We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Pro-Aging: Why the Best is Yet to Come with Ashton Applewhite.
Episode Date: March 24, 20221. Why we’ve been sold a lie–and the truth that we actually get happier the older we get! 2. The two most important–and shocking–predictors of aging well. 3. Busting the most prevalent misconc...eptions and about getting older. 4. How believing the myths about aging literally harms our health and makes us more vulnerable to the fears we hold about aging. 5. Glennon paints a mental picture of her older self–and encourages the Pod Squad to do the same. About Ashton: The author of This Chair Rocks: A Manifesto Against Ageism, Ashton Applewhite is a leading spokesperson for the emerging movement to raise awareness of ageism and to dismantle it. A co-founder of the Old School Anti-Ageism Clearinghouse, she has been recognized by the New York Times, the New Yorker, National Public Radio, and the American Society on Aging as an expert on ageism. Ashton has written for Harper’s, the Guardian, and the New York Times, blogs at This Chair Rocks, and is the voice of Yo, Is This Ageist? She speaks widely at venues that have ranged from colleges and symposia to the TED mainstage and the United Nations. In 2022 she appeared on HelpAgeUSA’s inaugural 60 Over 60 List and on Fe:maleOneZero’s first international edition of 40 over 40 – The World’s Most Inspiring Women. Twitter: @thischairrocks Instagram: @thischairrocks To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Whether you're doing a dance to your favorite artist in the office parking lot,
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Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. Once again, we are delighted and baffled
that you keep returning to listen to us talk.
It's just a huge surprise and great joy of our life.
And another huge joy of our life is aging.
We at We Can Do Hard Things are pro-aging. We are excited about aging. We are for it.
As we discussed on the last podcast, the alternative to aging is death. And also, there's just so much power and beauty to be found in aging itself. Aging equals best case scenario. Okay. So today we are going to
celebrate aging because we would like to continue doing it. Okay. And so what I want to start with is this very cool thing, which is that a lot of people
ask us about the paintings behind us.
As we sit on this couch, speaking to you on this podcast, if you want to see the paintings,
you can go to our Instagram and check them out.
They're absolutely beautiful.
And so what I want to tell you about these paintings is that the woman who painted
them, her name is Mary Ann Flynn Fouse, and she painted them when she was 80 years old.
She is now 86 years old. She is unflippin' believable.
unflippin' believable.
She says of her work, she's just her quote when she was 80.
I'm a fan of doing something new. Mentally, I'm still very modern.
So, the art that inspires us each day in our office
and you as those of you who watch the podcast
on our Instagram feed is made by an 80 year old badass.
So great.
And so the theme of this podcast is one thing
that I read in our guest today's book,
what 88 year old folk artist, Marcia Mooth said,
you are never too old and it is never too late.
I feel that.
Yes.
It's good.
So to discuss all of this beautiful, this beautiful situation we have, which is getting
older, which is for the lucky ones, we have today, Ashton Appalwaite, who is the author
of this chair rocks a manifesto against ageism.
Ashton Apple White is a leading spokesperson for the emerging movement to raise awareness of ageism and to dismantle it.
A co-founder of the old school anti-ageism clearinghouse.
She's been recognized by the New York Times, the New Yorker, National Public Radio, and the American Society on Aging as an expert on
Agism. Ashton blogs at this chair rocks is the voice of yo, is this Agist and has spoken on
the Ted Main stage and at the United Nations. Welcome, Ashton. Yay! Thank you! To be here. Ashton,
on this podcast, we believe that often the thing that screws us up the most is the
picture in our head of how things are supposed to be.
And it seems that, in addition to individual and structural ageism, discrimination, it's
the picture in our head of what aging is that seems to be screwing a lot of us up. And so we are
thrilled that you are here to tell us that that picture of aging in our head is wrong. So can you
share with us what do we get wrong? What are some of the predominant myths and stereotypes about aging that are just simply not true.
I'm happy to.
I wouldn't say that anyone's attitude is wrong,
because of course there's no binaries,
and it depends on what your fears are
and what your circumstances are, of course.
That's right.
I would say, well, the most annoying stereotype
about aging is the mother of all stereotypes,
which means grouping thinking of a group as the same, all members of a
group are the same. We grow more different from each other as
we age. Every newborn is unique, every 17 year old is
different, but they are way more alike, the developed
mentally, socially, cognitively than 37 year olds who are a
way more alike than 67 year olds and so on out.
All stereotypes are wrong and misinformed, but the idea that old people are alike is particularly
misinformed.
I would say there, another really common misconception is that older people are incompetent,
that we are not interested in new things, that we're not creative as you pointed out about
the artist
who made those beautiful paintings.
My guess is she was creative at four,
she was creative at 40,
and she's gonna be creative at 90.
We don't turn into some weird thing.
We just become more distilled versions of ourselves.
It's why I chose, as the epigraph to my book,
a quote by the wonderful writer Ann Lamotte,
which is that we contain all the ages we have ever been. And so I would say, act to your question,
we have, because we are bombarded, all of us, we all have these ideas inside us, no judgment,
but we are bombarded by negative messages about age and ageing from childhood on,
starting with children's books and Disney movies.
And if we don't stop to question them, they become part of our identity.
And there are real losses.
They're genuine thanks to worry about. I'm not a polyanna.
But we only hear the negative side of the story.
So I would say that it's important to acknowledge the things that we gain and the ways that aging
enriches our lives in addition to some of the fears and the losses which likewise are
different for each of us.
And in your book you talk about, you know, we all think we're going to end up in a nursing
home, but what are the numbers for that?
Thank you for asking me that question.
I love that. Thank you for asking me that question. I love that. When I gave my TED Talk four years ago,
four years ago, I think the percentage of Americans over 65 in nursing homes, not all senior
residents, I mean, I would have pegged it starting out at 20 or 30% was 4%. Since then, it has dropped
to 2.5%. Wow. It continues to decline.
