A better way to 'live forever,' even for nonbillionaires
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[November 08, 2018]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Is there a cure for
death?
Some Silicon Valley billionaires are looking for it - or at least a way
to extend life spans dramatically, perhaps by hundreds of years.
One scientist sponsored a $1 million contest - the Palo Alto Longevity
Prize - for researchers who can stop aging. Alphabet Inc's Google has a
business called Calico, also focused on extending life spans.
Entrepreneur Peter Thiel, a cofounder of PayPal Holdings Inc, has funded
anti-aging research and has even declared himself against death.
"Basically, I'm against it," he told a British journalist a few years
ago.
Marc Freedman, however, has a more down-to-earth idea about immortality.
The founder of the encore career movement has just published a wonderful
new book called "How to Live Forever: The Enduring Power of Connecting
the Generations" (Public Affairs). Freedman is aiming to kick-start a
national conversation about ways that today’s older generation can live
on through young people.
“Silicon Valley is trying to conquer the wrong problem in the wrong
way,” he told me in an interview. “Real happiness comes from having a
sense of purpose - and not defeating death, but accepting it and living
accordingly. We need to accept and embrace mortality with the wisdom
that we are a species that can live on not just literally, but by
passing on from generation to generation what we’ve learned from life.”
Freedman’s organization, Encore.org, has played a key role over the past
decade in promoting and developing the idea of encore careers - second
acts for older adults focused on social purpose and innovation. Two
years ago, Encore.org launched a major new youth-mentoring initiative
called Generation2Gen, aimed at recruiting and mobilizing more than a
million older adults to help young people thrive.
The campaign is working with government and nonprofit groups in seven
cities around the country to expand opportunities for older adults to
work with children and help them thrive. The focus typically is on
issues such as childhood poverty, tutoring and mentoring. So far, the
campaign has attracted 160 partner organizations, 1,100 grassroots
leaders and a community of 71,000 supporters, Encore reports.
In his book, Freedman explores the intellectual underpinnings of the
Gen2Gen campaign. And he gets specific about ways to do it.
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People enjoy a walk at sunset past beach cabin on the pebbled beach
in Cayeux-sur-Mer, France, October 13, 2018. REUTERS/Pascal
Rossignol/File Photo
“Older people need to get proximate to the young, finding ways to build contact
with the younger generation into their daily lives,” he told me. “Start with
housing - look for neighborhoods that have a mix of generations. Some older
people I know have even sought out co-housing arrangements, because they knew it
was a prime opportunity to connect across the generations.”
BUILDING BONDS
He also advises older people to think of common interests that bond generations
together. "That’s the most reliable crucible for building bonds." For example,
he writes about a senior living facility in Cleveland that has an
artist-in-residence program that provides free housing for graduate music
students. “The older residents and young musicians frequently share a love of
music, which provides the basis for deeper bonds,” he said. "Other people I know
have become youth baseball coaches, school volunteers an chess mentors.”
But Freedman’s focus on older people as a resource also flips upside down the
narrative about older people as a drain on society, and a looming
intergenerational war. This is a recurring motif in U.S. media and public
opinion - the notion that baby boomers are engaged in generational theft,
spending down the nation’s resources on programs like Social Security and
Medicare, leaving young people with a huge pile of debt and a bleak future.
Plenty of holes can be poked in the deficit and debt arguments, as I noted last
week. (https://reut.rs/2SNhvnU) Their proponents also falsely portray this
spending in zero-sum terms - as though security in old age for your parents
makes no difference in your own life.
But Freedman prefers a "glass half-full" approach. “I don’t want to be a
Pollyanna about the challenges of the massive demographic shift that is coming -
any change of this magnitude will require adjustment,” he said. “But I see these
changes primarily as an opportunity to be seized, not a problem to be solved.”
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.)
(Reporting and writing by Mark Miller in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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