Who Do You Want to Be When You Grow Old?: The Path of Purposeful Aging
By Richard J. Leider and David Shapiro
()
About this ebook
Everyone is getting old; not everyone is growing old. But the path of purposeful aging is accessible to all—and it's fundamental to health, happiness, and longevity.
With a focus on growing whole through developing a sense of purpose in later life, Who Do You Want to Be When You Grow Old? celebrates the experience of aging with inspiring stories, real-world practices, and provocative questions. Framed by a long conversation between two old friends, the book reconceives aging as a liberating experience that enables us to become more authentically the person we always meant to be with each passing year.
In their bestseller Repacking Your Bags, Richard J. Leider and David A. Shapiro defined the good life as “living in the place you belong, with people you love, doing the right work, on purpose.” This book builds on that definition to offer a purposeful path for living well while aging well.
Richard J. Leider
Richard J. Leider is founder of the Inventure Group and is consistently rated as one of the top executive coaches in the world. He is a senior fellow at the University of Minnesota’s Center for Spirituality and Healing and author or coauthor of seven other books.
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Book preview
Who Do You Want to Be When You Grow Old? - Richard J. Leider
WHO DO YOU WANT TO BE WHEN YOU GROW OLD?
Who Do You Want to Be When You Grow Old?
Copyright © 2021 by Richard J. Leider and David A. Shapiro
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed Attention: Permissions Coordinator,
at the address below.
Ordering information for print editions
Quantity sales. Special discounts are available on quantity purchases by corporations, associations, and others. For details, contact the Special Sales Department
at the Berrett-Koehler address above.
Individual sales. Berrett-Koehler publications are available through most bookstores. They can also be ordered directly from Berrett-Koehler: Tel: (800) 929-2929; Fax: (802) 864-7626; www.bkconnection.com
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Distributed to the U.S. trade and internationally by Penguin Random House Publisher Services.
Berrett-Koehler and the BK logo are registered trademarks of Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc.
First Edition
Hardcover print edition ISBN 978-1-5230-9245-1
PDF e-book ISBN 978-1-5230-9246-8
IDPF e-book ISBN 978-1-5230-9247-5
Digital audio ISBN 978-1-5230-9248-2
2021-1
Book production: Linda Jupiter Productions; Text design: Kim Scott, Bumpy Design; Cover design: Wes Youssi, M.80 Design; Edit: Elissa Rabellino; Proofread: Maty Kanable; Index: Paula C. Durbin-Westby
To everyone, everywhere, who is growing older
Contents
Preface Choosing the Path
INTRODUCTION The Long Conversation
ONE Old? Who, Me?
TWO If We All End Up Dying, What’s the Purpose of Living?
THREE Aren’t I Somebody?
FOUR Am I Living the Good Life My Whole Life?
FIVE How Do I Stop Living a Default Life?
SIX Am I Having a Late-Life Crisis?
SEVEN Will I Earn a Passing Grade in Life?
EIGHT How Can I Grow Whole as I Grow Old?
NINE How Will My Music Play On?
AFTERWORD Staying on the Path
Acknowledgments
Index
About the Authors
Preface
Choosing the Path
This is a book by two old friends who have known each other more than half of both their lives. It is a book that explores a subject about which no one can claim absolute expertise, but which each of us learns a little bit more about every day. It is a book whose purpose is purpose.
It is a book about how to grow old, with the emphasis on grow.
Our focus is not just on getting older but also on how to grow as we do so. Everyone is getting older; not everyone is growing older. This is a book about growing whole as we grow old and how the later years of our lives can be as fulfilling and meaningful as those that led us here—if not more so. We see aging as a liberating experience, one that enables us to live with greater purpose and meaning for all of our lives.
Our pairing of backgrounds in psychology and philosophy and our nearly 150 years of growing older give us, as coauthors and friends, a unique perspective on the path of purposeful aging. The questions we raise are open to reflection by everyone, and the answers that arise in response are for each of us to consider personally as they relate to our own lives.
We grow up twice: first, from childhood to adulthood; second, from adulthood to elderhood. Taking the path of purposeful aging means outgrowing adulthood and growing into elderhood, expressing more of our true selves in all that we do. Purpose and meaning emerge from choosing to follow our own path. The path is marked by a mindset that the second half of life—the old
half—is less about outward accomplishment and more about inward growth.
We grow up twice: first, from childhood to adulthood; second, from adulthood to elderhood.
