CHRIST IN WINTER: Reflections on Aging from an Aged Man—SHORT LIFE—GOOD ATTITUDE [2-4-26]
It’s well known now, at least among psychologists, that old people are not any wiser or smarter than younger people; we’re just aware that we have less time to live. When you know your days are limited, you make better choices about how to live them.
Psychological researchers like Laura Carstensen have done many studies that show this: your attitude toward life depends almost entirely on how long you think you’re going to live.
If you think you’re going to live for quite a while, you are interested in future achievement, expanding life, making new friends. If you think you will die in a relatively short time, regardless of how young or old you are, you are primarily interested in enjoying the present, drawing your circle close, with the family and friends you already have.
I did not know about Carstensen’s work when I got sick one night, and had surgery at midnight on my 53rd birthday, and was told the next morning I would die. [That is not the exact time line, but that’s how it felt at the time, and still does.]
Within a matter of
minutes, I stopped thinking about where the bishop might appoint me next, and
if I could get a novel published, and where Helen and I might go on vacation.
Instead I was thinking about whether I could afford to retire early so that I could
spend all my time with my family and close friends, especially my
grandchildren. Bigger churches? More book sales? Acclaim and applause? Not
interested at all.
It’s not morbid to say that you’ll die soon, as I often do, not because I’m sick, but just because of the realities of age. As a society, we don’t deal well with that. We seem to think that if we don’t anticipate death, it won’t happen. Younger people, who are still in their futuring years, keep saying to me, “You’re much healthier than other people your age. Oh, you’re so healthy, you’ll live to be ninety!” Yeah, but what are you going to say when I’m 89? Yes, that’s today, so it’s okay to say, “Hey, you’d better start making good choices about how to spend the rest of your short life.”
John Robert McFarland
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