Youthful Old Age!
A Self-evaluation Tool
“You can’t help getting older, but you don’t have to get old.”
- George Burns
“If you have confidence, it can empower you to reach
heights you never thought possible. But if you don’t, it can have a devastating
effect on your future. Confidence lies at the core of what makes things
happen.”
- Prof Ian Robertson
Defining Old Age
The inspiration to write this article was triggered by the
following WhatsApp message, obviously a newspaper clipping, which caught my
compelling attention some time ago. I reproduce it below exactly as received.
I have a tendency to
dismiss such messages as just bible bytes, but when I looked at the last line, proclaiming
the reputation of the original source, I thought better of
it, and read the whole piece with rapt attention. Then I checked the
credentials and professional background of the neuroscientist cited in the article.
As credibility was established quickly, I began to examine the contents from my
own perspective.
The primary
observation of Prof Ian Robertson (see picture below, aged 72) is that people
are aging slower now than before. The rest of his arguments are set out in the
newspaper clipping above and at the original source cited above. However,
worldwide differences exist in life expectancy, and I will get to this later in
this article.
Reverting to my own
interest in the topic, first and foremost, I have to reluctantly admit that I come
under the ‘old’ classification by any common demographic criteria since I will
be hitting 85 come September. Actually, I became a ‘super-senior citizen’ when
I turned 80, having received twin rewards of a substantially enhanced pension
and a not so substantially lower income tax. The new landmark next month entails me another
hike in pension. So, growing old is not always
a curse as it is generally made out to be; it also has its countervailing rewards,
even if it is only for some people like me!
There are also other minor
rewards like concessional, or even free, entry to exhibitions, museums, art
galleries, popular entertainment events, sports and games, etc., in some
countries. I have experienced a bit of this in countries as diverse as Japan
and Indonesia. Not so minor is the
enhanced interest rates for bank deposits from senior citizens in my country.
I am reconciled to my
‘old’ or ‘super senior’ status as an unalterable fact. But I must admit that a
‘feeling’ of being old has not crossed my mind any time, though my appearance
may suggest otherwise. Also, although it is 23 years since I retired from
service formally, it is only since the last three or four years I stopped
taking up paid assignments of a professional nature, which involved frequent
travel within the country, not because I was losing interest in them but
because I thought I needed to live differently.
Besides, I have travelled abroad quite extensively during the last
decade to satiate my urge to experience the wider world and ‘expand my horizons’.
These have kept me both physically active and mentally alert, something
impossible had I taken my retirement in any literal sense.
While age is a metronomically
increasing number, which we generally measure with a calendar based on
repetitive astronomical events, aging is a process that is rather
hard to quantify. It is something like the
entropy of a system which only increases with time in an unregulated physical
process, and never decreases. (Entropy, whose mathematical description we may
ignore here, is a measure of the disorder in a physical system, such as
a gas escaping from a leaky valve.)
Aging and Life
Expectancy
While Robertson sees several
reasons for a slowing down in the aging process, a correlation can also be seen
between aging and life expectancy, which has indeed increased
dramatically in most countries in the last few centuries, especially in the
last century. Below is a visual, showing
available data on life expectancies in different geographical regions over the
period 1770 – 2021. Barring Africa, life expectancy everywhere is now in the
seventies! While there are many reasons for this, the single most important
reason could be better health, fueled by spectacular advances in medical
sciences and technologies, and services, as also by better hygiene and public
awareness of good personal and civic habits.
[The little dip at
the end is obviously
attributable to the impact of Covid-19]
My own country, India,
has witnessed a doubling of life expectancy since independence (1947) as the
following graph indicates:
While the huge increase
in life expectancy speaks volumes for the progress the country has achieved
since independence, it has also opened up a rather problematic situation for
the government in the form of sky rocketing pension bills payable to its
retired employees at both central and state levels. In fact, the pension outlay currently is
significantly in excess of the salaries paid to working government employees. However, the extension of retirement benefits
to newer government employees has been greatly reduced in an effort to offset
the anomaly.
