{"id":3761,"date":"2006-02-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"2006-02-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-2006-the-reality-of-aging\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T01:32:41","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T01:32:41","slug":"february-2006-the-reality-of-aging","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-2006-the-reality-of-aging\/","title":{"rendered":"February 2006 &#8211; The reality of aging"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p align=\"left\"> Nothing is more modern than aging. In all but                     the most recent chapters of the human story, only a tiny minority                     could expect to live for more than 50 years, let alone past                     65. It is true that the rise of complex civilizations, with                     their accompanying social inequality, meant that the well-fed                     few could expect to live much longer than the masses whose                     labour supported them. Some even lived past the biblical three-score                     and ten: the Emperor Augustus, a man of frugal habits, lived                     to be 77. Nonetheless most of the subjects of the Roman Empire                     were dead before they were 30. Even those who survived the                     hazards of childhood could count themselves lucky to see their                     40s.<\/p>\n<p>Scarcity often begets value. In the pre-literate world of                     a Stone Age tribe, or even in a medieval village, the elders                     were valued as living archives, the repository of the myths,                     customs and laws that gave meaning to life and a sense of                     identity to the group. When writing arrived, documents produced                     by the temple or the palace took over much of this role in                     complex societies. More: the document writers soon did their                     best to monopolize knowledge of the past. To control a society&#8217;s                     collective memory is a long step toward controlling the society                     itself. (There was a joke in the former Soviet Union, &#8220;We                     are certain of the future. It is the past that keeps changing.&#8221;)                     It is only in relatively recent times, and with marked reluctance,                     that authorities of state, church and party have opened most                     of the historic past to free investigation.<\/p>\n<p>The spread of written records meant that the aged lost the                     status that came from being the bearers of oral tradition.                     Their subsequent fate has been determined by the cultural                     differences between the great literate civilizations. Confucian                     thought unequivocally placed elderly males on a pinnacle of                     status and power, with profound consequences for the civilizations                     of East Asia. Generations of elderly male visitors to China                     have been agreeably surprised by the deference paid to their                     grey hairs. Hinduism sees old age rather as a stage when a                     man, his duties as husband and father done, is free to devote                     himself to the acquisition of spiritual merit, ideally by                     becoming a <i>sanyasi<\/i>, a Hindu ascetic. A somewhat similar                     tradition of study and devotion in the last years of life                     exists in Judaism. In the West, in general, attitudes have                     been much more ambiguous. The Fourth Commandment told Jews                     and later Christians to honour their father and &#8211; notably                     &#8212; their mother too, and while no one can measure compliance                     with this precept it is hard not to think that its influence                     has been far reaching. At the same time, Western writers have                     been acutely conscious of the physical decline associated                     with aging. Homer&#8217;s heroes repeatedly say how much they prefer                     a glorious death in battle to the slow decay that otherwise                     awaits them. Shakespeare wrote memorably of &#8220;sans eyes,                     sans teeth, sans everything,&#8221; and while this may be the                     view of the bright young people in the Forest of Arden rather                     than Shakespeare&#8217;s own, there is no doubt that outliving one&#8217;s                     physical abilities was something dreaded by almost everyone.                     Not without reason. Those who outlived their strength could                     expect to be dependent on their children if they were lucky,                     beggars if they were not. All over Western Europe there stand                     little groups of almshouses &#8211; perhaps ten or twelve small                     dwellings around a chapel, where a fortunate few of the deserving                     poor could end their days in security. They are a tribute,                     not only to the Fourth Commandment but in a backhanded way                     to the longstanding strength of the &#8220;nuclear&#8221; family                     &#8211; parents and children only &#8211; in Western Europe. Civilizations                     where the &#8220;extended,&#8221; multi-generational, multi-sibling                     family was the norm had less need of almshouses.<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\">*<\/p>\n<p> These conflicting attitudes of respect, distaste and fear                     are still with us today, often in the same mind. Yet the reality                     of ageing is changing with extraordinary speed. The planet                     holds far more over-60s than ever before, and they are increasing                     rapidly. In the developed democracies they are, as a group,                     enjoying better health, longer lives and more financial security                     than ever before. They also have growing political and economic                     clout.<\/p>\n<p>Around the year 1750 the population of the world began to                     grow steadily, especially in Europe and China. Why this happened                     is much debated. A warmer climate and the introduction of                     new crops may have had something to do with it. Medical advances                     and government policies definitely had nothing to do with                     it, at least in the initial stages of growth. But whatever                     the cause, humanity was launched on the demographic revolution                     which has since engulfed the whole planet and only begun to                     slow in our own time. Everywhere the pattern has been the                     same: the high birth rates of earlier times continue and even                     rise, accompanied by a fairly steady drop in the death rate                     as better diets, public sanitation and since 1800, the control                     of epidemics come into play. Last comes a drop in the birth                     rate as urbanization and industrialization make multiple-child                     raising both expensive and (as a form of old-age pension)                     unnecessary. Taken together the last two trends produce a                     rapid increase, both absolute and relative, in the numbers                     of the elderly. The traditional demographic age graph of a                     rather skinny pyramid has become something more like a bumpy                     column. This is most evident in the developed world, but it                     is happening even more rapidly in industrializing countries                     such as China or Brazil.