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Are we (or most of us) guilty of age bias?

(59 Posts)
Dinahmo Thu 24-Aug-23 16:24:52

The following is an article from The Washington Post. Rather long but interesting I think.

"Age bias doesn’t show up only as blatant discrimination (“We want someone younger for that job.”) or snarky birthday cards. One of the most potent sources of ageism comes from older people themselves, and like other forms of ageism, the self-inflicted kind is associated with lower levels of emotional and physical health and can slash years off people’s lives.

People, however, can shift these negative feelings to improve their well-being. When older people are reminded of the many positive things about aging, they can experience immediate benefits such as becoming stronger and having more will to live, said Becca Levy, a professor of epidemiology and psychology at the Yale School of Public Health who is a leading expert on the health effects of ageism.

“Age beliefs are not set in stone,” said Levy, author of “Breaking the Age Code: How Your Beliefs About Aging Determine How Long & Well You Live.” “They’re malleable. That’s a really key piece.”
What is internalized ageism?

Internalized ageism is the negative voice in a person’s head that may push them to take extreme measures to look younger (Madonna’s radical facelift) or tell themselves they’re having a “senior moment” every time they forget a name.

hese attitudes are nearly universal: Over 80 percent of people between ages 50 and 80 subscribe to ageist stereotypes, according to a study led by Julie Ober Allen, assistant professor of health and exercise science at the University of Oklahoma.

The irony is that in reality, the vast majority of older people feel in good health and are satisfied with their lives. But you’d never know that from how older people are portrayed in advertising and entertainment — forgetful, cranky and frail.

It may seem counterintuitive to hold a prejudice against yourself, but internalized ageism takes hold in a sneaky way. It begins in childhood, with fairy tales about evil witches, and deepens over time thanks to negative messages we absorb from the media and society, experts on aging say. Then at some point, when we notice our hair graying or younger people start offering up their seats on the bus, the toxic age beliefs that we casually assimilated while they seemed to be about other people suddenly turn personal.

“The extent of older persons actually believing themselves to be inferior from others because of their age is staggering,” said Marvin Formosa, associate professor of gerontology at the University of Malta.

People deny their age, even to themselves, he said, and the fast-growing anti-aging industry caters to those impulses. Americans spent $5.4 billion in 2022 on anti-aging skin products, according to market research from Euromonitor International.

Age bias doesn’t just sell anti-wrinkle creams. It affects how people think, feel and act.

In her research, Levy exposes older people subliminally to charged words about aging — positive stereotypes such as wise and accomplished, or negative ones such as senile and dependent — while they are playing a computer game. Before and after the game, her team asks participants to complete tasks such as reproducing from memory a dot pattern they’d previously viewed, talking about a stressful event, walking a short distance and balancing.

When people unconsciously absorbed uplifting words about aging, they showed improvements in memory, their blood pressure and heart rate were reduced while recounting a stressful event, and they walked faster and had better balance. Conversely, after unconsciously absorbing age negativity, participants had worse recall and a heightened stress response.

Levy has also tracked people over time and found that older people with more positive age beliefs were much less likely to develop dementia, even when they carried an Alzheimer’s gene.

In another study, she found that people who had internalized more positive age beliefs lived, on average, 7.5 years longer. Research by other teams has confirmed her findings.

Levy’s hypothesis, based on her research, is that internalized ageism worsens health through three mechanisms.

When you think decline is inevitable, you’re less motivated to take your medicine, eat well and exercise.
Feeling bad about getting old can lower self-confidence, which can make people withdraw (one recent study, for example, found that internalized ageism made people want to retire early).
Negative emotions about aging can raise people’s biological stress levels, putting them at risk for heart disease and stroke.

Changing habits is also key to Levy’s three-part strategy to reduce internalized ageism.

Recognize ageism. “If we’re not aware of some of that messaging, then it’s hard to resist it and question it and not take it in,” Levy said.
Shift the blame from age to ageism. A doctor told Janine Vanderburg, of North Fork Valley, Colo., that her knee hurt because she was getting older. Vanderburg, 70, thought, “Then why does my other knee feel fine? It’s the same age.” She insisted on an MRI; “I had to push for that.”
Challenge anti-aging messages in advertising, politics, everyday conversations — and your own thoughts.

People who have a purpose and feel confident they can achieve their goals may be less susceptible to internalized ageism, said Andrew Steward, assistant professor of social work at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee.

He and a colleague tested whether exercise, volunteering and computer use reduced people’s negative age beliefs, and found that older people who participate in these activities had more positive self-perceptions about aging. “If we engage in a healthy lifestyle in these variety of ways, that can mitigate the negative impacts of internalized ageism,” he says.

