Solutions December 2018 | Page 43

When Anne Lamott took the stage to deliver a TED talk, it was on the cusp of her sixty-first birthday. She said, “I am no longer 47, although this is the age I feel, and the age I like to think of myself as being.” If you aren’t feeling your age, you have plenty of company. The Pew Research Center found that the majority of baby boomers, 61 percent, think of themselves as younger than they really are. “I’m at a good age.” Can you say that? Do you feel that? These are the kinds of questions I ask you to ponder because your attitudes and expectations shape how you approach your years ahead. Your viewpoints and actions will either take years off your life or add them. Here is how CNN summarized remarkable findings from two studies: People who feel younger actually live longer than those who feel their age or older, according to a study in 2015 published in JAMA Internal Medicine online. [ JAMA is the Journal of the American Medical Association .] Another study, this one by researchers from Yale University and the University of California, Berkeley in 2014 found that people who were exposed to positive stereotypes about aging did better on physical tasks, such as balance, than their peers who had worked out for the previous six months. I’m not campaigning for you to adopt positive thoughts as a substitute for physical fitness. Both are good for you. What you may not have heard before, however, is how pervasive the evidence is that your outlook on aging has powerful effects on your health and well-being. Steer far away from discouraging stereotypes about aging! Instead of giving up on life and slowly sliding into decline, take inspiration from older people who are amazing. Here are some examples: • Rock-and-roll music legend Chuck Berry released a new album at age ninety. • Astronaut John Glenn was the oldest person to travel in space at age seventy-seven. That’s not all he did after sixty-five either. He spent a dozen years in Congress as a senator from Ohio. • T. Boone Pickens built one of the largest independent oil companies in America and then reinvented himself as head of a highly successful investment fund. He thinks his third stage of life counts as some of his best years: “Last month I turned 89 years old, mindful of the fact I’m now 24 years beyond traditional retirement age. My post-65 era has included the most productive years of my life.” “ In the end, it’s not the years in your life that count. It’s the life in your years. Solutions • 43