Right.
It's not that our fears aren't real.
It's that they are so out of proportion to the reality.
And that's a perfect example.
And dementia, right?
We all think we're going to lose our cognitive ability.
Uh-oh.
You stammered there.
That's a very bad sign.
That's what happens.
We can get a grip.
I can't find my keys, then I'm not
going to know my dog by Tuesday.
Yeah, it's not the case.
10% of the population ends up with Alzheimer's.
That's according to the Alzheimer's Association.
It's a terrible disease.
That's a big number.
But most of them are in their late 80s and 90s, right?
Age is the biggest risk factor. What we don't talk about though is the 20% of the population
escapes cognitive decline entirely. We all know some of those really sharp, 90-year-olds, right?
And that most of us will lose some processing speed. Some of, you know, the name of the movie you saw with what's your name, but that is as bad
as it gets.
For the vast, vast, vast majority of us, you can find your keys.
You'll find them in the morning.
If you can't remember what keys are for, you know, or some, that's a problem.
But guess what?
Kids forget things too.
All the time. And really, interestingly, our attitudes
towards aging affect how our minds and bodies function. And my favorite study, and this is
Blue Chip Science done by Becca Levy at Yale University, shows that people with, it's often framed
as positive attitudes towards aging, which I don't like because it sounds like happy think.
Let's ignore the scary shit.
People with fact rather than fear-based attitudes towards aging
are less likely to get Alzheimer's even if they have the gene
that predisposes them to the disease.
Whoa.
That blew my mind.
I just want every, let us stop and just really take that in.
Ageism is not just wrong because you're treating older people in a discriminatory way.
You are actually by adopting these negative views of aging. You are literally hurting yourself.
You are hastening bad outcomes for yourself by thinking badly about aging.
You are making yourself more vulnerable to what you fear.
Agism absolutely harms our health.
In addition to harming our sense of self, our sense of ourselves as competent, as attractive,
as employable, as socially and economically valuable and on and on and on.
And, ageism is any judgment on the basis of age,
including your two young and younger people,
encounter a lot of it,
although less than older people
because we live in such a youth obsessed society.
So truly, it casts a shadow across our entire lives.
Yeah, and it's almost like the age of older people, I think
contributes to the age of younger people because when people
dismiss older people, we get pissed off. And then we want to just
put down the younger people. It's like, it's like an ageism, I'm
rubber, your glue situation. Right. It's like, okay, boomers
versus OMG millennials. Right. And there were just not helping it out. Yeah.
In my rainbow pony unicorn universe, we would, we would not use generational labels at all.
They have no scientific basis. The whole concept of generational warfare was invented by right wing think tanks in the 1970s.
I write about all this on my blog, which is free, searchable by topic.
So you can look up the research or a lot of it's in my book.
Was everything terrible created by right wing?
In fact, in the 80s.
Also in fairness, journalists love generational labels and marketers love generational labels, but they have no
scientific basis.
They obviously foster stereotyping, as though everyone born between your ex and your wife shares
the same set of characteristics, when class by far engender and race and geography have
much, much, much more of an effect on shaping our trajectories through life,
but it's irresistible.
Like clickbait, like six annoying things, you know, millennials do.
And it's really hard not to click on it.
And then you're right away in an us versus them mindset that is really counterproductive
and divisive and destructive.
and destructive and man. I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I wanna talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing,
and strangely intimate things about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner,
I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows
that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
I want to go back to the ideas that we have that are not right, because if we want to change
those ideas for many reasons, to free ourselves from, then to free others from these stereotypes.
It's important to actually change our ideas in our head.
So I think a lot of us think as we get older,
we will become less happy because of all of these other factors.
So can you talk to us as another wrong idea
we have in our head about the u-curve of happiness?
You bet.
I mean, I didn't know any of this 15 years ago when I started out researching.
And one of the things I encountered really early on was something that's called the u-curve
of happiness. You bend if you're British, which shows that people are happiest in the beginnings
and the ends of their lives. And I cannot tell you how skeptical I was.
I thought they must have cornered to 80-year-olds
and given them a cookie and said, how are you doing?
Then I thought, well, it must be true if you're healthy
or if you're wealthy.
And this data shows, obtains across race,
across class, everywhere in the world.
And it is a function of the way aging itself
affects the brain, the healthy brain,
because we get better at not sweating the small stuff and having a longer view. It's
a relates they did a the Stanford longevity center did a study. They started it right
before the pandemic coincidentally. So they had the, you know, the parameters in place.
And they learned that older people
despite being more isolated and obviously a greater risk of dying from COVID were more
resilient simply because they had lived through more stuff and it was easier to imagine
getting through it. Wow. So interesting. I was looking at that study too because I saw it
Interesting. I was looking at that study too,
because I saw it reference in some of your work.
And it was interesting the way they described it
as, you know, we talk about happiness kind of a shorthand,
but the researchers were using the word savoring,
like almost able to, not that there's just happy joy
all the time, but this ability to kind of savor the moments,
and it's as if we would think the closer we get,
theoretically to death, although, you know,
it could be tomorrow for any of us,
but the closer we get that we would be more afraid of death.
But actually, that is the opposite as well, right?
It's kind of counterintuitive.
I mean, I love the way you put this
because I remember thinking heading into this,
like it's all gonna suck.
And one of the things that's gonna be the most awful,
I had this mental image of the shadow of the grim reaper,
you know, stretching across the sad iron bedstead
in which the old person coward.
And the anxiety about dying grows less
as we get older older people don't want to die. They especially don't want to die in pain,
but they don't think about it a lot. And as you figured out, I think, or intuitive, it relates to
that business of living in the present. Kids live in the present because they don't have the experience or cognitive ability to
do anything else.
Older people live in the present as a conscious choice when we are more careful about how
we spend our time, who we want to spend it with, and are just better at living in the
moment.
