Experiencing firsthand how difficult an aging alcoholic, quadriplegic, post stroke, narcissistic, demented or simply ‘nothing’s wrong with me, I can drive, I don’t need those meds, I don’t need to go to a nursing facility’ kinda parent surely gives you some insight on what to do, what not to do and how to prepare for our own aging and eventual demise.

How do you plan to age gracefully and what advice do you have for us all?

  • I_Fart_Glitter@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Stay active. It really is “use it or lose it” with physical and mental abilities.

    My aunt and uncle are both 90. My uncle has always used a treadmill or standing desk for his computer and pulls long hours in front of it still doing pro bono legal work even though he’s been “retired” for several decades. He walks to the grocery store and carries the groceries home. He walks barefoot around the block every morning and has a body weight fitness routine he does every other day. He’s doing just fine, his brain wheels turn a little slower but they work just as well as ever.

    My aunt got very sedentary around age 75. Her mother developed dementia around that age and she just sort of settled in and waited for it to come. Maybe it is hereditary and there was no point in doing anything else, maybe not. She’s wheelchair bound now, just from lack of strength, not really any medical issue. She can take a few supported steps to transfer, but that’s it. Her short term memory is gone, I go have lunch with her twice a week and she knows who I am, but as I’m leaving she’ll say she’s sorry we couldn’t have had lunch while I was there and it’s a shame I can’t visit more often. It’s not really out of bounds for 90, but I’d rather take my uncles route than hers.

    • RBWells@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      My mom stayed fit and walked everywhere, and was a teacher and curious lifelong learner& traveler sort of person and still got dementia before she died. Her mom too. Honestly it terrifies me but there is only so much you can control. I do work out and stay fit and so far so good, I honestly feel great. My hope is that science comes through with a good treatment, and between me & my husband we have a lot of children to hopefully help some if we need it.

      • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        7 months ago

        and this is why we should be rioting in the streets about the state of the medicinal industry, we could have the ability to cure terrible ailments like dementia and cancer, but because that’s not actively profitable we only allocate some token amounts of funding to the research, and what few treatments we do have are hideously expensive for many people to the point that they might as well just spend the money on enjoying their last few years of life than spend it on extending their lives by a few more years…

        We as a society have just decided that profit for a couple thousand rich people is more important than ourselves being able to continue living.

        • RBWells@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Thank you for this rant and I agree, I ought not need to spend years being greedy as fuck just to be able to afford end of life care.

    • treadful@lemmy.zip
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      7 months ago

      I’m mostly hoping I can figure out suicide before dementia. That’s no way to go out.

      • Albbi@lemmy.ca
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        7 months ago

        In the book series The Stormlight Archive, there is a character whose intelligence changes every day. He takes a test every morning to determine his capabilities for that day. As the ruler of a kingdom, he’s not allowed to do certain things if he’s too stupid, or sometimes even too smart that day.

        I think a little test like that would be nice. If you have dementia but can pass a test every once in a while, ok maybe life is still worth living. I figure some days will be better than others. But if you can’t figure out some basic things for like a month straight, maybe it’s time to check out.

        • Lichtblitz@discuss.tchncs.de
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          7 months ago

          Trouble with those tests is, that they become unreliable or even meaningless, when you have done then once before, let alone daily.

          • kambusha@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Might not be meaningless for someone with dementia. Say it’s a test that asks you simple Qs: what day is it? How many kids do you have? What year is it? Etc.

            If you start failing simple Qs, then you’re memory is fading. Although at that point, maybe you don’t even know why you’re taking the test…

  • jetA
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    7 months ago

    Diet, low to no sugar.

    Cardiovascular exercise every week.

    Resistance training every week

    Maintain social engagement outside of work, have a strong friend group that doesn’t depend on you having a job

    Reduce or remove optional vices like smoking, alcohol, drugs

    But most importantly, have something to live for! Have a purpose greater than yourself.

    The goal is to live long, and die fast.

    • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      Purpose is the most important. It is clearly observable that you fade away when you “sit behind the geraniums”, as we say in my country. Pointing at old folks sitting behind the window, with geraniums in the windowsill, staring outside all day.

  • livus@kbin.social
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    7 months ago

    Based on my observations (of various old people in my life) of what works and what doesn’t:

    • continue to gather and use evidence to make decisions

    • continue to be open minded to new ideas and new evidence

    • recognise your blind spots and have trusted people in your life to help with decisionmaking in those areas

    • whynotzoidberg@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I think you hit the nail on the head.

      Where you live is one thing, but how you face the world is another. As we age, it seems that we have increased challenges in the areas you note.