Towards quantifying
youthful aging
With my academic
background, I tend to look for quantitative relationships among variables, even
if they are of non-physical types pertaining to the noncognitive domain. So, largely on the basis of Ian Robertson’s
findings, I propose the following schema as a flippant exercise to
partially quantify the process of aging youthfully:
Based on Ian
Robertson’s observations, one can classify the human life span broadly into
three groups:
G1: Young age, up to 50
G2: Middle age, between 50 and 80
G3: Old age, above 80
Also, the key
descriptors associated with his seven-point plan to achieve a ‘youthful old
age’ can be reduced to:
- Aerobic fitness
- Mental stimulation
- New learning
- Reduced stress
- Social life
- Healthy eating
- Thinking young
We need to elaborate
each of these descriptors to spell out what it amounts to in some precise terms
as far as possible. Let me attempt this in my own way.
1) By aerobic fitness, I would like to include all physical activities, both outdoor and indoor. Being athletic or predominantly an outdoor type merits a higher rating. Leading a lazy, sedentary life works the other way around. The nature of one’s profession has a great deal to do with one’s physical fitness. The function and structure of the brain both appear to be influenced strongly by physical activity in daily life situations.
2) Mental stimulation is how one keeps one’s brain active by posing it all types of challenges, including the simplest of mathematical calculations or tackling complex problems requiring the use of advanced mental abilities. Games like chess or tasks like the Rubik cube fall into this category. People with high IQ should also rate highly. One can reduce cognitive decline to a significant degree by mental training.
3) New learning would mean expanding one’s horizons through learning ‘outside the box’. Moving from algebra to calculus, classical mechanics to quantum mechanics, one genre of music to another, etc., would all involve new learning. The more one learns, apparently the more one can learn. New learning can have profound physiological and psychological effects on the brain.
4) Life under undue stress is often counterproductive and hinders a smooth aging process. Hence, the emphasis on reducing stress. Extreme and prolonged stress appear to produce strong negative effects, particularly on human memory.
5) Social life includes how harmoniously one fits into the social fabric of everyday life. The degree of sociability should count as well. People who find it difficult to get on with others ought to rate low in this category. People who maintain a lot of social interactions seem to be able to maintain mental sharpness for quite a long time.
6) Healthy eating, under nutritional guidance, contributes to fewer ailments in life and therefore, slower aging. There is strong evidence that a diet rich in fruits and vegetables and fish seems to have profound effects on reducing cognitive decline in later life.
7) People who generally feel the burden of age are the antithesis of thinking young. Thinking young should also result in feeling young, a very powerful psychological stimulant to a youthful old age. The influence of confidence and positive thinking on the mental state is very well known. Norman Vincent Peale’s 1952 classic book on ‘The Power of Positive Thinking - A Practical Guide to Mastering the Problems of Everyday Living’ is a notable example.
The Age-Life style Matrix, a self-evaluation tool
Now, we can create a self-evaluation
tool by making up a matrix of numerical data showing Robinson’s life style descriptors
against the age group as set out below:
Next, one can assign
an appropriate numerical rating (needless to emphasize that this is entirely
subjective) at each cell of the matrix and do a simple arithmetic exercise to
determine where one stands on the ‘youthful old age’ index, both age group wise
and overall. The rating can be on a 1-5 scale or even 1-10. As an illustrative example, here is a fully
filled matrix on a 1-5 scale for one hypothetical ‘old’ person:
The above
self-assessment profile is broadly indicative of a person who is active both
physically and mentally, but leading a somewhat stressful and possibly
introverted, but stable, life.
Self-Evaluation
Now to a self-evaluation of whether and to what extent do I see myself satisfying the seven-point criteria for a youthful old age. Let me go through them one by one, first qualitatively.
Aerobic fitness: In my student days I used to dabble in all kinds of street level sports activities, including tennis ball cricket and long-distance walking, the latter more out of necessity than choice, eventually giving way to cycling even longer distances, more out of thrill than necessity. This progressed with time to table tennis, outdoor ‘ball’ badminton, which is a lighter version of indoor shuttle badminton, and eventually to even lawn tennis, which came in only one version for me, i.e., on hard courts. Walking long distances continued into my middle age and is still my mainstay, as are some indoor aerobic exercises, on the treadmill and the monocycle. These have ensured an adequate level of aerobic fitness despite having to manage some annoying morbidities and coexisting with some comorbidities, and covid! Yes, I score decently on this criterion!