Internalized ageism is so normalized it can be hard to spot. It even comes in the form of compliments such as, “You haven’t changed a bit” or “You don’t look your age.” Last year, Aalda created an Instagram project — Say Your Age! — for women to “out” themselves as the age they are, and in June, ageism activist and fashion entrepreneur Jacynth Bassett’s social media campaign, #ILookMyAge, went viral.

Thousands of people, mostly women, have posted exuberant photos and videos of themselves, and content related to the hashtag has gotten more than 27 million views.

“When people say you don’t look your age, well actually, you’re basing that on your internalized ageist attitude of what it means to look a certain age,” Bassett said. “You have this box.”

Kim19 Sat 26-Aug-23 23:12:29

Very good Callistemon!

M0nica Sun 27-Aug-23 07:55:17

fancythat People can ignore me. I am not helping this thread.

Of curse you are. Every response every query drives the thread forward and makes people stop for a moment to think - and agree or disagree.

Personally, I do not think that old age is really that different from any other age, one always has to look ahead for possible problems and think through lightly possible Plan Bs.

For us it goes right back to when we were first married and planning a family. We had a couple of 'what if' discussions as to what we would do if we couldn't have children. Would we adopt? Stay childless? DH did a lot of international travel to quite remote places, we 'what iffed' if anything happened to him - and made wills.

Recently following minor health problems, we have revisited our plans to downsize locally where we have lived for some time. Our children do not have an easy journey to us, so after talking to them, we are considering downsizing somewhere closer to them. Currently everything is working fine, we are both healthy and independent, but we are just thinking and planning ahead, so that if and when we do need to move, we know what we will do.

fancythat Sun 27-Aug-23 08:47:25

Thank you all for the lovely comments!

DH and I have a lot of "what ifs".
I am starting to realise there are too many possible what ifs, to be able to plan with any certainty.

I have a friend and her DH who I think are making the next right step for them. But we realised together that her situation and mine are not the same. They do not sadly have any parents left. So the future is about themselves.
DH and I have 3 elderly parents. All of whom at the moment are in relatively good health.
To my mind, we cannot effectively abandon them, and get on with things all about ourselves.

M0nica Sun 27-Aug-23 10:31:22

fancythat That is not an uncommon dilemma. For decades many of our decisions were governed by wanting stay within reasonable reach of our parents as they aged and might need us. Our children were young and we were much younger and travelling distances between the younger generations wasn't a problem.

But now we are the older generation, and have already seen our children face the problems of long journeys to us at short notice when DH had a major health crisis. Work and family commitments mean they cannot move to be near us, but would be happier if we lived closer to them, but at the same time we do not want to move too far north because most of our more extended family and friends are in the south east, so one of our requirements for our new location will be being close to a mainline station to London.

Thes econflicting problems are with all of us, this is why it is worth thinking ahead and sketching out ideas, even if things never quite turn out as you meant them.

For many year I have been fascinated by the history of the Regency period and the Napleoinc wars. Our great military commander, the Duke of Wellington, having made some plans was asked what would hapen if something came up to disrupt them. His response was that his plans were made of rope, if they broke, he tied a knot and went on. I have found that response very useful when, as always, things do not always go ahead as planned.

loopyloo Sun 27-Aug-23 11:22:21

MOnica, many apologies. My remarks were certainly not directly aimed at you or the thread. Just an observation that some of the people I meet seem to be competing to be the smartest fittest best dressed etc.
And of course there is a whole industry built on our desire to stay young.
These days I am glad I can move around without too much discomfort and can still see.
Yes as my mother used to say "count your blessings"
Again apologies.

CatsCatsCats Sun 27-Aug-23 12:53:58

Is this being guilty of age bias?

If so, so be it - I found it to be both apt and funny.

Dinahmo Sun 27-Aug-23 19:41:11

CatsCatsCats your card is a representation I think of Iris Apfel, a New Yorker, born in 1921, who was involved in fashion, textiles and interior design. Her dress sense is way out - but she is a bit of a style icon. Not to everyone's taste of course. She is to me but I am too large to dress as she does, even if I had the money. Then I was reminded of Bubbles Rothermere, a rather large lady who used to wear Zandra Rhodes evening gowns and they were pretty amazing too. But alas, also too expensive.

M0nica Sun 27-Aug-23 20:14:07

Iris Apfel is a model for us. She is now 101 and does not let age come between her and living life in her own way, including her OTT cothes.