Just not, you don't have to be a Buddhist or a billionaire.
It's again, it's just a function of the way it happens. For most of us, there are exceptions. My mother-in-law used to say, she's just
frankly didn't believe me, you know, and I would say to her husband, how's it going? He said, I'm happy.
And she was not so happy. She was not so good at living in the moment. There are always exceptions,
but this is how it pans out for the vast majority
of people on earth. It's comforting. It's so comforting. Getting
all of us is complicated. I was thinking about the title of your podcast, we can do hard things,
and how it sort of bumped into one of my least favorite things, which is old age isn't for sissies.
Well, we're the misogynistic, homophobic, and age is all in one sentence.
We all get older unless we die as you pointed out, although that phrase, like old age beats the
alternative, I used to think that and I wait, thought, wait, all what that really means is the only
thing worse than being old is being dead. Right. That's a nice fair point. Fair point.
But we all get older, right?
It's not, it is a hard thing, but it is a universal thing.
And the ways in which we adapt are available to most of us.
There are things that help, but they're not necessarily
the obvious thing.
For example, the most important component of aging well is not health, which is what I would
surely have guessed. And then I thought, well, money, obviously. It's having a solid social network.
Oh my God, it just keeps coming back to this for God's sakes. We're women have advantage and that
doesn't have to do with how wealthy you are, right? Even how healthy you are. It's how you are in the
world, which is of course the subject of your podcast. Oh, so talk to me about that because that hit us when we were
discussing your work, that the two predictors of how you will deal with aging are how you feel about
aging and your social network, not your genes, not your whatever. So talk to us about that. Who are these magical
people? What type of social network do they have that makes them age whatever? What do you
even say? Well, better? How do you age good? I say well. Or yeah, you know, I try and,
you know, fudge that one because one of us until age is different.
You know, if you're in athlete, looking, I'm looking at you, Abby.
Right.
You know, the loss of physical function is of a specific kind.
You know, you may still have great sex, but not be able to run fast or whatever it happens
to be.
She knows it.
She knows it.
She knows it.
For catch potatoes like me, you know, the fact that I can't kick a soccer ball anymore
is not a loss.
But for someone else, it is.
Again, it's so it's totally individual.
And the kind of, you know, I feel like you know the answer to your question better than
I do because it is really genuinely unique to each of us.
Some people want to be around kids.
Other people don't want to.
Some people want to be out in. Other people don't want to. Some people
want to be out in nature. Other people don't care. We may not be able to do all the things we used to
do in the same way that we did them when we were young, but we can do versions of them
if they're important. Yes. It's almost like the way that I feel about what you just said is
all of us have our specific personal identities. What makes us us. Like for instance, you speak to like
my athleticism. It's interesting because I feel like the things that make us us as we get older,
if those things go away, then who are we inside, right? So this last year, I've been dedicating myself to learn how to physically work out that is in a way that
is less suffering, so that I don't, and I'm not holding on to the identity of suffering
as a form of my own personal sense of who I am, because I do think that as I get older
and I start losing some of these capacities, whether it's being able to run. I mean, I traveled so many miles on my legs, right?
Like having replacements and all of the things.
Like, I have to actually prepare myself for whatever kind of future in terms of the life
that I've lived and also the person that I think that I am and the identities that I carry
with me.
So it's really interesting. I think for athletes and dancers,
and there are probably other categories
that don't occur to me, the task is the hardest.
They're only two inevitable bad things about getting older.
People you've known all your life are gonna die.
And some part of your body is gonna fall apart.
So for people whose identity is bound up
in physical accomplishment,
that is a really tough task.
For people like me who sit and type all the time,
that's less of a time that I might be more invested
in not having wrinkles, right?
Or some other component,
there's no component of our identity
that aging doesn't potentially affect,
but aging is living, right? It's how
we move through life. But I salute you for being proactive and seeing that there will be advantages
to training in a different way and relating to your body in a different way. The losses are real.
But there are also gains in what you learn about your body, how your body works, and those will pay off, you know, for the rest of your life. Question, you mentioned just now that the things that are inevitable
are those two things will change and then also that we will lose people, people will die who we love.
That we've known all our life. We've known all of our life. So make younger friends.
Yes, that's real. And that also speaks to something you mentioned about pointing fingers at boomers and millennials.
If we have more younger friends, we remember how hard it is to be young.
Oh, yes.
It's easy to forget that, especially in a culture that bombard you with messages that because
you're getting older, becoming, you know, hideous and useless, right? And I think especially for women where we have the double whammy of ageism and sexism,
that's so linked to being punished if we appear to visibly age, with younger women around older
women like me, like us, who really enjoy being the age we are and find power and confidence in it,
they'd be less afraid of getting older
and wake up earlier how much of our youth
we squander on worrying about it.
Wow, I love that idea.
That if we hang out with people in dip,
because we segregate ourselves unbelievably,
especially in this country.
It's a very age-segregated society.
It's not, you know, we all do.
Yeah, it's like we are committed to only hanging out with people
who know as little as we do.
Right.
And that's it.
Like, nobody younger, nobody older, but if we did, we would see each other.
I always wonder if that's why I might have some more joy about getting older because
so many people write to me about their lives that I read letters from 20 and 30
year olds constantly. So I'm remembering every day how freaking hard it is. And I, how I wouldn't
go back there for any of the reasons it's hard is because of this culturally induced sort of
brainwashing about how awful it's going to be. Right. So there's no basis. Do you know any cultures who are doing it right?
Because we were talking about intergenerational living and how that is such a uncommon thing in
American culture, but in fact that helps people in many ways. Yeah. I mean, contact with people
of different ages. It's pretty hard. It's pretty hard to hang on to any kind of stereotype.
If you're mixing it up with people who embody that stereotype, who guess what?
Are all different from each other and some are jerks and some are great.
