Dumont had volunteered at Liberty Science Center on Tuesday to don a
computer-controlled exoskeleton that can be remotely manipulated to
debilitate joints, vision and hearing and shared with the crowd what
aging feels like decades before his time.
Headphones muffled his hearing while goggles left him with only
peripheral vision due to macular degeneration while the suit's
joints were adjusted to simulate the stiffness of rheumatoid
arthritis. The 40-pound (18 kg) suit also gave Dumont a taste of the
weight gain people typically experience as they age.
"Wow," Dumont gasped as he struggled to walk on a treadmill facing a
video titled "Walk on the Beach." His heart raced from 81 beats per
minute to 100 as the staff cranked up the ailments, pushing buttons
and levers on a control board linked to the computer backpack that
he wore.
"I don't know how you can focus on the water. You just want to be in
bed!" said Dumont, a photo agent who lives in the nearby New York
City borough of Brooklyn.
The Genworth Aging Experience is a traveling show created by
Genworth Financial Inc., an insurance company, in partnership with
Applied Minds, a design and engineering company, that allows museum
visitors to feel first-hand the effects of aging.
Genworth "brand ambassador" Candace Hammer, who narrated one
demonstration of the aging suit, said the show's aim is to build
empathy and awareness of the challenges elderly people face in
everyday situations. That includes everything from joints so stiff
you cannot get the breakfast cereal off the shelf to trying to talk
to someone in a noisy restaurant when a neurological condition known
as aphasia sends words bouncing around in your head.
ATTENTION, BABY BOOMERS
Ultimately that understanding may spark families to start
conversations with 75 million baby boomers in the United States
approaching retirement, nearly one-quarter of the population, about
long-term care and how to pay for it, said a statement from Genworth,
which sells long-term care insurance.
"In our culture, we revere youth and beauty, so this is opening up
the channels to have the 'let's talk' conversation," Hammer said.
"It's not shameful that you should need care."
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There are limits to how deeply the suit immerses the wearer in the
aging experience since it cannot simulate the pain of rheumatoid
arthritis, the difficulty of urinating or not urinating, the trauma
of Alzheimer's disease and dementia and so many other of the other
miseries that can be hallmarks of aging.
Still, even feeling just part of aging's toll on the body had a
dramatic effect not just on the volunteers who wore the suit but on
audience members as well.
Robert Richards, 74, a retired publishing executive from Madison,
New Jersey, said he now understood why his older golfing partners
moved slowly.
"I'll be more patient when I'm waiting for them to swing. Sometimes
you think, 'Can't you just get up there and do it?!'" said Richards,
who has had one hip replaced, suffers partial hearing loss and wears
contact lenses.
With him was his granddaughter, 8-year-old Maggie Richards of
Mahwah, New Jersey, who said the "really cool" exhibit would change
her behavior, too.
"You think old people are weirdos but then you understand that they
don't see you and they can't hear you," she said. "I'm going to give
them more time to understand what to do. I'll say, 'Can you please
move?' Instead of, 'Get out of the way!'"
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Bill Trott)
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