{"id":4080,"date":"1960-10-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1960-10-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1960-vol-41-no-8-the-social-challenge-of-old-age\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:47:04","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:47:04","slug":"october-1960-vol-41-no-8-the-social-challenge-of-old-age","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1960-vol-41-no-8-the-social-challenge-of-old-age\/","title":{"rendered":"October 1960 &#8211; VOL. 41, No. 8 &#8211; The Social Challenge of Old Age"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">A new problem in human experience                     has appeared in our Western World: the rapidly growing number                     of older people in our population. So far as is known, no                     culture in history has ever had such a high proportion of                     people past middle age.<\/p>\n<p> The problem is made up principally of four factors: economic,                     social, medical and personal.<\/p>\n<p>Every one of us desires to live long, yet not to be old.                     But aging is inseparable from life. The process has been taking                     place within our bodies from the day we were born. It is gradual                     and continuous, though we do not all age in the same way or                     equally fast. As in a steeplechase, the horses are nicely                     bunched at the starting gate, but during the second lap those                     that have not yet fallen are strung out in a line.<\/p>\n<p>This <em>Monthly Letter <\/em>is not concerned with prescriptions                     designed to lengthen life, but with what can be done toward                     making fullest and happiest use of the years that we have.<\/p>\n<p>Every announcement about the increased span of life has                     significant personal meaning for us. Only total lack of imagination                     can excuse us if we fail to identify our own future fate with                     the present fate of the aged.<\/p>\n<p>There is imperative need for social recognition of the problems                     presented by our older population. But relative to the research                     and tender care lavished on infants and adolescents, appallingly                     little has been done.<\/p>\n<p>The killers of youth, the contagious diseases, have been                     largely eliminated, only to be replaced by a set of chronic                     or degenerative diseases for which few specific cures have                     been found. Mental diseases, which seem to multiply with age                     under the stresses of our civilization, are not sufficiently                     cared for by present rehabilitation centres, nursing homes                     and home care plans. Unemployment problems, which hardly existed                     in our century-ago world, are pressing upon thousands                     of persons who still have years of satisfactory work within                     their power. Socially, the aged are estranged. They are no                     longer the heads of households of two or three generations.                     Family organization today leaves no room for them.<\/p>\n<h3>How old is &#8220;old&#8221;?<\/h3>\n<p>Before deciding where we can draw the line at which old                     age starts, let us look at the chronological ages of Canadians.<\/p>\n<p>The Biblical figure of three score years and ten was an                     enormous life extension figure in that era when average life                     expectancy was not more than thirty years. A century ago (in                     1840) the life expectancy of an infant was about 48 years.                     A recent estimate of the life expectancy of males in Canada                     was 67.6 years, and of females 73 years.<\/p>\n<p>As to the future, interesting figures are given in the study                     made by the Royal Commission on Canada&#8217;s Economic Prospects.                     In 1955 there were 1,730,000 persons in Canada aged 60 years                     and over: it is estimated that by 1980 the number will be                     3,345,000, an increase of 93 per cent.<\/p>\n<p>There we have the cold statistical figures. In twenty years                     we shall have 1,615,000 more men and women aged 60 or higher                     than we had five years ago.<\/p>\n<p>But when we are dealing with human beings we cannot depend                     wholly upon statistics. Dependence upon strict chronological                     age can have no real meaning. All that can recommend it is                     the administrative convenience of its application.<\/p>\n<p>The question &#8220;How old is &#8216;old&#8217;?&#8221; should be rewritten: &#8220;Old                     &#8211; with respect to what performance?&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Our difficulty is that many of the adjustment problems of                     aging result not from declining capacities but from social                     rules requiring the individual to give up certain forms of                     participation when he reaches a prescribed age. He is expected                     to behave in terms of what society has defined as proper for                     his age-sex category without regard for his needs or                     capacities.<\/p>\n<p>If we are to handle the new problem of age so as to do the                     best for people and for society, we need to use common sense                     in our rule-making. To point up the matter lightly, consider                     that there may be forty or fifty years variation in being                     &#8220;too old to work&#8221; depending on whether the person is a prize                     fighter, a ball player, a piano tuner, a company president,                     a lawyer or a plasterer.<\/p>\n<p>Age is a condition that is not measurable by years, but                     by attributes. A life should be appraised on the level of                     attributes &#8211; what qualities has a person -rather than by the                     crude quantity measurement of the calendar &#8211; how long has                     he lived. A survey reported in <em>Industry <\/em>a few years                     ago pointed out that 64 per cent of the world&#8217;s great achievements                     have been accomplished by men who had passed their sixtieth                     year. Johann Von Goethe, who was 20 when he started his great                     dramatic poem and 83 when he finished it, put these words                     into the mouth of Faust: &#8220;I am too old to trifle, too young,                     no yearning wish to nurse.