Older people, I mean, there are lots of older people that don't seem to have learned a thing along the way.
I've got you've learned almost as much from the 20-somethings you deal with as the older side.
I don't think wisdom and aging
are coupled. But as far as doing it right, it's less a question of cultures. There are cultures
that especially everyone looks sort of wistfully eastward when they ask me that question, as that was
all great in countries where they were, or I should say, cultures where there is confusionism, ancestor worship, and there those are indigenous cultures all around the world in the US as well, where older people are held up and even revered.
though that the world I want to live in doesn't hold older people as more valuable or less valuable. Cultures like the early United States was a gerontocracy. Older people
held at all the power, older white men, shocker. And it was this was a world in which it was
not great to be young. You had to wait for your older brothers to die off if you wanted to inherit that
anything. So I want a world of age equity where neither older nor younger people have inherent
better more value than the other and we can support people across the lifespan. Living in mixed
age communities is absolutely a wonderful thing. We see it more, more than in different specific cultures, we see it in communities, smaller
villages, places where the older people aren't, you know, sheltered away or hidden, and
people remain in community.
So in order to do that, we'd have to get rid of ageism, and I want to talk about what
it really is.
You've said, like racism and sexism,
ageism is not about how we look.
It's about what people empower, want our appearance to mean.
Oof.
Can you just talk to us about that?
That's kind of an oof or the idea.
It's an oof.
All prejudice operates to pit people against each other
every form, whether it's sort of the Marxist example
of factory workers from different countries.
If they're fighting, then factory owners
can continue to exploit them.
Same with older workers and younger workers
arguing about who's better.
Then employers can fire the old people who have higher salaries and
higher younger people who then,
PS typically, you know, quit.
And so there's much higher turnover,
which then old people say,
oh, those disloyal millennials will guess what?
When we were that age, we did the same thing.
Has nothing to do with when you were born,
has to do with the age you are.
But that's an example of really unhelpful generational finger pointing.
So all prejudice, the gender wage gap persists because it's profitable.
Hello capitalism.
And as long as women are arguing about who's a better mom, if you're in the paid workforce,
are you stay home or not joining forces to close the gender gap. So women can choose whether or not to stay home. And all versus young is just another contrived
divide to keep us squabbling and divided so that we don't join forces against the status
quo. Amen. And so it's political. And you just said it's political, but it's political. They said everything you just said, it's political, but it's also come and it's also completely
rooted in capitalism because aging contentedly does not sell, right?
Unless it's like a pillow company.
It's good.
Like money off satisfaction.
No, that's right.
They have to keep us on this hamster wheel of being scared to death of aging.
So we will buy their
shit that will help us somehow not age. That's why I think you buy. Yeah, good luck with that.
Anti-aging, right? I read that it's eight by two thousand thirty. It's going to be a four hundred
billion dollar industry worldwide. And it's basically rooted in self-loathing. We all have those
moments. I mean, I look in the mirror and I, sometimes it is like,
what the hell happened?
But then I think about what did happen.
It is a real challenge to question that narrative
in a society where every magazine, every billboard
reinforces this incredibly artificial, expensive,
elitist, white, thin, blonde standard of so-called
beauty, and pushing back against it is the work of a lifetime.
And it can only be engaged in with others.
But when you start to see the messages and where they come from and then step back again and referencing your really good
question to what purpose they serve, right, to make us spend money, to make us divide it, to make
us walk in the room and think, you know, was she's had work done or I want to help, she is all that
stuff, which we all do. Oh, judgment, but it's not healthy. It doesn't serve our own interests collectively or individually.
If you think about it for the purpose of this discussion,
which is, and I'm always aware because the minute
we start talking about women's appearance,
we are reinforcing the idea that it's more important
than it should be, but in this context,
if you think if the goal lot of women talk about
becoming invisible, you know,
if the goal is to women talk about becoming invisible, you know, if the goal is to be perceived
as sexually attractive, look at your friends who are sexually active. They're not the thinnest,
they're not the prettiest, they're not the youngest, they're some of the women who listen to this
podcast to what you say about doing the work on yourself to understand and reach for what is genuinely good for you, right?
And to beat back this idea of a norm.
So what we learn from all those things, like what we learn from raising awareness of our
own internalized racism or homophobia, those processes are all analogous.
If you're doing work on any of those fronts, they will help you think more holistically and realistically
about getting older too.
It's just like that moment of self hatred and then questioning it.
I have that all the time.
And that's what any prejudice is or is a miss, right?
It's like the moment of like fear or dislike or you are different than me or I don't like
you.
It's, that's your conditioning, fear of other or self
is never our true or self.
That's our conditioning.
So learn, yeah.
Instead of going with that knee jerk reaction,
it's questioning it.
And with ageism, it's often in ourselves.
Like I was looking in a mirror the other day
and was just noticing that my neck was looking a little bit different
and then was thinking about the Nora Efron, like I feel bad about my neck book, which made me remember Nora Efron and made me very happy.
But it's just that. It was that moment of like, oh wait, who taught me that my neck's not supposed to look like this?
And then who benefits if I believe that?
That's right. Exactly. There's a great quote by Amos Wilson.
I believe his name is, he's a professor.
And he says, if you want to understand any problem in America,
don't look at who suffers from it. Look at who profits from it.
Yes.
There we go.
Wherever there's suffering, there is profit right up the river.
That's exactly always true.
The hardest part is to look at your own attitudes. In this case towards age and aging because
no one wants to acknowledge that they're biased. It's uncomfortable. We're all biased.
But the cool thing is, and this is what consciousness raising did for women in the 70s, is that once you
come together and share your experiences, you realize like,
oh, it's not me, it's not that my tits are too small
or my husband is a particularly jerky
or my boss is particularly awful.
These are widely shared social and political experiences
that we can come together and do something about it.
And that is really liberating.
