21 Comments
User's avatar
Annie Bush's avatar

Bravo, Diana. I can see you spreading your wings

We Get Better With Age's avatar

Thank you Annie, appreciate it!

Marcy Schorsch's avatar

Love it! Good pivot. 👍

Susan's avatar

Thank you! I’m in!

Eileen  Bell Landau's avatar

As an 84 year old curious, independent woman, I can tell you that the best is yet to come. However, that means planning. You don’t just retire and everything magically falls into place. Too many assume life will remain the same, with later morning wake times. I look at time as finite and therefore need to make the best possible choices.

Eileen Landau

Author: Authentic Aging

We Get Better With Age's avatar

100% agree Eileen, thank you for sharing it!

Cary Dominguez's avatar

I love this reframe. It's like an affirmation. Even if we don't fully believe it 100% of the time, we can gradually make it true by saying it, practicing it, and sharing it. We certainly have issues to manage, but I like the idea of believing we can get better with age. I also love the idea of doing now what will help me feel and function better later.

It also helps to change what comes to mind because "seniors" is a word that is so weighty for so many. It implies "old", like "granny" for older women whether they're a grandmother or not, etc.

Aging is what we all hope to do, and doing it well is my goal.

We Get Better With Age's avatar

I love this take. The words we use around aging really do shape how we see ourselves. Getting older comes with challenges, but I’d rather focus on doing what helps me stay healthy, capable, and enjoying life for as long as possible.

Jane French's avatar

brings me back to my years on a municipal senior task force. use of the word "senior" is fraught! like you, i was not yet an older, even though i'd been a family caregiver who also worked in social welfare. it took me a bit to grasp that "we are all olders in training" and we are all on the same road, albeit at different points.

We Get Better With Age's avatar

“We’re all elders in training” really lands. Appreciate this perspective, thank you for sharing it!

Diane Ziomek 🇨🇦's avatar

When I read the first few sentences I was thinking “Don’t go!”. As I kept reading I was happy to see you’re not leaving, just shifting a little.

I turned 58 two days ago, and I’ve been applying little bits of what you’ve written about since I found your newsletter several weeks ago. I’ve regained some hand strength because of one article, and realized my mobility isn’t as bad as I thought because of another.

Keep doing what you’re doing, and even though you’re not a senior yet, you have your parents to thank for the part they play in what you do. Without watching them and learning about their challenges and the changes they face, you wouldn’t be able to help the rest of us.

Thank you for all you do! 😀😊

We Get Better With Age's avatar

This means more than you know. Hearing that something I shared helped even a little with strength and mobility makes all the writing worth it. Thank you for taking the time to say this, and happy belated 58th. 😊

Susan's avatar

I am in process of adopting a new cat - 7 years old. The application asked my age. I had to enter 81! I thought “This is the kiss of death!” And the adoption coordinator questioned my reference about my age. My reference said, “If you didn’t know her age and met her, you wouldn’t really be able to ‘age’ her! And it definitely wouldn’t be 81!” That’s what it’s all about!

We Get Better With Age's avatar

Way to go Susan! 💪

CJMG's avatar

I like the name change because it is more honest. I really thought you were a senior when I started subscribing to your Substack. I have enjoyed many of your posts and have shared them with other seniors. I will continue to subscribe for now because of this. I do admit to feeling a bit disappointed that you aren’t actually a senior because i have become aware in the past few years how we become invisible to the world in many ways and I felt validated for the exposure your posts represented. I want to believe that you cared about seniors not just to sell stuff but because of a true caring to help and inform. I’m willing to see if this is true but will be seeking other voices as well.

We Get Better With Age's avatar

Thanks for being honest about that. I care about helping seniors live healthier, better lives, and I’ll keep doing my best to earn that trust through the work itself. I’m glad you’re staying, and I appreciate you sharing how this felt from your side.

Maurice Turmel PhD's avatar

I am 81, a relatively healthy Senior who goes to the gym twice a week, walks regularly and stretches every day. At our Senior's Gym the motto is simple: "We're Not Done Yet!!!"

We Get Better With Age's avatar

Love it ❤️❤️❤️

John Bennett's avatar

I like the name change and the slightly revised focus. As I emailed you earlier today, I’m proposing to lead a class based upon your newsletter at our LLI 55+ continuing education center. I’ll be revising the proposed title and description to reflect your changes.

We Get Better With Age's avatar

Thanks John. I haven’t seen your email yet, but I appreciate the support and I’m glad the newsletter is useful for what you’re building.

Irena Halder's avatar

Ageism is rife. So many have entrenched negative beliefs about aging and many of these beliefs are just plain wrong if you look at the science. I’ve read quite a lot of your Substack articles and found them trustworthy, interesting and positive. It’s important to present facts and opinions in a palatable way that’s easy to understand, that’s both serious and kind, that’s honest, reliable and entertaining. You score highly in all of my categories; you’re an excellent and very creative writer and I hope you go from strength to strength. I love the reframe. I never expected it but I think it’s true, I have indeed become better with age. In my opinion ofc 😆