
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
This is an episode of Crush It Mondays. Each week, I’ll bring to you an inspiring message, habit, or contemplation to get your week off to a powerful start. In this week’s episode, I want to talk about aging.
I find it frustrating how our society strongly values youth. I'm still relatively young in life- I turned 36 a few days ago, but I wouldn't go back to my 20s. I value the things that I've learned, the person I've become, the experiences I've had - and I certainly would not trade that to have younger-looking skin or even for a longer runway in front of me. Now, I can understand that some people have a lot of regrets of how they've lived their life or maybe it just isn't what they had hoped for, so the younger days seem more attractive. I don't want to invalidate that. Aging also means loss of loved ones over time, potential illness, and difficult changes in life that I haven't experienced yet. So I don't want to say aging is this glorious, amazing thing all the time.
Last year, a good friend of mine turned 60. She said she was so excited to be 60 because she always knew her best years would be her senior years. I loved hearing her perspective. Now let's look at ways that our society talks about aging to turn it into this menacing thing. One, all advertising is about looking younger. Use this cream, get this surgery, feel like you're 25 again! On TV (and yes, this does sometimes happen in real life too)- an older person pining for someone much younger than them. Showing "old" people as being decrepit, senile, helpless - how many times have you heard someone say "I don't WANT to live to be 100." This is the picture that has been painted of aging. People ashamed to tell others how old they really are... I've made it my intention to always say proudly my age.
So what else can aging look like? For starters, if you take care of yourself- aging will not look like it does on TV. I am always admiring older people who are fit, who like to be learning and trying new things, and who still strive to be better. My parents and also Matt's parents have been a great example of this. My neighbors are also closer to my parent's age and they are always going on bike trips, spending time with friends and family, and look great. Eating with a plant-slant as I've mentioned before and as mentioned in the Blue Zones will help prevent getting things like heart disease and certain types of cancer...and even diseases like dementia and alzheimers. If you want to learn about the habits of people who live to be a healthy 100 years old- the 100-year-old who is still out there exercising, has it all together, and is a healthy image of aging- read Dan Buettner's Blue Zones where he teamed up with National Geographic to find the areas around the world where people live to thrive at age 100.
Another really interesting read I enjoyed was John Robbins' book, "Healthy at 100." This book actually came out before Blue Zones, and it was John's idea that Dan made even bigger. In this book, it follows different people- the Abkhasias, Vilcabambas, Hunzas, and Okinawans where people actually like to make themselves older. In fact, some of the research was difficult because people would lie and say they were 130 years old! Kids always want to be older until a certain point, so when, as adults, do we start trying to make that number smaller and why? People in these places value the elderly and make sure they are not lonely in old age by either having elders live with them or near them. Loneliness, as discovered in John Robbins, researched can kill you faster than cigarettes. For the Abkkhasians, sickness is not considered normal or a natural event in very old age. In Abkhasia, it's an insult when someone tells you you are looking young. In John's
--------------
The Grow the Good Podcast is produced by Palm Tree Pod Co.
4.8
373373 ratings
This is an episode of Crush It Mondays. Each week, I’ll bring to you an inspiring message, habit, or contemplation to get your week off to a powerful start. In this week’s episode, I want to talk about aging.
I find it frustrating how our society strongly values youth. I'm still relatively young in life- I turned 36 a few days ago, but I wouldn't go back to my 20s. I value the things that I've learned, the person I've become, the experiences I've had - and I certainly would not trade that to have younger-looking skin or even for a longer runway in front of me. Now, I can understand that some people have a lot of regrets of how they've lived their life or maybe it just isn't what they had hoped for, so the younger days seem more attractive. I don't want to invalidate that. Aging also means loss of loved ones over time, potential illness, and difficult changes in life that I haven't experienced yet. So I don't want to say aging is this glorious, amazing thing all the time.
Last year, a good friend of mine turned 60. She said she was so excited to be 60 because she always knew her best years would be her senior years. I loved hearing her perspective. Now let's look at ways that our society talks about aging to turn it into this menacing thing. One, all advertising is about looking younger. Use this cream, get this surgery, feel like you're 25 again! On TV (and yes, this does sometimes happen in real life too)- an older person pining for someone much younger than them. Showing "old" people as being decrepit, senile, helpless - how many times have you heard someone say "I don't WANT to live to be 100." This is the picture that has been painted of aging. People ashamed to tell others how old they really are... I've made it my intention to always say proudly my age.
So what else can aging look like? For starters, if you take care of yourself- aging will not look like it does on TV. I am always admiring older people who are fit, who like to be learning and trying new things, and who still strive to be better. My parents and also Matt's parents have been a great example of this. My neighbors are also closer to my parent's age and they are always going on bike trips, spending time with friends and family, and look great. Eating with a plant-slant as I've mentioned before and as mentioned in the Blue Zones will help prevent getting things like heart disease and certain types of cancer...and even diseases like dementia and alzheimers. If you want to learn about the habits of people who live to be a healthy 100 years old- the 100-year-old who is still out there exercising, has it all together, and is a healthy image of aging- read Dan Buettner's Blue Zones where he teamed up with National Geographic to find the areas around the world where people live to thrive at age 100.
Another really interesting read I enjoyed was John Robbins' book, "Healthy at 100." This book actually came out before Blue Zones, and it was John's idea that Dan made even bigger. In this book, it follows different people- the Abkhasias, Vilcabambas, Hunzas, and Okinawans where people actually like to make themselves older. In fact, some of the research was difficult because people would lie and say they were 130 years old! Kids always want to be older until a certain point, so when, as adults, do we start trying to make that number smaller and why? People in these places value the elderly and make sure they are not lonely in old age by either having elders live with them or near them. Loneliness, as discovered in John Robbins, researched can kill you faster than cigarettes. For the Abkkhasians, sickness is not considered normal or a natural event in very old age. In Abkhasia, it's an insult when someone tells you you are looking young. In John's
--------------
The Grow the Good Podcast is produced by Palm Tree Pod Co.
11,852 Listeners
21,107 Listeners
5,345 Listeners
1,099 Listeners
1,292 Listeners
946 Listeners
7,037 Listeners
8,016 Listeners
656 Listeners
655 Listeners
2,310 Listeners
28,585 Listeners
1,145 Listeners
912 Listeners
19,405 Listeners