Cause then you start to see
the forces, you see it in the culture. And so it's getting past that initial moment of looking at your
own brainwashing and collusion. I know that's a complicated idea. And I don't want to blame people
for their own, you know, hardships. But we do have to look at that to get started. And then you're
often running. Then you're often running that sister's level language,
you just said, that's the whole point of this podcast,
by the way, Ashen.
It's just the idea that when women tell their stories
to each other, they start to learn that everything is political
and everything is capitalism.
And they start to learn, oh, it's not me, it's them.
We could have named the podcast that.
It's not you, it's them. We could have named the podcast that. It's not you. It's them.
Also, it feels like one of the last forms of discrimination where we
unabashedly engage in self-pleasing and policing of others. You know, we can check ourselves now when we're policing people's gender.
We've become an awareness, but we still consume these lists of what not to wear over 30
or what level of sexiness or boldness is allowed from people who are 40 and 50 and 60 around us.
I will catch myself putting on a shirt.
If it's too high and I'm like, I'm 42.
42 year olds wear the shirt?
Like, what is that?
We're doing the work of the system on ourselves,
but you've been asking that question.
That's a crazy-ass question to ask.
There's no shirt 42 year olds wear.
That's right.
There's no such thing as age-appropriate
except for children. Period.
And speaking of children, I had this wild situation
which I'm so interested what you think about this
because it just came to me yesterday.
I was in the park with my daughter, my then five-year-old daughter,
and she walked up to a mom in the park and she says, hi, I'm Alice, I'm five, this is Amanda, she's 42.
And she said, what's your name and how old are you?
And the lady clearly did not want anything to do with this question.
And so we got through this awkward moment and we were walking away from the park and it
was really upsetting to me because it felt
like, it felt like what a mom was supposed to do in that situation was tell their daughter it's not
polite to ask people's age. But I couldn't do it because it was, it felt like introducing a her that that was not in her mind, that the idea that there is shame around having lived
more years and therefore we don't ask people how old they are.
Yeah.
Why do you think it was at the top of her mind?
I think she just, I think it's how she identifies herself.
She's trying to be friendly.
It's what she knows to say about herself.
I think it's because I'm five.
Adults don't know how to talk to kids.
I was an elementary school teacher
and adults don't know what the hell to say to children.
It's like little aliens have walked up to them.
Adults lose their mind and they only know two things.
They know how old are you
and what do you wanna be when you grow up?
Yes.
Right, right.
And I do like the idea.
I mean, I have a friend who says
if you're gonna ask a kid how old they are, that's fine, but you should say how old you are too, which I really like that idea, right? Just put it out there as a neutral identifier. I mean, all this stuff is is it's so interesting and so unexamined, you know, so the more we talk about it the more I guarantee the deeper you go, the more interesting it is. How do you answer the question? How old are you? Is not so simple because I think
it's important to say how old we are, great work around to say I was born in 1952, which
confuses the person who asked the question if they can't do math like me. And it's so
it short circuits the fixed meanings that we all attach to a number the minute we have it.
And it puts the the proper thing forward, which is, oh, she's been around for a while. She must have seen stuff.
That's so good.
Oh, that's so cool.
Yeah.
It's going around now.
I've been born in 1980.
Plus, you can remember it.
I am for you.
You have the other hand.
We also want to push back and say, well,
why do you want to know? You know, I'll tell you, this is not
the exactly cocktail party, you know, casual, church, I'm happy to
tell you, if you tell me what changes in your mind when you have
the number, or if you'll think about why you want to know, it's a
little like asking like, you like asking white people typically saying,
oh, where are you from?
Which is not a question we typically ask of a white person.
Right?
So I want a world in which age is both out there
and yet reduced in value because it says so little about a person.
Yeah. In fact, it says so little about a person.
In fact, it says a lot less about what you have in common,
what you're interested in than we think it does.
Because all that generational labeling
and the older the person is,
the less it reveals about them.
That starts with ageism of all of us,
saying to your daughter over and over again, how old are you?
Because all she's doing
is parroting back to the culture what the culture has taught her is important about human beings.
Because she really is more sick. Childhood is different because we've changed so much in every year
and because what is appropriate for an eight-year-old is not appropriate for a four-year-old.
What's appropriate for a 38-year- What's appropriate for a 38 year old is appropriate
for a 34 year old.
So, it's a little problematic to extrapolate from childhood out,
but I encourage you to do so from any stage in adulthood
to another stage in adulthood
because the frames of reference stop,
they're just obsolete.
They box us in, they're irrelevant.
Like those dumb marketing checklists that say what you know products
I think stitch fix had something that like had these incredibly small age categories what you know 24 to 26 year olds
We're wearing and 26 and then it's stitch fix. I believe I'm not sure it was stitchers. It was age 40 and up
Marketing checklist routinely end at 65 as though everyone over 65 does the same
stuff. It's like, when in fact diversity increases. Yeah. They might as well have said 40 or even more
irrelevant. But I just want to circle back to what you said, sister, the thing about Alice, I just
think is so important because those questions we ask children, I think are relevantory
of both those questions of the ageism in our country because we say to children, how old
are you and what are you going to be when you grow up?
We tell them by those questions that what matters is your age and also what you're going
to be between the time you're 25 and 50.
Your identity, all we care about is what you're gonna be
when you grow up, is your career, right?
And we tell kids that's all that matters about them.
It's so freaking weird.
And then we don't even know what we wanna be in five years,
but we ask these little five-year-olds,
the important thing about you is your career.
Tell me five-year-old what your career is going to be.
And believe me, at 50 or at 65, or in my case, I'm about to turn 70, I had never, never
never did know what I was going to be when I grew up.
But the idea of things ending, or there being any fixed transition attached to a chronological age,
becomes increasingly less valid and accurate over time.
I think that I was just going to interrupt you.
And I want to actually clarify.
