words have power and meaning.words can caress or harm. Words can enlighten or degrade. our language forms how we think and feel about ourselves and one another and the world. words make perception and sensation tangible. so how we, as elders, perceive our world is often shaped by the words that are used to define us.consider these:old fartover-the-hillcronehagold fogeyold baghas-beenold batbiddyblue-hairthese words, all in common usage, not only insult older people, they lift up those who are, right now, younger, they further the divide between age groups. they tell us, in no uncertain terms, that old is ‘other’, abnormal, unappealing and less-than.and how about the phrase, “you’re only as old as you think you are”? this is a popular lie, one we are taught to believe. the author ursula k. leguin commented in response, “if i’m ninety and believe i’m fourty five, i'm headed for a very bad time trying to get out of the bathtub.”
she also commented, in response to someone telling her, while in her 80s, that she wasn’t old, was like telling someone the pope isn’t catholic.in many spiritual traditions, the elders were held in high regard, honoured and respected.
we, as conscious elders of the 21st century, can reclaim the currently unpopular words associated with old age and bring them back to their original meanings. “old”, as a word, used to signify the the third part of life, just as “youth” meant the first.old age is for all of us who live it...the sissies, the warriors, the healthy, the strong, the ill and frail, the cowardly and the courageous. we can claim our full lives and live them with purpose, attention, meaning and love.