress or exploit or silence or simply ignore people who are much younger or significantly older.”

– Ashton Applewhite, This Chair Rocks: A Manifesto Against Ageism

Marta Keane, JABA CEO

As we address JABA’s second Value of Inclusion, an area that is often overlooked is age.  Ageism exists.  We looked at ways to Defy Ageism last spring.  But we can never talk about it too much.

There is a lot in this quote to think about.  Do we and others make assumptions based on someone’s age?  This can cut both ways.  Is someone too old for the job?  Is someone perceived too inexperienced for the job because they are young?  And the point is, do we make that judgment based on our unconscious bias?  We don’t even realize that our first thought is based on “how someone looks”!

Have others set the stage, those in power, those who influence, to tell us what they “want our appearance to mean”?  The key is how do we take that power away from others, and defy ageism?  How do we change the unconscious bias of ourselves and others regarding what the appearance of age means?

It is what is true for any “ism”.  We need to let each individual present themselves, without judgment from us.  And experience what that individual brings forward.  That is how we disallow age as a factor in deciding what any of us can do, or could be allowed to do.  As the population skews older, and there are as many people over 60 as there are under 18 in our region, it is important that we embrace what every age and stage of life brings to the fabric of our community.

Thanks for reading the quote and thinking about what it means to you.

Marta Keane, JABA CEO

The Problem with the “Anti-Aging” Trend

Everyone is aging. From the moment we are born we begin growing and changing. So why then, at a certain point along that continuum, do we rebel and freak out against that process? A Google search on aging reveals what I'm talking about. You'll inevitably find articles and advertisements about "anti-aging cures" and reports on medical research and developments that promise to "fight" aging or eliminate it. Indeed, multi-billionaire Jeff Bezos has invested in a bio-tech company called Altos Labs, which promises to halt the aging process through "cellular reprogramming" and other new technologies.

“Staving off death is a thing that you have to work at, " wrote Bezos in a letter to Amazon shareholders when he stepped down as CEO last year. " … If living things don’t actively work to prevent it, they would eventually merge with their surroundings and cease to exist as autonomous beings. That is what happens when they die.”

And this sort of thing is not only the obsession of multi-billionaires. According to P&S Intelligence, the global anti-aging market is expected to grow from $191.5 billion currently to $421.4 billion by 2030.

What are we to make of all this?

Again, we can turn to science. A recent study published in Nature Communications addressed the question of whether or not we can slow the rate of aging. Researchers pointed out that primates (humans) actually enjoy relatively long lifespans when compared to other species, and found that there's a direct connection between “life expectancy at birth and lifespan equality in a diverse set of human populations." In other words, attention given to the health of infants, and declining infant mortality rates, has been one of the main reasons why more people are living longer, healthier lives. What's more, the study found that human lifespans remain generally fixed due to biological constraints, and that "lifespan equality" is the real issue.

For instance, while Thomas Jefferson, who died at 83, made it to the higher end of a typical human lifespan, life expectancy at birth during that time was 40 years old. Since then, due to advances in medicine and a variety of economic, environmental and societal factors life expectancy at birth in the U.S. has increased dramatically, to 80 years old in 2020, but the typical biological human lifespan has remained largely unchanged.

Today, in developed nations, deaths are typically concentrated near the end of human lifespans, whereas in less developed nations those deaths may be spread across different ages. The same could be said about people in various socio-economic situations within a population. In other words, our quality of life as we age, not anti-aging cures, are what will likely allow us to "stave off death" and live longer, healthier lives.

So, then, what is the current obsession with "anti-aging" and "curing and fighting" aging all about? Well, you could say that fantasies about finding the "Fountain of Youth" have always been a part of our mythologies, and that now we like to think that technology can provide that. Indeed, one of the scientists involved with Altos Labs has called cellular reprogramming technology the "elixir of life." Of course, while much of this isn't so much about wanting to cheat death, and more about not wanting to look prematurely old, it amounts to a refusal to accept aging and a prejudice against aging.

According to the spiritual teacher Ram Dass, who believed the denial of aging and death was a cultural cruelty, that's a recipe for disaster.

"The minute you pit yourself against nature, the minute you pit yourself with your mind against change," Dass wrote, "you are asking for suffering."

Remember, the aging process began the moment you were born, and it’s happening as you read this. Relax.

This article originally appeared in C-Ville Weekly.