That's why I just stopped you and grabbed your hand.
I know, but I want to clarify, if what I was about to do is Aegis, because I think that we do
this a lot. I think that we do this a lot.
I think that you said you're coming up on 70 and I was like, oh my gosh, over here,
because to me, you don't look 70.
I think what I was just doing was so fucking Aegis
that I apologize and also like,
how, why do we do that?
Why is that so important to me?
Why was it important to me to let you know?
That is the question.
How do you look?
So here we are back to women's appearances,
but let's talk about it.
Absolutely.
You certainly don't owe me an apology,
but on the other hand,
I have worked hard to learn not to accept that
as a compliment because if I do accept it, it's at the expense of everyone else who's also 70 and look 70, we all look the age we are just in thing I've, the one good snappy answer I've come up with is when someone says
you don't look great, so you don't look your age either, you know.
Yeah.
Thank you for showing that.
That's it.
That's why the reason it comes across as a compliment and why it is well-meaning on your
part, which of course does not let you off the hook, as you already know, is
because we live in a society that worships you.
Yeah.
It's like you said.
Thank you.
It's like somebody says you're so thin.
Or I just want to say thank you.
What?
If I say thank you, that means I'm accepting that thinness is a goal or that we're worshiping
thinness.
And also, there's a whole thing in there where
somebody says you look younger than your age. It is shocked by it. It might be somebody who spends
a lot of their wild, reprecious life on this earth, desperately trying to anti-age.
Yeah.
Do we want to make that valorous?
Same with thinness. Like when people say you're so thin, what I want to do sometimes say now is, oh, yeah, I have a raging eating disorder.
That ends the conversation real fast.
I have a friend who's about to give birth and she is, you know, she's, she's, her whole body looks lenders for the giant belly.
And when people say she looks great by which they mean she looks then, she says well throwing up for the first
six months really, really helped.
Yeah.
Because she has really bad feelings for six forever.
I like those responses because they kind of like bring a disc equilibrium about like,
oh yeah, that must be interesting.
Here's the price that some of us pay for the cultural obsession with that.
There's a lot of analogies between the body acceptance
movement and the pro-aging movement. Can you talk about women and invisibility?
Because this is another thing that I am feeling really excited about, which people
usually talk about as a negative. Can you talk to us about women feeling like in
our culture we become invisible? Yeah, I mean, I'll score a little bit on that one because it is, I think related for most of us,
you know, in, well, I was going to say had our normative terms, but my daughter happens to be a
lesbian. And I remember saying to her long ago, tell me it's better. Tell me lesbians are not so judgey about appearances
on our more generous and forgiving to other women.
And she said, get over it, Ma.
We all want to be with the cute girl at the bar.
Ah, okay.
Oh.
But, um, D.
D.
The reason I'm uncomfortable talking about it for one thing
is that I never was, Vava Vumi, I never was invested in my appearance that way in turning heads when I entered the room.
If I ever did, I was too clueless to notice it. So I didn't experience that as a loss,
which makes me anomalous and therefore less qualified to comment on other people's experience.
And also, it's complicated because I do think there's a complicated
notion of complicity, which I already touched on. I don't ever want to say you're responsible
for your problems, right? But we are only invisible in terms of our self-worth and our identity if
we accept that idea on the terms of other people and those are the terms of patriarchy,
misogyny and capitalism. But it is very painful for a lot of women, but part of making it less painful
and even a source of power is working, doing the work to divorce our sense of attractiveness
and power. Think again about who's getting laid from these typical standard evil normative patterns of what the culture wants
us to value in terms of our appearance in particular.
And tell us again who's getting laid.
I want to just reiterate that not the finish, not the youngest, not the prettiest, but the
people who know their lovers are lucky.
Oh, shit.
That's so good. Oh, I love that.
So, you were going to jump in. What did you want to say?
I always thought that invisibility thing is so interesting because the idea of invisibility
is predicated on the male gaze.
Pretty right? Like if we're if we're thinking
that's true, That's true.
That's true.
That is how I think of it almost all the time.
I agree.
But I don't think-
And it's just the visual.
I'm talking about invisibility as a wider thing in terms of middle age and over a- older
women being invisible and at a table, at a- at a meeting, at a-
So am I.
Right.
I'm talking about the same thing. But that's on that
suggests there's only one group in power to give the attention and the gaze and the power.
Whereas I mean older people are the largest group in America if we knew our value in ourselves
and looked at each other and pointed the gaze both in the power and the attention and the value
Who the hell's invisible now?
So we would be worrying about being visible and we would be worried about seeing
Invisible to her non-whistar. Yes
Exactly exactly
one of the biggest fears
of value of my life which was super challenged by your work, is my independence.
So I think a big fear of getting older is this idea of losing my independence and being
dependent on others. So it was really interesting to read about the myth of independence.
And then it occurred to me as I was reading that, I was thinking about assisted living homes
and how that is such a fear for me.
And then I was thinking assisted living sounds amazing.
That's right.
All of my life has been assisted living.
That's right.
I've been assisted this whole time.
So stealing that. Please do. I've been assisted this whole time. So stealing that, please do.
I love that.
It's like a great quote, one of my favorite quotes
in the book by a Dutch gerontologist named Jan Barr's,
autonomy requires collaborators.
We are interdependent from childhood on.
When you need a lot of assistance, when you're in diapers,
when you are caring for people who are in diapers, whether they're two or 102, you need assistance.
And I'm really glad you pointed it because I do think that is the most important chapter
of the book.
Is this there's this whole myth and it's fostered by of course capitalism that you are aging
successfully.
Air quotes around that. If you are running up the stairs, driving at night,
doing in essence, not aging, right?
Which costs money and involves luck.
You know, sushi, leisure, gyms,
though all those things cost money.
No one is independent ever.
And when we stigmatize it, we make it more fearful.