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There is ample evidence that the years have little enough                     to do with initiative, determination, daring and accomplishment.                     Not rarely the triumphal course of a man starts at an age                     when the average person retires from business into idleness.<\/p>\n<p>Brains that are used hourly in creative activity associated                     with business building or scientific research or the development                     of society do not deteriorate. Many of them give proof that                     intellectual power can be intensified and energy increased                     as the years pass.<\/p>\n<h3>The value of older persons<\/h3>\n<p>One of the problems of an aging population is to retain                     in the stream of economic productivity and scientific discovery                     those men and women whose wealth of knowledge, wisdom and                     constructive work can contribute so greatly to the welfare                     of Canada. As Schopenhauer put it in his essay on &#8220;The Ages                     of Life&#8221;: the first forty years furnish the text, while the                     remaining thirty supply the commentary without which the text                     cannot be properly understood.<\/p>\n<p>Even if the circumstances of a man&#8217;s employment make it                     impracticable for him to remain in his job after pensionable                     age &#8211; for example, because some younger men are coming along                     behind him &#8211; that need not mean the end of the road for him,                     There are many jobs available to experienced men &#8211; jobs where                     the pressure from younger men seeking promotion is not felt.<\/p>\n<h3>The cult of youth<\/h3>\n<p>But, generally, our society as it is today does not award                     age the credit due to it.<\/p>\n<p>This is a time of the cult of youth. On the whole, our society                     on this continent is organized to satisfy the wants of the                     young, and makes relatively little provision for meeting the                     needs of the aged.<\/p>\n<p>In our literature, our advertising, and most other sectors                     of our culture, youth is looked upon as the golden age to                     which all else must be sacrificed. This, in addition to threatening                     to pamper youth into unripe manhood, creates undue hardship                     for the aged. The old are sometimes tolerated, but too seldom                     valued. They are pushed off the bustling main road, and find                     few side roads provided for their happiness.<\/p>\n<p>With the heavy accent on caring for children, there is slight                     emphasis upon any reciprocal obligation. Parents are reluctant                     to assert demands even when urgent need arises. Children are                     completely unaware of any obligation; indeed, their upbringing                     leads them to think of older persons as existing only for                     the satisfaction of the needs and wants of young people.<\/p>\n<h3>Learning to grow old<\/h3>\n<p>For their own good, as well as for the happiness of those                     who are now aged, young people should start learning how to                     grow old. There is no season of life for which preparation                     is more necessary. There is no preparation that can be more                     rewarding.<\/p>\n<p>Every phase of life is a making ready for the one which                     follows it. Just as what we learn during childhood determines                     the success or failure of our adulthood, so does our development                     in middle-life decide the nature of our old age.<\/p>\n<p>In the realm of the physical, repeated insults to the human                     machine in earlier life, such as infections, injuries, strains,                     chronic malnutrition, alcoholism, drug addiction, obesity,                     shock, and emotional turbulence, cause changes in the body                     cells which are conducive to aging.<\/p>\n<p>In the realm of ideas, education continued year by year                     will tend to limit the wrong thoughts, the unhealthy prejudices                     and the wild cravings that wear out or warp the mind.<\/p>\n<p>And in the social realm continuous learning about aging                     will give us understanding about those who are already aged,                     so that when our turn comes we shall be fit and ready.<\/p>\n<p>We need a programme for continuing education, beginning                     in public school and carrying on through adulthood: education                     that will help us to find new and pleasant things to do in                     widely separated areas of life. It will keep our minds supple,                     learning to live in accord with the changing social, economic                     and political times. It will train us to weigh relative values,                     so as to get the best return for our time. Continuing education                     will enlarge our capacity to find our place today and tomorrow,                     to win the right to prolonged participation and recognition.<\/p>\n<h3>On acting your age<\/h3>\n<p>There is a very fine saying of Voltaire&#8217;s to the effect                     that every age of life has its own peculiar mental character,                     and that a man will feel completely unhappy if his mind is                     not in accordance with his years.<\/p>\n<p>It is true that if we do not wish to feel the weight of                     our years we must look forward instead of backward. It is                     silly to try to continue acting as we did five years ago.                     All living implies a growth, then a peak, and then a decline.                     The change from one stage to another makes certain types of                     behaviour impossible or inadvisable if life is to be maintained.                     Every period of life has its own emotional experiences. There                     are times of depression, just as there are times of elation,                     which it were foolishness to dwell upon.