If Paul McCartney was writing the lyrics now, this might be the title. Sixty-four today is young by any standard. So I tackle Sr Joan Chittister’s reflection on “Ageism” in her book The Gift of Years with some diffidence.
In my mid-seventies, I can’t say that I have yet experienced to a noticeable degree the prejudices that she explores. It’s never been suggested that I am beyond my depth, losing my marbles, or out of touch. No one’s ever said to me, “Okay, boomer!” I am, however, aware of many who have experienced passive or active prejudice, so I take seriously the nuances that she raises, affected by perceptions of diminished mental, social, economic and physical capacity from those around us. These, in turn, affect our inner awareness and the degree to which we “live into” the expectations of others or ourselves.
It seems unusual then to speak of ageism as a gift when it is mostly a shallow, culturally conditioned projection from both within and without. The gift is more perhaps in the choice of response we make. We can feed into such cultural determinism by defiantly tilting at windmills “to prove a point” or tap into our years of wisdom and discerning know-how as a winsome resource to offer others when invited. We can give in to the limits of perceived diminishment or answer the call to model how to live fully whatever our current circumstances.
Herein is both the burden and the blessing:
A burden of these years is the danger that we might internalise the negative sterotypes of the ageing process. We might become what we fear, and so abdicate our new call to life.
A blessing of these years is that we are the ones whose responsibility it is to prove the stereotypes wrong, to give age its own fulness of life.
Sr Joan Chittister
My mother, in her confinement, has just turned 99 and she models living fully well!









