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The Sun City
"Lifestyle"
Retirement is...
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A |
“a time to take it easy, take care of
yourself, enjoy leisure activities, and take a much-deserved
rest from work and daily responsibilities.” |
B |
“a time to begin a new chapter in life
by being active and involved, starting new activities, and
setting new goals.” |
According
to Marc Freedman, the traditional
view of retirement (Option A) is largely the invention of
one man, Del Webb, the Arizona developer/ promoter whose
Sun City launched the retirement community industry. Nearly
fifty years later, much new residential development still plays one or
another variation on the Sun City theme.
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Promotional Copy For
A Typical Del Webb Community |
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SUN CITY HUNTLEY (IL) |
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Welcome to the Midwest's premier active adult community, Sun
City Huntley. This award-winning community for active adults
ages 55 and better offers spectacular amenities, a rewarding
social atmosphere and a convenient location close to your
family, your friends and all the things you love.1
At Sun City Huntley you will feel like you are on vacation
365 days a year! From the moment you drive into the luxurious
entrance featuring cascading waterfalls and mature landscaping,
you will feel as if you are entering your own private resort! As
you drive down Del Webb Boulevard you will notice gently rolling
prairies, meandering paths, water fountains and beautiful ranch
homes tucked into the natural beauty of the landscape. Imagine
coming home to this each and everyday!1
Become a resident in a Del Webb Active
Adult community, for people 55 or better, and you will take
ownership of a new lifestyle. From our state-of-the-art fitness
centers and exquisite golf courses to a variety of classes and
clubs ranging from ceramics to computers to personal investing,
Del Webb offers a lifestyle that allows you to set your own
course. Whether you seek a resort style environment or a more
intimate community, the lifestyle you're looking for is waiting
for you.2
Sources: 1Sun
City Huntley page & 2Lifestyle
page |
Compared to
the modest bungalows of 1960's vintage, the new developments are
decidedly upscale, with a move to the Arizona desert is no
longer a prerequisite: “active adults” are lured to Sun City
Huntley, for example, by its “convenient location” — on the
Illinois prairie near Chicago — “close to your family, your
friends and all the things you love” (see inset).
Apparently,
however, increasingly fewer people find the prospect of being “on vacation 365
days a year” all that appealing. When asked to choose between
the competing versions of retirement above, Freedman reports, Americans between
the ages of 50-75, by a margin of nearly 3-to-1, preferred
Option B. The numbers were even more dramatic among the
boomer and pre-boomer cohorts.
A new
vision of aging is emerging in our time, and it is dramatically
altering how we choose the places we plan to grow old in. This ferment
within the culture is sparking the experiments and innovative
thinking you will see displayed throughout this guide.
“Community” vs “Lifestyle Enclave”
Sun City
offers LIFESTYLE. In spades! Become a resident and, voila!
you instantly “take ownership of a new lifestyle... Whether you
seek a resort style environment or a more intimate community,
the lifestyle you're looking for is waiting for you.” Uncertain
what lifestyle is “perfect for you”? With a
click you can get help from Del Webb's “Lifestyle Adviser.”
Sun City
tempts us with the thin broth of lifestyle, when what our hearts long
for is the deep nourishment of community. The authors of
Habits of the Hearts help us understand the important
difference between the two: “Whereas a community
attempts to be an inclusive whole, celebrating the
interdependence of public and private life and of the different
callings of all, lifestyle is fundamentally segmental and
celebrates the narcissism of similarity. It usually explicitly
involves a contrast with others who ‘do not share one's
lifestyle.’”
Instead of
speaking of “lifestyle communities,”
the authors propose the term “lifestyle enclaves.”
These they see as segmenting and segregating us in in
two senses. They engage only a segment of ourselves,
“for
they concern only private [and not public] life, especially leisure and
consumption. And they are segmental socially in that they
include only those with a common lifestyle. The different, those
with other lifestyles, are not necessarily despised. They may be
willingly tolerated. But they are irrelevant or even invisible
in terms of one's own lifestyle enclave.” [pp. 71-75]
By the way, when we clicked on the Del Webb
“Lifestyle Adviser,” we got
the
following message:
... Error
We are currently experiencing some
technical difficulties with our on-line Lifestyle Advisor
survey. Please call 1-800-268-3687 to request a hard-copy of the
survey via U.S. mail.
Thank you for your patience.
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 “The Selling of Retirement, And How We Bought It” by Marc Freedman
(Washington Post, February 6, 2005) ) In his ground-breaking book, Prime Time: How Baby Boomers Will Reinvent Retirement and Revolutionize America, Freedman, the founder of Civic Ventures, argues persuasively that a renewed sense of civic engagement is replacing the view of retirement as a time of leisure and consumption.
“Real Estate: Not Your Father's Retirement” by Daniel McGinn and Andrew Murr
(Newsweek, October 23, 2006)
“Boomers are redefining the 'golden years' by buying into communities that
feature Pilates over shuffleboard, moving back downtown—or even staying put.”
 “Why Refirement” from ReFirement: A Boomer's Guide to Life After 50 by James V. Gambone (Kirk House Publ., 2000) “What if we replaced the retirement concept with a new and positive vision of basing your life and work choices on your core values, your passions, a commitment to lifelong learning, an intentional connection to all generations, and a willingness to use your legacy as a starting point for deciding how you want to live today?”
“Aging Baby Boomers: A Guide for the Perplexed” edited by Richard P. Adler of the People and Technology Institute for the Future (October 2006) This annotated bibliography lists more than 50 useful books, reports and articles about the aging of the Baby Boomers.
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