
August 24, 2006
Growing up and old takes longer
By JANE GLENN HAAS
While walking the dog in a park, I see the two guys: One has a skateboard, the other a video camera.The guy with the skateboard is poised above four concrete steps leading into the park. The other is going to video him as he leaps the steps and lands on his feet on the rolling board. Except he doesn't, of course. He lands on his tush, grunts loudly, grabs the board and starts all over.Nothing special about the game except the guys look to be in their late 20s. By their age, their fathers had put aside the toys of teenhood and shouldered responsibilities of adulthood already. They were dads.Who are these Peter Pans, determined to never grow up?
Author Christopher Noxon calls them "rejuveniles ... people who have tastes or mind-sets that are traditionally associated with people younger than themselves." Time magazine labels them "twixters." The won't-leave-home kids who inhabit a new land between adolescence and adulthood. And as they extend youth, so are we extending age.
Lu Molberg, head of the
Futurist Ken Dychtwald agrees. In his book, "Age Wave," written 17 years ago, Dychtwald argued for pushing "old age" back to 80."There's a new landscape," he says today. "People are staying younger longer, postponing adult responsibilities, and adults are remaining vigorous and vital and postponing the aging process."He would eliminate the word "senior" from the age definitions, he says. Instead, he would call them "older adults." The conundrum occurs when these older adults want to claim so-called old-age benefits long before they embrace old age.He refers, of course, to Social Security, a program that not only provided some financial security for older Americans but also defined 65 as the beginning of old age.Can you move the marker of "old age" without creating a horrific national backlash? If you call people in their mid-60s middle-aged, should you stop giving them old-age benefits? Me? I'm going to wallow in the middle of my middle age.