Notes on Aging

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For some years I have been giving thought to the matter of age and aging. This is partly because of the great recent, current, and prospective increase in the older population—a major change, especially impressive in the United States, to which two key factors have contributed. One is the imminent arrival in the older age brackets of the large number of people born in the immediate aftermath of World War II—the baby-boom generation, as it is less-than-attractively called. The other is the improvement in health care, both in provision for its cost, however still imperfect, and in medical and surgical knowledge and treatment. A further factor that should not be ignored is the drop in tobacco use, which, perhaps surprisingly, will increase medical costs. Cigarette smokers tend to die early and, on the whole, rather inexpensively, whereas nonsmokers live to experience the lengthy and expensive medical care so often required by the old.

My further interest in aging is more personal. I write these lines from a certain measure of experience; this year (1998) I celebrate, if that is the word, my 90th birthday. Thus, I have the authority, greater or lesser, of one who is there.

I should perhaps first note that apart from the aftermath of a fall in 1997—an injured shoulder, hip, and what in polite language is called a pelvis—I am in good health. Over the past half a century, I have not greatly changed my daily routine—breakfast in bed, an often dreary session with The New York Times, writing until lunch, exercise (for a long time swimming, now walking), attention to a large correspondence consisting mostly of requests to do or give something. Then a drink, dinner, and whatever commands the evening.

Unretiring attitude

I retired from active teaching at Harvard 22 years ago, when I was 68 years old. This was more formal than real. I live in Cambridge, close to Harvard Yard; after “retirement” the university—faculty, students, and functions—continued to require of me about the same effort as it had previously. Much work for somewhat less money. I thought I would have more time for writing; retirement made little difference. For many years my wife, Catherine, and I escaped every winter to Switzerland, where I wrote in the morning and skied in the afternoon. Eventually I was told by doctors that I must stop the skiing. That has been my only major concession to age.

Regarding the larger problem of the aging and the aged, as I have observed it, there are two critical concerns, closely related. The first is how the individual should respond to the mature years. The second is how the larger community, including the government, should respond to the needs of the old. I have rather strong views on both.

In the greatest possible measure, the individual response to growing older should be governed by preference and personal decision. For most older people the dominant, indeed controlling, factor is the matter of work. If this is enjoyed (and therewith the income), the individual should be allowed to exercise his or her preference as long as possible. In modern life an increasingly large proportion of the population—executives (and their financial acolytes), lawyers, authors, teachers, government workers, assorted intellectuals—has that choice. Anything that thwarts it, specifically an arbitrarily established mandatory retirement age, should be strongly resisted. Although diminishing capacity and aptitude do come with age, they should be acted upon in the specific case. The choice between working and not working, to repeat, must always consider the individual circumstances.

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For those for whom work is an unpleasant, repetitive drudgery, required retirement can be anticipated with pleasure. But even here the opportunity for continuing work and income should be available if it is preferred. In the modern—and, one trusts, civilized—community, a leisured existence should be open to the old; it should not be imposed. What is especially important, a point to which I will come presently, is that there should be no social assumption that, because one is old, one must withdraw or find a lesser place on the social scene. If advice is to be given, it should not be to work or to retire but to enjoy!

Wealth, health, and power

Turning now to the responsibility of society for the less-well-off elderly, two things are vital: one is income; the other is medical care. For the great majority of aging citizens, there comes a time when income declines, then dries up, and when health care costs become oppressive. Protection here is partly the reward of individual foresight and restraint. But inescapably some public provision of income and medical care for the old is essential—a prime social responsibility. So it is in all the economically advanced countries, starting with Germany under Bismarck more than a century ago.

In the United States, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are now fully established government responsibilities. Although the provision of health care is far from adequate—too many of the elderly poor fail to receive needed medical attention or are dependent on charitable help—it is nonetheless widely accepted that there is a basic public responsibility here—especially in the case of Social Security.

All elderly persons should be aware of the reasons for this acceptance. It is partly, one cannot doubt, the compassionate attitude of the citizenry and their elected politicians. But much more comes from the political role of the old. Here are increasing numbers of voters; here is an increasingly compelling voice. The modern old are a major political force. There should be no hesitation in bringing that power to bear. Certainly no member of Congress today—eccentric ideologists possibly apart—would mount a serious attack on Social Security. A lifetime of effort rightly earns its appropriate social rewards.