<\/p>\n<p>Demographic predictions have a mixed record of success, but                     it is hard to see this increase in the numbers of the aged                     altering in the coming decades, especially since it is to                     some degree self-perpetuating. An older population will also                     be a stable or even a shrinking population, as the percentage                     of fertile women falls and (for somewhat different reasons)                     the number of children in a family drops. The native-born                     populations of Germany and Japan, among other countries, are                     already declining amidst unprecedented abundance &#8211; something                     that would have been utterly incomprehensible to our forebears                     who lived in a simpler world where more food meant more babies                     growing up. Some estimates predict that by as early as 2050                     the over-60s may then be more than 20 per cent of the total,                     almost two billion people in all.<\/p>\n<p>As noted, the consequences are immense. Public policy, economic                     life, social attitudes and even the natural environment are                     already profoundly affected. The care of the elderly, especially                     the very old, is a growth industry almost everywhere. Their                     exceptional need for medical care threatens the financial                     viability of public health plans. A recent study estimates                     that on present trends, publicly funded health care will cost                     Canadians 11.3 per cent of Gross Domestic Product in 2050,                     up from 6.3 per cent in 2001. (For Newfoundland and Labrador                     the 2050 figure would be 24.5 per cent, which is surely unsustainable.)                     Public and private pension plans and the rules governing retirement                     are already being redesigned to fit new demographic realities.                     The direct and indirect investments intended to support the                     elderly represent a growing proportion of equity and bond                     markets. Increasingly, it is the managers of these great agglomerations                     of savings who decide the fate of corporations, as a J. P.                     Morgan once did. Thus it seems likely to be the aging, not                     the meek who will inherit the earth. For the natural environment,                     a stable or falling population should mean less human pressure:                     fewer malls and subdivisions, fewer fields paved over (although,                     unless carefully managed, increased demands for tourism and                     outdoor recreation will work against this trend). To indulge                     optimism a little further, perhaps architects, decorators                     and furniture designers will be less prone to assume that                     everyone is an athletic 25 year old, able and willing to bound                     out of a Barcelona chair and welcoming the sight of a 1,500-foot-long                     airport corridor with nowhere to sit down. If they don&#8217;t,                     legislation will do it for them.<\/p>\n<p>Far-reaching those these changes are, they are all manageable                     by public policy or private enterprise provided we have the                     collective will to acknowledge and deal with them. Moreover,                     there is every reason to suppose that the will can and will                     be found. The elderly vote more often than their younger contemporaries.                     They have the time not simply to go to the polls but to understand                     what the issues mean for them as pensioners, investors and                     medical patients. As a result, it is a brave, perhaps a suicidal                     politician who touches the social programs intended to support                     citizens in the final decades of their lives. In Canada recent                     years have seen a steady growth in public health spending                     and a relative stagnation in spending on education, especially                     higher education. Whether or not this is a good thing can                     be endlessly debated. What is hard not to believe is that                     it has something to do with the fact that pensioners vote                     while by and large, students do not.<\/p>\n<p>The elderly are also an increasingly important market. Not                     only are their numbers growing, both social policy and a long                     period of economic growth mean that they have much more money                     to spend than their grandparents did. The marketing industry                     has responded with campaigns targeting those over 50 or over                     60. The increasing fragmentation of the mass audience by the                     multiplication of television channels and specialized magazines                     has been both the result of this change and a contributor                     to it. No longer do older citizens appear only in advertisements                     for denture cleansers and antacid pills. Healthy, happy people,                     grey-haired but active, well but comfortably dressed, clearly                     enjoying life and looking forward to more of it, can be seen                     nightly selling goods and services from snow blowers to cruise                     ships.<\/p>\n<p>This is a significant change in the visual landscape. The                     marketing industry began by selling social status. Anyone                     with the necessary funds could use the same face cream as                     a countess or be the first on the block to own a Cadillac.                     This is still a powerful motivator, as can be seen from the                     substantial value of luxury brand names and the finely tuned                     efforts to increase sales without diminishing exclusivity.                     Status, however, has been joined by two other motivators,                     the twin values of youth and newness. The value set on youth                     certainly owes something to the relative scarcity of young                     people; in a cautious, well-insured, middle-aged world, the                     vitality and optimism traditionally ascribed to youth (though                     not always detectable in today&#8217;s young people) are powerfully                     attractive. The predominance of the young in visual media,                     however, is undoubtedly owing to the belief that their sexual                     attractiveness will rub off on whatever is being sold. The                     cult of the new is a more purely artificial creation. It exists                     to convince consumers to replace goods they already own. The                     fashion industry in particular exists, not so much to clothe                     people but to persuade them to stuff more items into what                     may already be decidedly full closets.<\/p>\n<p>The rights and wrongs of these phenomena can be debated.                     