And I want to make a sort of wonky distinction here
between ageism, which is prejudice and discrimination
on the basis of age and ableism,
which is prejudice and discrimination
on the basis of physical or cognitive function.
A lot of what we think of as ageism
is the kind of fear each of us has alluded to
in this conversation, fear of losing some
kind of physical or cognitive function, leading to needing more help from people on terms
that we have less control over than we used to, right? That's actually ableism, right?
People and people live with beautiful, meaningful lives with disability from birth onward.
It's different to age into disability versus being
born with it and so on.
But if we acknowledge and think more about the overlap and join forces, I mean, some of
these people in disability, justice who are almost all young queer women of color, they
are badass.
And they celebrate interdependence. So think what we could learn from them about adapting to impairment and about solidarity and
about feeling, you know, refusing to feel shame and instead feeling proud, I read a great
quote, living with disability is a creative act.
How gorgeous is that, right?
So instead of going, you know, as it is now, you don't want to think about being old, don't want to think about being disabled and really don't want to think about how they come together, think of the power and acknowledging not only where they're different, but where they overlap what we can learn from that and how we can join forces and reducing. I love that. It's so important to me. It's so important.
I have such a fear of dying, but it feels like this is the proactive research-based information
that I need to curb some of those death and aging, because I think that's also part
of death.
It's the aging process.
They're so linked.
Let me say one thing on that, because people use that line of thought,
which I'm not saying you're doing Abby,
to rationalize ages.
I'm saying it's natural, or it's okay,
because we're gonna die,
and it's about fear of dying.
Old people are reminders of mortality.
Of course, there's an element of truth in that,
but I think the conflation of the two
is a function of ageism.
Don't wanna think about getting older, don two is a function of ageism. Don't want to think about getting older.
Don't want to think about dying.
Yes.
We are aging from the minute we're born.
It's not something annoying that old people do.
And dying is a discrete biological event at the end of all that living.
People may look at me and think I'm agent,
but they don't look at me and think I'm agent, but they don't look at me and
think I'm dying. But it's really important to talk about getting older because it paves the
way to talking about dying, which is really, really, really important. And I love talking, I actually
love talking about dying too, but excellent. Can we just ask you on so much? I do. I do. Can you
ask me one question before we jump into these cues that we have from the pot squad
for you.
You do talk about, it is an inevitability that we will lose people we've known for a long
time.
Do you see an approach to that, that inevitable loss of other people that brings power
and peace to aging people as opposed to panic and resistance. Is there an
approach that you've seen to loot to loss that leads to more peaceful second half? I hope this
doesn't sound like a cop out, but I think it's individual. I think it depends on how your community, you know, one serious, you know, drawback of like white middle class culture, which is mine is this shortage of ritual and shared experience.
I mean, look at day of the dead in Mexico. I would love to have one day a year where I could go back and party on my mom's grave, you'll connect it to her, which I'm sure would be cultural appropriation
of the word sort or whatever, but we have a posity of ritual.
It's not all ageism.
These long lives are new.
So we need to invent rituals and transitions.
In Japan, they celebrate your 60th birthday.
It's viewed as this time, this really, really happy transition
into the stage of your life when you are freed
of a lot of obligations that helped you down before
and could go explore all sorts of new things.
A, white and end.
But I do think acknowledging that we are aging
paves the way to acknowledging that we are mortal
and for sure the best way to have as much control as possible over the
circumstances in which we die is to talk about it with those potential collaborators and
to make it a recurrent conversation. Because what we want at one point in life is probably
going to change as we grow older.
Yeah.
And it's so interesting.
You said the celebration at 60 in Japan.
I just want to kind of end with that.
It's amazing that we fear this time of life,
which everything could get fucking awesome.
Like all of the things that we worry so much about,
all the caretaking, all of the, you know,
keeping up appearances, all of the striving and all of
that stuff that's just stuff.
It's like, and for women, it's like at the moment that we reach the hype of our confidence,
our contentment, our wealth usually, that's when society decides we're worthless.
But we are at the hype.
We should be reclaiming that completely.
And we should be
we should be just like dot like so excited for that time to come. That's right. I am here.
Yeah. I'm you know, significantly older than you, which is both a real number, but also utterly individual because I'm going older in a way that's different, you know, we all have a
lot of just looking,
you know, looking at us all, we're all healthy.
It looks like we're all white.
We all have a certain amount of privilege
and those confer obvious benefits to us.
I am happier in my work that I've ever been.
I don't love having really better threats
such that they have to put like giant pieces of metal in me now
to keep me going.
But on the other hand, that can happen and thank you Medicare, I can afford it. about arthritis such that they have to put like giant pieces of metal in me now to keep me going.
But on the other hand, that can happen and thank you Medicare.
I can afford it.
Who would have thought that I would hit my professional stride in my 60s?
Hmm.
It's awesome. All right, let's hear from some of these pod squatters.
Let's hear from Leah.
Hi ladies, this is Leah.
I am in a state of life that I have termed pediatric and geriatric care. And I feel like I am caught in the in-between of trying to work
on myself and become a better human of who I am, but at the same time care for both young
children as well as aging parents. And there's this cooling space or planning ahead for the excitement of
learning and schooling for my kids, but also the planning ahead for the long-term care
and housing and end-of-life status that come with aging. And I am struggling to be present in both at the same time.
And I would love to hear your thoughts, ideas, suggestions
on how to be present and yet plan in both stages of life
while being caught in the middle.
Thank you, ladies.
Love you all.
I would say cut yourself some slack big time.
Remember that you bend of happiness.
You are at the trough.
Life is long.
And right now you are juggling sights.
I mean, I remember when I first had my first kid,
if I could like do the laundry and
I couldn't and you know do the laundry period maybe another day. I'd like put lipstick on
That was it good for you
Pat yourself on the damn back because it really truly gets easier
And I will now get political and point out that if we live in a
society that provided financial support and paid for caregiving and paid
caregivers, whether they're for your children or to help you know for anyone
a living wage, you know, and oh I know single-payer health care that's
affordable, the stress is on you and your family would be much, much smaller.
