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Reply To: Times harder as we age? Everything at once

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Anonymous
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Dear Sandhya:

Thank you for wishing me peace. You shared that when you were young you went through difficult situations easier. You had a very difficult career but you don’t remember pain involved. “Life was easier when I was younger, or maybe I wasn’t paying attention. Probably the latter. Maybe I just have more time to focus on things now. Now.. I am feeling loss more, and it’s resting on my mind harder“- life was easier in the past because you were very busy with your career and otherwise, too busy to pay attention. Now life is more difficult because you are retired and otherwise less busy, and therefore, you are paying more attention.

Perhaps if you get busy with something new, your focus and attention will again move away from life difficulties and life will get easier for it.

I’ve had 11 surgeries and have never had pain medications because I learned to have a relationship with pain, I can still see myself going without post op pain medications. It’s the emotional pain I have more problems with now“-

What if you can form a relationship with emotional pain, one that is somewhat different from your relationship with physical pain?

apa. org/ aging (I added the boldface feature so to point to issues you mentioned or issues that may apply to you): “Geropsychology is the field within psychology that applies the knowledge and methods of psychology to understanding and helping older persons and their families maintain well-being, overcome problems, and achieve maximum potential during later life. As with younger adults, a variety of treatable mental health disorders affect older adults. In fact, older adults have the highest rates of suicide of any age group in the U.S., and depression is its foremost risk factor. In addition, stressors common in late life such as loss of loved ones, relocation, health conditions, caregiving demands, change in employment status, and poverty significantly affect the health and independence of older adults….

“Geropsychologists are at the forefront of research on questions related to health and aging. Why are most older adults successful in adapting to the stressors of late life while others become suicidal? Why do most older adults remain mentally sharp while others have memory problems?”.

I am guessing that geropsychologists address the topics of age-appropriate nutrition & daily exercise, & age appropriate socialization opportunities, as well as teaching emotion regulation skills, assertiveness skills (“Did I suit any purpose what so ever except to be needed by everyone else? … I was tapped out, I needed to need me”, you wrote in your original post).

Also, Viktor Frankl’s book Man’s Search for Meaning comes to mind. Quotes: “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms—to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way“- one’s youth is taken away if we live long enough, but an older person still has the freedom to choose his/ her attitude and individual, chosen way of living.

It is not freedom from conditions, but it is freedom to take a stand toward the conditions“- the freedom to choose one’s attitude, one’s stand toward aging and other conditions.

Those who have a ‘why’ to live, can bear with almost any ‘how’“,

Even the helpless victim of a hopeless situation, facing a fate he cannot change, may rise above himself, may grow beyond himself, and by so doing change himself. He may turn a personal tragedy into a triumph“, quotes again, are from Man’s Search for Meaning.

anita