Wearing new and smart clothes is an innocent pleasure open                     to almost everyone. The cult of youthfulness for its part                     undeniably has some positive results. The widespread acceptance                     of the idea that a healthy diet and physical activity can                     make life more enjoyable in all its stages is undoubtedly                     a major gain. Its shadow is a reluctance to accept the realities                     of aging and thereby to profit from all that this act in the                     drama has to offer. It is hard, too, to doubt that the relentless                     emphasis placed on youth, newness and sexual attractiveness                     by the media have done much to strengthen negative attitudes                     to the elderly. In public discourse, on the one hand, their                     political importance alone certainly ensures that they are                     treated with scrupulous respect. Advertisers have risen to                     the challenge with clich\u00e9s such as &#8220;senior citizens&#8221;                     and &#8220;the golden years&#8221; which, like all such forms                     of Newspeak, suggest the reverse of their ostensible meaning                     and barely serve to mask much more negative feelings expressed                     in private &#8211; or, significantly, in public by stand-up comedians                     who specialize in saying what politicians cannot. &#8220;Past                     it,&#8221; &#8220;lost it,&#8221; &#8220;over the hill&#8221; &#8212;                     these phrases and a hundred more like them conjure up a picture                     of bodily and mental decrepitude, the polar opposite of the                     glowing faces and taut bodies we see in ads every day. &#8220;The                     old&#8221; and &#8220;the elderly&#8221; are not much better.                     They powerfully suggest a group that is collectively a social                     problem rather than a social asset.<\/p>\n<p>Whether the new market clout of the elderly will change such                     attitudes remains to be seen. They are unlikely to disappear,                     however, because they are ultimately rooted in the natural                     human fear of death. In North American society this takes                     a particularly acute form. We are encouraged to believe that                     there is a remedy, known or to be discovered, for every human                     ill, yet no remedy is likely to be found for death, ludicrous                     experiments in deep freezing notwithstanding. Again, our intense                     individualism means that the end of an individual life is                     overwhelmingly final. Past generations could take comfort,                     when the end was near, in the thought that family, clan, dynasty,                     tribe or city would go on and that their life had been a meaningful                     part of a larger whole. Though few would have expressed it                     with Burke&#8217;s eloquence, they would have agreed with him that                     society is a contract between those who are living, those                     who are dead and those who are to be born. In a time like                     ours, when ads proclaim &#8220;It&#8217;s all about ME!,&#8221; such                     a belief seems archaic, even quaint. Believers in the great                     religions have of course traditionally seen death as a door                     rather an end, but such evidence as we have &#8211; and it cannot                     be anything but imperfect &#8211; suggests that belief in immortality                     is neither as widespread nor as firm as it seems to have been                     in times past.<\/p>\n<p>In response, we push death to the frontiers of our consciousness                     and do not welcome reminders of its presence. Our society                     is remarkable for the extent to which we have abolished all                     forms of public mourning. Victorians wore black for a year                     and pulled down their blinds until the funeral was over. People                     saved all their lives to have the biggest, splashiest funeral                     possible, and other people earned their livings by walking,                     with suitably grief-stricken countenances, in the funeral                     processions of people to whom they were completely unrelated.                     Nowadays even the procession of cars with headlights on is                     disappearing, perhaps because they are usually on anyway.                     Grief and bereavement, for many raised in the Christian traditions                     at least, have become private matters, to be shared only with                     close family and friends. Whether this makes them any easier                     to deal with may be doubted. Funerary rituals may seem absurd,                     but their universality through history and around the world                     suggests that they are powerful aids to coping with the inexorable                     fact of death.<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\">*<\/p>\n<p>To repeat, changing negative attitudes will not be easy.                     Perhaps the most effective counter to them will simply be                     the numbers of elderly people for whom, clich\u00e9 though                     it is, these really are the best years of their lives. For                     the growing numbers of the elderly who have reasonable health                     and financial security, aging may well bring physical pain                     and emotional loss, but it also brings a priceless opportunity                     to reflect, to remember and to understand, free of the insecurities                     of youth and the preoccupations of middle age.<\/p>\n<p>This is the time to do all the things that earning a living                     left no time to do, to enjoy the life of dignified leisure                     that, through most of history, has been the privilege of the                     few. For those fortunate enough to have grandchildren, they                     can enjoy what is perhaps the most rewarding of human relationships,                     enriching for both sides and largely free of the stress that                     comes with parental responsibility. For many too this is the                     time to give something back to society: the elderly volunteer                     out of proportion to their numbers. That many of the elderly                     can reasonably expect to lead such a life after retirement                     is surely one of the greatest, and most underrated, achievements                     of the developed democracies. Of course we are still some                     way from perfection. Too many of the elderly are still poor,                     still without needed care, still alone at the end of their                     days. Whether we can continue to be even as successful as                     we have been while the numbers of the elderly increase, only                     time can tell. But more than enough has been accomplished                     to help us see human life as a whole, in which each stage                     brings its own dangers, drawbacks and blessings, and where                     the last act crowns the work.<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\">***<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":86,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[66],"class_list":["post-3761","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-66"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.5 (Yoast SEO v27.5) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>February 2006 - The reality of aging<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-2006-the-reality-of-aging\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"February 2006 - The reality of aging\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Nothing is more modern than aging. 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