      Trust becomes harder. Acknowledging our own faults and cognitive degradations becomes harder. Making decisions becomes harder. And desire to remain autonomous becomes stronger. Those things don’t jive too well.

      One more thing to add: maintain a community of similarly-aged peers. Otherwise, one might feel like they are on an island.

      This is based on my experience caring for an elderly family member.

        • whynotzoidberg@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Maybe it’s just important to stay generally social with folks of all types, as perspectives and conversations keep us young? Is that a good maxim?

          • angrystego@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Definitely. Diverse friends give you a lot of insight and perspective and can help you not to become too judgemental. And then, when you’re really old, you will still have a social circle despite the older people and many of your age group being gone.

  • Countess425@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’m moving into a retirement community. Get in there early enough and they have to take care of you until you die. But before that point, retirement communities are like dorms without having to worry about grades or getting pregnant. Lotta syphilis, though, I hear.

  • MudSkipperKisser@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’m making a big conscious effort to hear out and be in tune with perspectives of people of all age groups and to not deny anyone’s experiences just because they’re not my own. There are such generational divisions that, being between the older and younger generations right now, I can see so clearly. That makes me want to go out of my way to avoid it as I get older.

  • SomeoneElse@lemmy.ca
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    7 months ago

    My mums been in hospital for 10 weeks. She only 62 and was admitted for a fairly routine infection after chemo for breast cancer. Since she’s been in hospital I’ve lost count of all the things that have gone wrong but the most distressing thing is the hospital delirium she’s developed. I’d never have believed my mum could become so violent and abusive, it’s like she’s a completely different person. She has absolutely no agency over her body at the moment, she can’t even sit up unaided. It’s so horribly undignified that it’s completely cemented my decision to commit suicide once I get a terminal diagnosis (or a diagnosis that I know I couldn’t deal with graciously). I can’t have children so it’s a small comfort that I won’t inflict the pain and heartbreak I’m experiencing from my mum, but I don’t ever want to treat my partner how she’s treating my dad. I’m going out on my own terms if at all possible.

    • ReiRose@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      That took a turn I hope that suicide will be legal and safe before you have to make that choice.

      • SomeoneElse@lemmy.ca
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        7 months ago

        Don’t worry, I have a life threatening illness and reduced life expectancy anyway. And I’m not suicidal. It was already my preferred way to go, this ordeal with my mum just made it crystal clear in my mind. Thankfully I have access to everything I need already so I wouldn’t get anyone else in trouble and my loved ones understand my decision and feel similarly. It being legal would be a bonus, but I’m not letting a law stop me.

  • AppaYipYip@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’ve been dealing with my 85 year old uncle who recent fell and broke his hip again. I’ve learned the following:

    1. Physical exercise is important! My uncle could barely walk before, which is probably why he fell. While he was in the hospital he physically could not sit up on his own (no upper body strength) and now cant lift himself into/out of his wheelchair. I’ve decided to start working out more and focus on strength.

    2. Listen to your doctors!! After he broke his hip the first time, he refused to do physical therapy and would not use his cane. It’s obvious that both of these things would have helped prevent him from falling the second time.

    3. Be kind to the people around you! My uncle is narcissistic and insults friends/family when he gets comfortable with them. This meant that for most of his stay in the hospital, I was the only person who visited.

  • HexesofVexes@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    My options are likely to be:

    A) Live 5 years unable to remember my work, with added incontinence.

    B) Go out trying an experimental age reversal treatment - because why not roll the dice one last time?

    C) Not survive to old age due to overwork, burning out my body one semester at a time.

    C is most likely, B is the plan, and A is to be avoided at all costs!

  • edric@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    Try my best to save and prepare enough funds to live without having to depend on family to take care of me. Then try my best to take care of my health as I get older so I don’t get seriously sick.

  • Bye@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I don’t have kids but I’d kind of like to have adult kids when I’m old. So maybe I can adopt a college age person when I’m like 50 or something

  • loopy@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    As someone who cares for elderly people sometimes, please please fill out an advanced directive (not just a living will). It’s a sort of “if this, then that” for health scenarios. It’s immensely helpful when when caring for someone not well, and can be much more stressful without one. I have had dying, incapacitated patients wait weeks for guardianship or POA-HC to be processed before care can be changed to comfort measures, because they did not have one on file.

    Get one from the hospital you would likely go to, fill it out, give them a copy, keep a copy, and give a copy to who you list as a decision-maker. You do not want to add the stress of logistics to an emotionally difficult time.

    I think as a society we should embrace death more. Pretending it doesn’t happen just makes things worse when that reality of mortality unwaveringly stares you in the face.