<\/p>\n<p>The hardest part of aging is adaptation, we are told; adaptation                     to the changes in our individual situations and to the expectations                     of society.<\/p>\n<p>To keep step with the progress of the years and to accept                     each phase of life as it comes is to live in harmony with                     nature. The great scientists, historians and philosophers                     agree that life on earth has always been and is one continuous,                     never-ceasing, process of readjustment.<\/p>\n<p>What are the distinguishing attributes of various age groups?                     Youth is marked by resiliency, strength and mobility. Maturity                     shows balance, precision and achievement. The good qualities                     of old age are thoroughness, steadiness, dependability and                     wisdom.<\/p>\n<p>One thing remains irrevocably fixed: our allotment of time                     at 65 is just what it was at 15 &#8211; twenty-four hours a                     day. It behooves us to use every twenty-four hours in                     accord with the wisdom we have picked up along the way.<\/p>\n<h3>The wants of life<\/h3>\n<p>The wants of life differ at various stages of the journey.                     A youth wants employment, knowledge, power, wife and children,                     honour and fame; he has spiritual wants, aesthetic wants and                     civil wants. One by one, day after day, he learns to coin                     his wishes into realities. Insofar as he succeeds, he enters                     old age without ferment, serene of thought and behaviour.<\/p>\n<p>Youth is not a wholly happy time. Youths live amid a rabble                     of passions. They are tormented by the want of correspondence                     between things and thoughts. Michelangelo&#8217;s head is so full                     of conceptions of gigantic figures that he is fiercely unhappy                     until his chisel can render them out of marble.<\/p>\n<p>In late life the excitements have waned and the ardours                     have cooled. We seek physical health and comfort, affection,                     recognition, a chance to express our interests, and emotional                     security.<\/p>\n<p>Were these wants easier to satisfy in bygone years? In a                     patriarchal society the old fitted into the picture almost                     perfectly. They were able to perform necessary services, such                     as caring for the flock or herd, fashioning utensils and tools,                     spinning and sewing. Their hands retained their cunning to                     the end. Their skill and counsel helped in the struggle of                     the family and the tribe for the good things of life.<\/p>\n<p>We cannot hope that our surroundings should be as they were                     yesterday and that they should remain so. With the heightened                     tempo of life, the growth of cities, and the swift plunge                     from an economy based on agriculture to the factory system                     and mass production, the aged have been made more economically                     insecure. Questions which did not even arise in a Canada of                     large families have become pressing problems in our metropolitan                     apartment-house civilization. The trained aptitudes of                     youth have, very often, put on the shelf the skills of the                     aged.<\/p>\n<p>We may hope that the disregard seen in our society for the                     health, social and economic demands of life in its later years                     is a temporary, transitional phenomenon. It will be so if                     people now in their middle years see to it that the young                     are educated in understanding and sympathy, and that what                     can be done by church, community, industry and government                     is done at once to meet the needs of our aged people. By proper                     means, earnestly pursued, society and machines can be adapted                     to gray-haired men, and gray-haired men and women                     can be adapted to society and to machines.<\/p>\n<p>Interested imaginative effort is needed, worthy of the best                     thought of our institutions, our parliamentarians, our social                     workers, our service clubs, and everyone who considers seriously                     his own well-being, the welfare of the country and the                     development of our culture.<\/p>\n<h3>Making the best of today<\/h3>\n<p>That is all very well for the future, some may say, but                     we have many thousands who have already entered upon old age,                     which should be a golden age, and have found it a dark age.                     Their children &#8211; and other young people &#8211; talk &#8220;over&#8221; or &#8220;through&#8221;                     them as if they aren&#8217;t there. They are taken for granted.<\/p>\n<p>Life is intensely real to the aged. The fictions are gone.                     They want, above all, to know where they stand. Dr. J. L.                     Gillin remarks in <em>Social Pathology<\/em>; &#8220;As one grows older,                     the craving for response formerly satisfied in friendship                     between those of the same sex, and love between the sexes,                     changes to a desire for gratitude and love from one&#8217;s children                     or from those who owe something to one&#8217;s efforts. How many                     are the tragedies of the old which grow out of the failure                     to secure such a response!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>These are not days in which the generality of humanity indulges                     liberally in service to others. We blame the pace of life,                     the shortness of time, the demands of duty, and other things,                     for our neglect of the samaritan acts really natural to us,                     but suppressed.<\/p>\n<p>Here is an opportunity for those advanced in years. Dr.                     Hans Selye says wisely in his book <em>The Stress of Life<\/em>:                     &#8220;neither wealth, nor force, nor any other instrument of power                     can ever be more reliable in assuring our security and peace                     of mind than the knowledge of having inspired gratitude in                     a great ninny people.