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HOW OLD DO YOU FEEL INSIDE?

How old do you feel inside?Those of us lucky enough to grow old must contend with the miserable stereotypes of what it's like: the frailty, the forgetfulness, the early bird specials.

But in aging, as in many things, attitude can make all the difference. Research has shown that how people feel inside, and their expectations of their capabilities, can have a greater impact on health, happiness and even longevity than the date on their birth certificates.

In her seminal "counterclockwise" study, in 1979, Harvard University psychologist Ellen Langer brought men in their 70s and 80s to a weeklong retreat that was retrofitted, from the music to the newspapers, to look and feel like 1959. One group of men was told to reminisce about the era. The other group was told to let themselves be who they were 20 years earlier.

By the end of experiment, both groups of men, who upon entering had been highly reliant on relatives to do things for them, were functioning independently, actively completing chores, and showed significant improvements in hearing, memory, strength and intelligence tests. The group told to behave like they were 20 years younger also showed better dexterity, flexibility and looked younger, according to outside observers who judged photos of the participants taken before and after the retreat.

Expectation, not biology, leads many elderly people to set physical limits on themselves, Langer concluded; they assume they'll fall apart, so they let it happen.

"What we want to do is not get older people to think of themselves as young, but to change their mindsets about what it means to be older," Langer said. And being older doesn't have to equal decay.

Take memory. Thirty-year-olds forget lots of things, but they don't blame dementia. Older people jump to the conclusion that memory failures are part of their inevitable decline, when in fact it could be that their values change about what's meaningful enough to remember, Langer said.

Rather than declare failure when they aren't as nimble on the tennis court or spry on the stairs as they used to be, older people should recognize that anything is still possible; they just may have to try a few different strategies, Langer says.

Internalizing negative stereotypes about aging can have dire health consequences, even among the young, some studies suggest.

Men and women older than 50 with more positive self-perceptions of aging lived 7.6 years longer than those with negative perceptions, according to a 2002 study led by Yale University epidemiology and psychology professor Becca Levy. Young, healthy people younger than 50 who held negative attitudes toward the elderly were more likely to experience a cardiovascular disorder over the next four decades than their peers who had more positive view of the elderly, a 2006 study by Levy found.

Pessimism about elderly decline, the researchers suggest, becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Other studies that look at age identity -- also known as subjective, or felt, age -- have found that feeling younger than you really are is linked to better health, life satisfaction and cognitive abilities.

It's not clear what comes first: If identifying as younger makes you vital and sharp, or if people who feel vital and sharp associate that with feeling younger, said Markus Schafer, assistant professor of sociology at the University of Toronto, who last year published a study on age identity while a graduate student at Purdue University.

His study, in which people on average felt 12 years younger than their actual age, found subjective age was more important than chronological age in predicting performance on memorization and other mental tasks 10 years later. The cognitive benefits of feeling young were slightly more pronounced among women, he said, perhaps because of greater pressure on women to maintain youthfulness.

Regardless of what causes the correlation, he said, there's benefit to staying engaged.

"Learning new things, reading in a new area, at least trying to become connected with new technologies and platforms: Those are ways people can feel connected with the ebb and flow of the world," Schafer said.

The concept of "feeling younger" can be misleading: People usually mean that they feel healthier than they expected to feel at a particular age, not that they're denying their age or yearning for youth, said Laura Carstensen, founding director of the Stanford Center on Longevity. When asked in studies how old they'd like to be, most people say they wish to be 10 years younger -- 70-year-olds want to be 60, 60-year-olds wish to be 50 -- because they'd be healthier. No one wants to be 20, she said.

More important than reversing the clock is to be optimistic about it, she said. And aging does have its upsides.

Emotional satisfaction and stability tend to improve as people get older, despite sad events like losing friends or social status, Carstensen said. Because time seems short, elderly people focus on what matters most to them, such as personal relationships, rather than flailing about in the uncertain what-ifs of youth, she said. It's not a happy-go-lucky happiness, but a deeper sense of gratitude.

"The misery myth is one of the most pernicious myths, because when you think the future is really bleak you don't plan," Carstensen said. "When you think, 'I'm going to be the coolest 80-year-old and will start a line of clothing for old people,' there is so much possibility."

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(c)2011 the Chicago Tribune


Previous Article: Preparing for your retirement: healthy aging
Next Article: Longevity's secrets sought in DNA of 100-year-olds
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francarona I agree. Sometimes I'm shocked that others consider 65 to be old! I feel like I'm just getting started!
Sat Oct 22, 2011, 10:27:14 AM EDT
firedrake I'm 57 - 4 years ago, I had major back reconstruction surgery, thanks to injuries I'd suffered back in the 70s, in the military. The VA had told me at 22 that I'd be in a wheelchair by the time I was 50, and it almost happened. I fell down a hill knees first while rock climbing and tore my right quadriceps off at the kneecap.

It took a year of therapy before they figured out I'd fallen because of a pinched nerve in the back. It was another 3 years and 4 doctors before I found a neurosurgeon/spine specialist who said he could fix it.

When I entered the hospital, I'd been on a cane for over 2 years, was obese (300+ lbs.), borderline diabetic, and had high BP and cholesterol.

11 months after the extensive surgery (3 artificial disks, a titanium cage from S1 up to L2, and two nerve transplants), the doctor said I could go back to the gym. I'd loved weightlifting all my life, but hadn't been able to train hard for some time.

I fell in with a bunch of guys in a bodybuilding club, most of whom were at least 20 years younger than me. I went what some would call a little crazy.

Three years to the week after the back surgery, I walked onstage as a competitive bodybuilder at the Los Angeles Bodybuilding Championships. I placed 4th in the Over 50s and 5th in Novice Heavyweights -- and my competition in that class was as young as 24.

I've taken some time since then to add another 28 lbs. of muscle, and will be stepping on stage again next spring. My goal is the Masters Nationals competition in 2014 -- the year I turn 60.

Whaddaya mean, "senior citizen"? Some of the kids in my gym won't train with me because I work 'em too hard!

Sun Oct 23, 2011, 10:27:35 AM EDT
adelec At 64 I can run circles around people half my age and I have a bum knee!
Sun Oct 23, 2011, 3:30:35 PM EDT
vf12 After having surgery in February for removal of a kidney that was not working right I feel very good. I ride my exercise bike to keep the aches and pains I hear my friends say that they have everyday. I don't like I did when I was 25 but I also don't feel like I am 54 either I keep moving so life does not pass me by.
Sun Oct 23, 2011, 7:28:27 PM EDT
wljames1 I am 59 years old, but my gray matter still thinks I am in my late 20s or early 30s. I cannot run 6 minutes miles, but I am still running. I am an Appalachian Trail Section Hiker. Howerver, the one activity that keeps me young, in my opinion, is that I keep learning. I am an actuary and I recently started studying econometric times series - WHY - because it really is interesting!
Sun Oct 23, 2011, 8:31:16 PM EDT
ActiveBabs Be active, stay active, embrace aging says it for me. The more active you are the easier it is to embrace the minor aches and pains that accompany a natural process. Course, being active also helps keep the ole' maching running smoothly!
Mon Oct 24, 2011, 10:23:11 AM EDT
geea I,m 67,and I feel better now than any time in the past.I exercise,keep lots of hobbies.One thing I don,t do is sit around like i,m an old fogy.I,m very grateful for every day.And I have some arthritis and migraines.But life is wonderful.I go out daily too.
Sun Apr 15, 2012, 1:07:07 PM EDT

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