So work when you come up for air and it's going to be a while.
I try and, you know, cut yourself some slack to work towards that kind of social and political change.
Let us never forget we're at the trough.
Okay. Let us never forget we are at the trough. Okay, we are troughing and that's the best freaking, it's best we can do right now in the trough.
Good for you, Leah.
Good for you for being alive and writing sentences and writing to a podcast.
Subjects and troughs.
Good for you.
Well, Leah crushing it.
Let's hear from Jeannie.
Hi, my name's Jeannie.
Well, I just dropped off my baby last weekend.
And it's the worstest ever.
And maybe you could talk about why life seemed dimmer.
And I feel like my life is over, which is so dumb.
Because I know it's hot.
And I know that there's a lot I'm also looking
forward to but maybe you could still talk about why this represents like aging and leaving
behind a part of your life that was so precious and putting your one of your favorite beings in a place where she doesn't know anybody and there's
boys and other
scary
out there and she's all alone and how I was supposed to be okay with that I
Love you all and I really would appreciate and answer to those questions
appreciate and answer to those questions. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Oh, she would really appreciate it.
I should tell her it's going to be okay.
Well, I would say that you, I hope the baby in question is a college-aged child, not a
child-aged baby.
Yeah, it's a baby, GD.
Go get your baby.
It's not time.
What you're going through is really hard, you know, it just is and
Sitting the grief it will pass. I was so sad at the thought of my daughter leaving home
That my partner said I was pre-Nostalgic
When we dropped off at college. I was a wreck. He said pull yourself together completely
Judgmentally when the plane took off and the war of the engines,
I let out this, I still remember this gut wrenching sob.
Finally, I get home.
The moment I have dreaded for years arrives.
I walk past her empty bedroom and I swear to God,
popped into my head.
Oh, now I have a guest from.
Yes.
That was it.
I was open.
Because I had done all my morning before
And you know you are doing it probably a better way or a more logical way
It will pass she will come home the fact that you were able to let her go means you know in some ways
Means that she will be freer to return to you as a grown-up eventually on her own terms. You're doing great
It's good and you might have a guest room.
I guess from God. And you know, like a praise of your life.
I think that the face of life that she's moving through might have come to an end.
And a new one is beginning. And I think that Glennon and I, I think Glennon is also very
pre-established. I think that that she realizes that she realizes things that will be problems if we don't work on them now.
So Chase went off to school and then we have Emma and Tisha to head out over the next
four years.
And we're just like, we need friends.
Yeah, so we're entering a new part of our life.
But it's also a little bit like, I mean, I'm not anti-aging
and I'm not anti-children leaving the house.
You must think of the alternatives.
You must like, if they don't leave,
they don't leave.
That's right.
That's right.
And that is way worse for your sex life than that of all.
Exactly.
That's right.
We're not counting our blessings
so we can become sex queens.
Exactly. Now is count our blessings so we can become sex queens. Exactly.
Now is our time.
Okay.
We're going to end with our next straight thing.
And I just want to say, you could do this little thing if you wanted to do this little
thing.
I have always had this vision of myself as an old lady.
Okay.
And it is my favorite vision of myself.
Cool. Okay. you know this one,
actually, I've talked to you about this. So I don't, basically, I'm just walking on a beach.
Okay. And I have the great, the most beautiful gray hair and it's kind of like long and curly,
but it's in a ponytail. And in my, I'm just walking on the beach, just doing my daily walk and I'm like so full
of peace and power and calm.
In my vision, I had just, I've always just left my small purple beach house, but I don't,
I feel like that's a little bit capitalistic of me, so now I've changed it to a purple sweater.
I'm just wearing a purple sweater.
Okay.
Purple house.
Purple is involved, but it's just a sweater
because that feels like something I can control more, right?
Yeah.
But the point is that I love this vision of myself.
It's like, it's not something to fear or worry about.
It's like a goal to get to.
It's like, what do I have to do now
to become that badass, peaceful woman
in the purple sweater on the beach.
It's like the truest, most beautiful version of myself is that and it's an old version
of myself.
So maybe if you feel like it, you could just imagine what's the truest, most beautiful,
older version of you.
And then it could become this beautiful lighthouse as opposed to something that you're avoiding,
but it's like something you're becoming.
And also, there's a whole thing in my book about becoming an old person in training,
which is a phrase I appropriated from a geriatrician named Joanne Lynn.
You can have that future older you be as far off down the road as you need her to be,
you know, for it to be psychologically tenable, but the minute you perform the exercise that you just so beautifully
describe, you have stepped off the hamster wheel of aged denial. You aren't right.
It's a little trick of the mind in a way, but then you're not.
You're, and you look at the older people around you instead of looking past us and
think, oh, I love what she's doing., oh, I hope I don't do that.
You know, and that helps you gradually relate
to the future you instead of being distanced from her,
which is where age is,
I'm takes root in pretending we're not going to get old
and making the older you a subject of fear
and even self-loathing.
This is the opposite.
So I think it's a really beautiful exercise. And I hope
I hope everyone listening is able to engage in it. And it's full circle because where we started
with In the Month, we end because she is already inside of you. So you're just, oh yeah, you already have her.
So get to know her. Thank you for this beautiful conversation action. I just feel like it really moved me. Well, it makes me know I've got a
lot of work to do because I got some ageism inside of me. It's cool. Yeah, but
you're already so far ahead by just acknowledging that that you have less work
to do than you think. Thank you. Good job, babe. All right, you all. We can do
beautiful things like get older. We'll see you back here next time. Thank you. Good job, babe. All right, you all. We can do beautiful things like get older.
We'll see you back here next time.
Thank you.
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