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Claiming our Elderhood:
Growing Elder and Not Just Older
© By Ron Pevny
Editor's
note: The author is a life
coach and psychologist who, for many years, has
offered rites of passage and other support services
for individuals and organizations in transition. He
and his colleagues offer rites of passage for
elders, in wilderness and retreat center settings,
through
Animas Valley Institute and the
School of Lost Borders.
For information about the programs which Ron Pevny
and Ann Roberts will lead in 2007, click here.
Listen carefully and you will
hear a rumbling, as the first of the baby-boom generation
cross the threshold into our sixties. This rumbling will
soon become a demographic earthquake. In an America that
worships youth, the proportion of the population over sixty
will reach unprecedented heights, and the resulting impact
upon every aspect of American life will be profound. Each
day, we need look no further than the media and the internet
to find predictions of the demographic sea change that is
nearly upon us.
Listen
even more carefully and you will detect another rumbling at
a different frequency. This is the sound of a rapidly
increasing number of seniors and baby-boomers questioning
the mainstream contemporary models for aging. These are
people having a sense — sometimes a vague yearning tinged
with frustration and fear, sometimes a persistent deep
feeling of inner calling — that there are more possibilities
for their senior years than are generally recognized and
supported. They feel a call to Elderhood, and sense that
there is a difference between being old or senior, and being
an elder. But, they often don’t know what this would look
like or how to get there. And, living in a society in which
there is no designated role for elders, there is no
prescription. The good news is that a general shape of
Elderhood in America is beginning to emerge.
Throughout much of recorded
history, up until the Industrial Revolution, elders have had
honored roles in society. They have been the nurturers of
community, the spiritual leaders, the guardians of the
traditions, the teachers, mentors and initiators of the
young. They have been the storytellers who have helped
their people see the enduring wisdom and deeper meanings of
life that lie beneath superficial models of reality and
persist through life’s changes.
Elders have been the ones
who, over long lives of experience and growth, have
converted knowledge and experience into wisdom and whose
revered role is to model this wisdom as they teach the
younger generations.
So much has changed since
then. The impending demographic shift is a result of
societal advances that now make it possible for large
numbers of people to live, often healthily, well into their
seventies, eighties and even longer. Such lifespans for huge
numbers of people are unprecedented in human history. It is
no longer just the rare few who live long lives.
At the same time, for the
last century, at least, our culture has adopted the machine
as a new metaphor for how human life is viewed. We are
assembled and programmed during the years of youth. We
efficiently produce material goods and new ideas and
information during the years of adulthood, and our value is
directly tied to what we contribute to the economy. We go to
therapy if we are unable to continue to be efficient. In the
senior years we slow or break down, no longer able to
compete with those younger, and we are taken out of service
or make that choice ourselves In a world of
ever-accelerating change, most of what older people have
learned about work and technology — about contributing to
the economy — is considered out of date and no longer
useful. However, in dismissing the elderly for these
reasons, modern society also dismisses its potential prime
source of deep wisdom and values, wisdom that can be read
about in books and blogs but which is most powerfully
communicated by those elders who have become able to embody
what they teach.
So, we live in an America
that will soon be composed of record numbers of seniors
facing the prospect of many years, even decades, of life.
What are the contemporary models for aging that shape our
visions for how we will live these years?
Many seniors and
baby-boomers, especially those with financial security and
good health, see our senior years as a time of well-deserved
rest from responsibility and plentiful opportunities for
recreation, travel, adventure and learning. As early a
retirement as possible is the ideal for many, and moving to
leisure-oriented communities of people like ourselves may
well be part of this vision.
For those not so
economically fortunate and healthy, the prospects for our
senior years can appear much less appealing. They envision
years of living alone, in elder care facilities or with our
children, with few opportunities and quite possibly the
prospect of having to take low-paying service jobs to keep
body and soul together.
Of course, this
categorization is too simple. More and more seniors in both
categories are volunteering in our communities. Many
retirees are choosing to work part-time as consultants in
our former professions or to pursue entirely different
careers for reasons other than economic necessity. The
models are not nearly as clear-cut as they were ten or
twenty years ago. The cultural landscape is being redefined,
and will be so even more profoundly as the baby-boomers, who
have led so much cultural change since the 60’s, become
sixty. And this leads back to the distinction between being
elder and being old.
We human beings seem to be
genetically wired with a need for living passionate lives of
purpose, meaning and service to the greater good, a good
which is larger than the economy. Throughout the last
century, the mainstream visions of aging have largely seen
the senior years as a time for withdrawing from contribution
to the larger community, a time for winding down. At the
same time, as life expectancy has dramatically increased,
for many the years after retirement can be a significant
portion of one’s life. Can we find fulfillment and passion
by “winding down” for twenty or thirty years? By devoting
our lives to golf or other recreation? And what about the
urgent need for elder wisdom in a complex and threatened
world where true wisdom seems to be in short supply?
The emerging definition of
what Elderhood can be in today’s world is very much linked
to the crucial question of how, as a senior, to meet this
need for purpose, meaning and service to the larger
community. The challenge for those feeling these needs is to
envision, create and claim elder roles for ourselves in a
society greatly in need of elder wisdom but offering few
such roles or models to its seniors. This is not something
that is easily done alone. And it requires preparation at
all levels — physical, psychological and spiritual.
This is where meaningful
rites of passage, also in critically short supply, can play
such an important role. Throughout most of known human
history, significant changes in life status have been marked
by rites of passage or initiation into the next stage of
life. The intent has been to provide extensive psychological
and spiritual preparation for the transition, followed by a
significant ceremony to mark the life passage, with the goal
being to help the initiate to consciously and fully move
into his/her next role. Through such powerful processes,
people were assisted in letting go of attitudes, behaviors
and self concepts that would not fit their new life roles,
and were guided in identifying and strengthening the wisdom,
the psychological resources and the spiritual connection
necessary for claiming and effectively filling their new
statuses.
Contrast this with today’s
world, where meaningful, empowering rites of passage are
rare, and people are expected to move from one stage to
another largely on their own, with little psychological and
spiritual preparation. Teens graduate and are assumed and
expected to be adults. Adults retire and are assumed and
expected to be — what? Old? Out of the way so the young can
make the contributions? Drains on the budget?
This is a call for meaningful
rites of passage for those feeling the call to Elderhood.
It is a call to the leaders of the many spiritual traditions
in our country, as well as those others who, through various
means have stepped into and owned the wisdom of their own
eldering, to develop inspiring, intensive programs of
preparation for Elderhood, culminating in ceremonies of
passage. It is also a call to seniors and
soon-to-be-seniors who feel called to Elderhood to request
and seek out such support. A few programs already exist
and are having a dramatic impact upon those who utilize
them. As burgeoning numbers of people stand on or near the
threshold to their senior years, the need and demand for
elder rites of passage will greatly increase.
Whatever form they take,
effective rites of passage into Elderhood will not prescribe
a particular form or role for emerging elders. The ways in
which these elders will share their wisdom and skills with
the larger community will be as unique as each individual
and as diverse as the American population. What we new
elders will have in common, however, is a commitment to
continual growth, discovery of purpose, passion and
service. We will realize that our wholeness, and the
well-being of the larger society and our planet itself,
cannot be separated. Current and soon-to-be seniors can
play a critical role in shaping a positive future if we
choose to not withdraw as we age, but rather to nurture
ourselves and our communities by claiming our roles as
elders.
Ü
Ron Pevny can be reached at his home in Durango, CO,
at (970) 247-7943 or
ronp@frontier.net.
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