Mental stimulation: If learning and teaching physics, other physical sciences and mathematics, and doing some occasional investigation and research projects requires or results in any degree of mental stimulation, I have had a fair share of it. Observational astronomy as a serious hobby has provided a welcome bonus! Even if a history of viewing total and annular solar eclipses in different parts of the world as another facet of the hobby is not sufficient evidence of an intense mental stimulation, the anticipation of viewing a few more of them in the winter of my life certainly is.
New learning: The very nature of the academic disciplines and activities that provide me a mental stimulation necessitates a continuous flow of new learnings to sustain the existing ones. This is perhaps the essence of the phrase ‘growing older and wiser’. But this is not the same as creating new knowledge or pushing the frontiers of existing knowledge which a true scientist ought to be doing. I have no illusions in this regard! My rating is distinctly bearish on this score!
Reducing stress: Stress is perhaps an unwelcome byproduct of an achievement oriented and active life. Success often comes at the expense of stress. I have had a fair share of highly stressful situations in life, as when I had to answer six theory papers in six consecutive days without a break in my master’s degree examination, or when I took up a high paying job only to realize that I was a misfit for it and eventually had to resign from it, or when I had to handle a major medical emergency at home, or when I myself was the victim of a hit-and-run accident in a foreign land, etc., but there have not been too many that I brought upon myself that are of my own making. By and large I have learnt to manage such situations with a combination of firmness, boldness, proactiveness and equanimity, and got on with the demands of life relatively unscathed. The art of reducing stress often boils down to not expecting disproportionately rewarding outcomes in relation to the efforts put it. I can rate myself satisfactory on this score.
Social Life: Being a bit of an introvert and unwilling to compromise on some of my radical beliefs, I do consider my social life perhaps as my weakest link with the outside world. Being a lifelong teetotaler and a vegetarian hasn’t helped either. I have been getting on reasonably well with other people socially as well as professionally, but perhaps not as well as I could. My score is distinctly below par.
Healthy eating: In my student days it was primarily a question of adequate eating as evidenced by my impoverished looks. After this issue was resolved in my later years, healthy eating was more a norm than an exception since most of what I used to eat was good home cooked food. It was only during my middle and old age stages that I occasionally indulged in junk food, especially during my travels. In recent years healthy eating has become a matter of necessity. By and large, I am doing well on this score.
Thinking young: I don’t suppose old people can be thinking young without also feeling young. The two indeed go together. If a feeling of living in a world full of excitement and wonder doesn’t foster thinking young, I am afraid nothing will. This is indeed my forte and I should rate myself quite high on this score.
So, how youthfully is my old age progressing? In other words, what is my self-evaluated matrix score? If at all interested, I leave the reader to unravel it from the following rather enigmatic numerical string:
454545543334233433555
The bottom line
How youthfully one can
age also depends on one’s attitude towards life. The following quote from Dr Ben Carson sums
it up eminently:
“Sometimes you are unsatisfied
with your life, while many people in this world are dreaming of living your
life. A child on a farm sees a plane fly overhead and dreams of flying. But, a
pilot on the plane sees the farmhouse and dreams of returning home. That’s
life!! Enjoy yours… If wealth is the secret to happiness, then the rich should
be dancing on the streets. But only poor kids do that. If power ensures
security, then officials should walk unguarded. But those who live simply,
sleep soundly. If beauty and fame bring ideal relationships, then celebrities
should have the best marriages. Live simply. Walk humbly and love genuinely...!
All good will come back to you.”
Sir,
ReplyDeleteThe reading of the article gave me an insight and threw light on the the inevitable aging could be dynamic and adventurous. Open mind to new ideas and change in mindset to aging are essential for a pleasant post work retirement officially.