I can’t help it. The statements and “insights” that are printed about “Boomers” are making me crazy! It is as if this “segment” of 76 million people was discovering the aging process for the first time. The printed results and expert comments on the recently released Del Webb Boomer Study are a case in point.
For example, one Boomer expert said that “for Boomers aging is a state of mind. The goal for Boomers is to pursue the Fountain of Vitality.” Well, the first person to make that observation about older folk was Mark Twain. Twain opined that “Age is simply mind over matter. If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.” If I remember my literature correctly, Samuel Clemens was not a Boomer.
For over 30 years, I have been working with older adults and found vital involved 80 and 90 year olds way back in the 70s…amazing. My first secretary was 80 when I hired her…and she was fantastic. Sure, there are more healthy and active 64 year old Boomers than there were in the generations before them due to medical advances, education, and awareness; but it is their numbers that make them unique. Their life experience has shaped their worldview, but their values are not different from their parents and grandparents.
The Del Webb study did reveal some startling results…current 50 year olds do not see themselves as seniors. Guess what? Neither do current 65 year olds and a good percentage of 70 and 80 year olds. In the 1970s, I was defining old as 10 years older than you are regardless of your age. Studies done then as now documented that an older person’s psychological age was generally 10 to 15 years younger than their chronological age.
Is the business community that uninformed about consumer behavior that they need to pay “Boomer Specialists” to tell them something they could read in David Wolfe’s Serving the Ageless Market written 20 years ago? Clearly all the hype around the recent studies says they are. Still, we have about 200 years of evidence from developmental psychologists that suggest most of the revelations (increasing altruism, connectedness, personal growth, autonomy, etc.) were totally predictable.
It is true that Boomer experiences and economic realities have changed the game. More people are now more educated and educated people tend to live longer. Boomers were generally wealthier than their parents; and could therefore afford better health care. Many older adults have always worked well beyond 60. Today, more are working longer because they have to do so – and that reality is not unique to Boomers.
Just once, I would like to see an article with a headline like, “New Studies Document Baby Boomers Aren’t Unique After All – There Are Just a Hell of a Lot of Them.”
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