The path of purposeful aging is a choice to wake up every day with the intention to grow and give. Choice is the key. Later life affords us the freedom to choose to become the person we always meant to be. Too many of us live the first half of our lives by default; the choices we made were typically made for us by societal expectations, custom, and external demands. In later life, no longer constrained by those default choices, we are finally free to choose to become the person we really are, the most complete and authentic expression of our deepest self.
Purpose is our why—why to get up in the morning. It’s the path that gives our life meaning. All of us are on that path, just at different places along it, at different stages in our lives. Everyone is getting older; not everyone is growing older.
Purpose is our why—why to get up in the morning.
The path of purposeful aging is to be traveled for three reasons. First, it is energizing and life-affirming; it provides us with that why to get up in the morning. Second, it makes us more resilient as we face the inevitable adversities of aging. And third, it enables us to grow whole as we grow older.
We, Richard Leider and Dave Shapiro, have long traveled our paths together as friends, colleagues, and coauthors. We met back in the 20th century, when Richard was still known as Dick Leider and Dave made sure to be called David A. Shapiro. The name change for Richard happened soon after the publication of our first book, Repacking Your Bags: Lighten Your Load for the Good Life, when he approached the half-century mark and began taking himself more seriously as a writer and speaker. And coincidentally, when Dave turned 50, about the time our third book, Claiming Your Place at the Fire: Living the Second Half of Your Life on Purpose, came out and he started taking himself on the whole less seriously, he began introducing himself with the shortened moniker.
This is simply to illustrate in one small way our abiding belief that growth can continue to happen from cradle to grave. The path of purposeful aging is always open to us if we’re willing to keep growing; it will be different for everyone but is accessible to all.
When we were children, grown-ups often asked, What do you want to be when you grow up?
The answers we gave were typically ones that Dave still hears from second-graders when he leads Philosophy for Children classes with them: doctor, basketball player, veterinarian, teacher. (Although nowadays, some seven-year-olds answer that when they grow up, they want to be video game designers or YouTube creators, professions unheard-of in our youth.)
It’s the what that children emphasize: an occupation or profession. Some what that will fulfill their dreams of a good life. All fine and perfectly understandable, of course.
When we become adults, though, and have lived that what, a new and different—but related—question emerges, one we ask ourselves: "Who do I want to be when I grow old?" The shift from what to who is key here. In our later years, many of us will find the what by which we defined ourselves falling away. Whether or not we can or will retire, it is inevitable that this formal—typically vocational—structure of our lives—the what—will become less important. What we do will turn out to be secondary to who we are. The person we’ve always been, or been so far, often emerges more authentically.
The question is: Will that emergent creature be like a butterfly casting off its cocoon and ready to spread its wings for the next phase of life or more like the proverbial deer in the headlights, paralyzed with fear?
Or, to put it more directly: How can we grow old rather than merely get old as we age?
What’s next? What are my real possibilities in life at this age? are questions most of us will ask ourselves sooner or later. If we’re able to reimagine our lives and our sense of purpose, then we can look forward to a more fulfilling, meaningful life at any age. The path of purposeful aging is a process of reimagination.
The path of purposeful aging is a process of reimagination.
Some people live their adult lives repeating the same year over and over without ever rocking the boat. Others choose to live their lives as an adventure of possibility and growth. As we age, we can choose to reimagine our lives in a manner that enables us to live in new and more fulfilling ways.
Most of us will live longer than past generations. Yet the societal story of aging is stuck in a script from our grandparents’ or great-grandparents’ era. As such, it’s not doing us any favors.
The time has come to change that story from a default antiaging mindset to an intentional pro-aging mindset. It’s time to retire retirement as we know it.
We must stop viewing aging as a disease. Aging is not a disease; it is a design problem. Growing old is not a bug in life’s program; it is a feature. Reimagining our lives for longer lives requires that we choose to grow whole, not just old. And that means exploring the path of purposeful aging.
We have chosen our subtitle, The Path of Purposeful Aging,
to emphasize that aging on purpose is a journey rather than a destination. It’s a quest, of sorts, to experience the power of purpose in later life, within a culture that tends to see old age as something to be feared. The quest is marked by questions that allow us to look back on our lives in order to grow and to look forward toward the future in order to give. That theme, to grow and to give,
is a universal expression of purpose in later life, one that each of us can adapt and adopt for our own experience.
We invite you to explore this path of purposeful aging, keeping in mind that for each of us, the path will be unique. Each of us is an experiment of one.
The path of purposeful aging is age-agnostic. It embodies principles and practices that anyone of any age can embrace. A person can (and should) start growing old well before they start getting old. Living longer requires taking the long view.
Choosing one’s own path of