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>No longer hurried and confused by the headlong rush of life,                     we are able to look around and distinguish the real from the                     artificial, the excellent from the customary. Now is the time                     to put into personal practice all that you have learned about                     how to live, and to express in a continuing way your goodwill                     toward others. By putting into daily practice the basic principle                     of the Golden Rule you will find that you have not merely                     alleviated a present ill, but have transformed it.<\/p>\n<p>This does not mean that one should go around the family                     or neighbours giving advice. Lord Chesterfield cautioned his                     son in words like these: &#8220;Wear your learning, like your watch,                     in a private pocket, and do not pull it out merely to show                     you have it. If you are asked what o&#8217;clock it is, tell it;                     but do not proclaim it hourly and unasked.&#8221; Don&#8217;t brag about                     what you did when you were young, or boast about what you                     would do today if you were not old.<\/p>\n<p>If there is one quality more than another that marks maturity,                     it is the quality of awareness. You will, when you are on                     the lookout for it, sense the moment when your advice and                     counsel would be fitting and useful; you will be aware, too,                     of the times when the weight of your years&#8217; experience would                     be a strain on good relations.<\/p>\n<h3>Take it easy: don&#8217;t quit<\/h3>\n<p>The time has come to lower sails and gather in the lines.                     When the sheet is slackened, the ship loses way, fails to                     maintain its speed, and so takes more time to finish its course.<\/p>\n<p>A clumsy sailor, of course, may &#8220;slack off the sheet&#8221; too                     soon. The easy chair has become a source of calamity for people                     past sixty. It requires no effort to become a sitter. We readily                     get into the way of shunning exercise.<\/p>\n<p>To &#8220;kill time&#8221;, said Abb\u00e9 Ernest Dimnet, is the most                     sacrilegious phrase in modern languages. There are still fine,                     strange things to be found, and regardless of what is found                     the search itself is fun. Think up something you want, or                     want to know. If you are at a loose end for interests, do                     as a child without toys does: make some. Pitkin advised men                     in that state to write down a dozen things they had thought                     of at various times in their lives that they would like to                     do, and then to try them one by one insofar as their strength<\/p>\n<p>and funds allow.<\/p>\n<p>The wisest investment of time lies in creative activities.                     Hobbies can be boring, transient, things if they do not involve                     imagination and doing. To design and build a doll house for                     a granddaughter out of an orange crate; to make a railway                     system for a grandson out of wire soldered on ties cut with                     a penknife; to write the story of your life as an inspiration                     to your children and their children; to prepare an anthology                     of the great thoughts that you have come upon; to teach Boy                     Scouts or Girl Guides what they need to know in order to earn                     a proficiency badge in your profession or trade: these, and                     hundreds of other activities such as church work, community                     service, coaching in drama or art, managing a team of boys                     or girls in a sport you know and like &#8211; all these hold out                     promise of full and happy&#8221; years.<\/p>\n<h3>Keep an open mind<\/h3>\n<p>The most difficult thing is to keep the mind from slowly                     going closed in the face of every-day undramatic happenings.                     Mental rigidity and stagnation are not the fated conditions                     of old age. Alfred North Whitehead said &#8220;I would make some                     of this advanced education compulsory, and keep up the process                     of education to the age of ninety&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>To make it possible for older people to keep on learning                     is the job of those who govern our educational institutions.                     Schools can go some distance in making buildings and facilities                     available for the use of older people. Adult education can                     attune itself, not to filling in gaps in education, but to                     opening opportunities for self-expression and self-realization,                     while giving people guidance so that they can steer through                     the shifting currents of changing times.<\/p>\n<p>Youth is a heap of beginnings; age a handful of achievements;                     but age gives us no time to dote or dream. Life is still a                     grand adventure, a fine show. The trick is to look at it and                     play in it at the same time.<\/p>\n<p>The vital secret of happiness in old age is to keep moving.                     And, who knows, some work of noble note may yet be done. Do                     not forget the hands of the aged: they have touched much of                     life and have become sensitive and sympathetic.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[40],"class_list":["post-4080","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-40"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>October 1960 - VOL. 41, No. 8 - The Social Challenge of Old Age - RBC<\/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\/october-1960-vol-41-no-8-the-social-challenge-of-old-age\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"October 1960 - VOL. 41, No. 8 - The Social Challenge of Old Age - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"A new problem in human experience has appeared in our Western World: the rapidly growing number of older people in our population. 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So far as is known, no culture in history has ever had such a high proportion of people past middle age. 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