How OLD is TOO OLD: Experts Say Age Should Not Be a Factor for Anything

By Gary Picariello, published May 22, 2007
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In fact, I'd venture to say that in many respects my life continues to get better as I get older, but unfortunately not everyone believes that. Ours is a society based on youth. And the perimeters of what constitutes "young" keep changing as fast as those associated with aging. So I have to wonder, "How old is too old?"

Georgesheehan.com makes a great point by asking if we didn't know our "chronological" age, how old would we be? I'd like to take that one step further: if your age didn't have a number -- how old would you feel? Research shows that the average American is 30 years older functionally than he or she is chronologically. That means that an active 60-year-old and an inactive 30-year-old will have equal physical work capacity. In other words, most individuals aren't taking full advantage of all their mental and physical capabilities.

I'm still trying to sort this theory out (I guess I'll have to ask George Sheehan) but I do know that inactive people give aging a bad name.

Think about how many things we decide not to do because we think we're too old. It took me a long time to stop using what other individuals my age were or were not doing as a benchmark. Time is gonna pass no matter what you do. Personal-development.com points out -- and I have to agree with this -- that whatever it is you want to accomplish you are never too old. Think about it: in four years, you will be four years older -- whether you do [fill in the blank] or not. Which would you rather be, four years older with a degree (for example), or four years older without one? So you can see that you're never too old to follow your dream. Whatever that dream happens to be.

Benjamin Franklin had the right idea when he said "Passion is a source of energy and youthfulness."

Or how about Henry Ford: "Anyone who stops learning is old, whether this happens at twenty or eighty. Anyone who keeps on learning not only remains young but becomes constantly more valuable, regardless of physical capacity."

One of the way-coolest books I ever read -- "The Personal Power Course" by Wallace Wattles -- makes a point of encouraging people to stop thinking about age. In other words, to become "ageless."

Takeaways
  • Age creates roadblocks in today's society.
  • If you don't think about your age then you won't be that age.
  • You really are as old as your feel.
Did You Know?
Some of mankind's most notable achievements were accomplished by men and women over the age of 65.
Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 5 of 5
 
 
You are on a roll, my friend. Another great read!

Posted on 05/22/2007 at 5:05:00 PM

 
Thanks for writing everyone! I want to apologize -- somehow my opening papragraph got clipped. Not sure how that happened.

Posted on 05/22/2007 at 1:05:00 PM

 
Feeling some age creep, are you?

Posted on 05/22/2007 at 12:05:00 PM

 
You mean EXCEPT for sex, right? :)

Posted on 05/22/2007 at 10:05:00 AM

 
These are the kind of news I like to hear!

Posted on 05/22/2007 at 10:05:00 AM

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