on 10-01-2012 06:23 AM
"This is for the Senior members of CS, those born before 1947. Baby Boomers and Generations X & Y are welcome providing you are over 18 🙂
But this is definitely for people who are facing the last long haul. We have survived babyhood, childhood, being teens and twenties... We have learned to read and write, to drive, have probably been married and the women have survived child birth.
The challenges are constant and the near misses of death are also there. If we have become a senior we have learned to survive so much, and along the way we have, of course, gathered a great deal of knowledge about life.
The belief that age diminishes us is not true, it changes us and not all of it is bad. Yes there can be various forms of dementia for some, but that is also a disease that can happen in younger people. Alzheimer's can also occur - it is another form of dementia and generally occurs in people over 65, although that can occur much earlier too and not everyone is going to get it.
Most of us keep our mental alertness up to the moment of death, even if we lose our hearing and our eyesight, but of course this can happen at any age too.
What changes is our physical strength, which diminishes but our mental strength and patience grows, it has to of course, to deal with this aging thing.
Arthritis, heart trouble, strokes - all these things associated with age can happen at any time in your life - arthritis can happen when you are a child but they don't like giving out new hips and knees until you are in your 50s and 60s or later. We can talk about that too.
Cancer can happen any time and that is also something we can discuss here if you like.
The point of this thread is to give the Seniors a chance to talk about how they are coping with age, the challenges it presents and the fears that can come with it... loss of hearing or sight, aging spouses, living alone, retirement villages, even death...
So I will ask that the Juniors treat us in kindly fashion and remember, all this is going to happen to you too - providing you avoid death before you get here 🙂
So, onward and upward. Let's go...."
on 10-01-2012 06:12 PM
Yes Rosie, I noticed the sweater he was wearing.
I was too polite to say anything. ha ha ha.
on 10-01-2012 06:26 PM
on 10-01-2012 06:31 PM
:^O
on 10-01-2012 06:36 PM
🙂
:^O Can I borrow your teeth to eat the dippy bread?
on 10-01-2012 06:43 PM
Lol ill pass on the meals on wheels their food for the most part is beyond disgusting:(
Ill have a lobster mornay swilled down with a chilled white thanks:)
on 10-01-2012 06:43 PM
omg I remember many years ago my Nana feeding us "sops"
bread with hot milk and sugar and sometimes raspberry jam
as the world turns I may end up eating it again some day
Hi Rosie nice to see you
on 10-01-2012 06:43 PM
🙂
Bwhaaaaaaa you are so right we have spent a lifetime protecting the children... so we are still at it are we?
Will they never grow old ... sigh 😞
on 10-01-2012 06:44 PM
Lol ill pass on the meals on wheels their food for the most part is beyond disgusting:(
Ill have a lobster mornay swilled down with a chilled white thanks:)
I'll join you JV.. that sounds just about what I need right now.
on 10-01-2012 06:45 PM
:^O Can I borrow your teeth to eat the dippy bread?
You're not having mine, that's for sure :^O
on 10-01-2012 07:00 PM
I believe we (those born between 1925-1945) are known as THE SILENT GENERATION, but does anyone know why?
Apparently you all sat silently by and didn't protest enough...
From Wiki
The label "Silent Generation" was first coined in the November 5, 1951 cover story of Time to refer to the generation coming of age at the time, born during the Great Depression and World War II, including the bulk of those who fought during the Korean War. The article, (which defined the generation at the time as born from 1925 to 1945), found its characteristics as grave and fatalistic, conventional, possessing confused morals, expecting disappointment but desiring faith, and for women, desiring both a career and a family.[1] The article stated:
Youth today is waiting for the hand of fate to fall on its shoulders, meanwhile working fairly hard and saying almost nothing. The most startling fact about the younger generation is its silence. With some rare exceptions, youth is nowhere near the rostrum. By comparison with the Flaming Youth of their fathers & mothers, today's younger generation is a still, small flame. It does not issue manifestos, make speeches or carry posters. It has been called the "Silent Generation."
The phrase gained further currency after William Manchester's comment that the members of this generation were "withdrawn, cautious, unimaginative, indifferent, unadventurous and silent." The name was used by Strauss and Howe in their book Generations as their designation for that generation in the United States of America born from 1925 to 1941.[2] The generation is also known as the Postwar Generation and the Seekers, when it is not neglected altogether and placed by marketers in the same category as the G.I. or "Greatest" Generation.
In England, they were named the "Air Raid Generation" as children growing up amidst the crossfire of World War II.
If I hadn't read it I would not believe it.. I think seniors have a hell of a lot to say... if everyone else just stopped for a moment to listen..
I am an X-Gen myself but will happily sit back and read this thread...
Great idea Darkie... :-x