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What’s Your True Age? - Career - Nairaland

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What’s Your True Age? by hardeyincah(m): 10:42pm On Nov 22, 2013
you want to know your true age, don't look at the calendar. The
calendar tells you what your chronological age is, but this number
may be far from accurate in defining who you are. All you know
from your chronological age is how many times you’ve sat on the
earth while the earth orbits around the sun. As an index of aging,
chronological age is deeply flawed.
Psychologists who study aging long ago dispensed with the value of
chronological age as a variable to use in research. For one thing,
it’s not an “independent” variable because it can’t be
experimentally manipulated. Participants can't be randomly
assigned to conditions. Researchers can’t say to a 30-year-old
participant: "I'd like you to be 60 years old today for our
experiment on aging and you're in the middle-aged adult
condition." Studies on aging can never be experimental because
there is no way to compare the "treatment" with the "control"
group. Without this ability to assign people randomly to conditions,
it’s not possible to determine cause and effect. The 30-year-olds
might perform differently because they’re younger than the 60-year-
olds but their performance may differ for many other reasons as
well such as having been born in different generations.
All of this is a problem for researchers, but why should it bother
you? For one thing, if the research evidence on aging isn't
experimentally-based, how will you know which advice to follow
when you’re trying to live a healthy life? At a more personal level,
the fact that you can’t rely on chronological age means that the
number you jot down on a loan application or government form
requiring your age is much more arbitrary than you've been led to
believe. Birthday cards to the contrary, turning 30 doesn’t make you
a different person than you were the day before, when you were 29
years old and 364 days. Even though most of us realize the
arbitrariness of age, we still place a great deal of stock in it
especially when we reach those infamous decade markers. And
without that number to define our years of existence on the planet,
what would we use in its place when someone asks us our age?
I’ll get to that answer shortly. But first I’d like to show you why so
many of us hold onto chronological age to define who we are.
Perhaps the biggest reason is that industrialized societies such as
our own measure productivity in terms of time. Agrarian societies
kept track of time by referring to markers in the seasonal variations
of the sun, moon, and planets. As society became industrialized,
people increasingly relied on clocks to set the pace of work. Age
then became part of that industrialized system. Atomic clocks that
measure the tiniest fraction of a second give us no respite from
time’s arrow.
Just as age and time become woven into our society’s fabric, so too
is the way that society defines each of us in terms of this magic
number. Did you ever notice that the first piece of information in a
news article or even wedding announcement, right after the name,
is the age? If you’d rather your neighbors didn’t know your exact
age, you better be sure not to get involved in a jaywalking accident
or fender bender. Your age will follow your name, and there’s no
way around that. With age such a crucial feature of a person’s
identity that we tag everyone from newlyweds to traffic scofflaws
with it, it’s no wonder that you feel you’d float off into a cloud if
you couldn’t hang onto this defining feature of your very being.
Yet, age is not a very good indication of very much about a person.
Think of the older-than-her-years hypermature 15-year-old who
could easily pass for 22. How about the older adult who lives down
the street from you whose sprightly step would rival that of
someone 40 years her junior? In thinking about yourself, as Satchel
Paige once said, "How old would you be if you didn't know how old
you was?"
It's time to throw aside this overly narrow and imprecise measure
of your identity. If you’re willing to give up the grip that age has
over your self-image, then you’re ready to move on to the next
step, which is to calculate your true age. As it turns out, your true
age will not be a simple number but will be a combination of where
you stand along three dimensions. These three dimensions are
your functional ages. The three functional ages represent your
biological age, your psychological age, and your social age. We’ll
take these one at a time.
Biological Age
Your functional biological age is the age of your body’s systems.
Given the complexity of the many interacting parts of our
physiological make-up, this isn’t a simple number to calculate. To
start, it would be helpful to know certain numbers, such as your
blood pressure, respiratory capacity, aerobic power, and blood
glucose levels. Age changes in your cardiovascular, respiratory, and
endocrine systems occur at a predictable rate with age (about 1% a
year after age 30-40), and so if you’re under 1% then you’re
beating your chronological age. Very few people actually know all
of these numbers, or even have the ability to get accurate
measures, however. For example, to calculate your lung age
requires that you use a spirometer—an instrument that actually
measures your lung’s functioning. Instead, you can substitute
answers to questions about your lifestyle such as the Living to 100
Life Expectancy Calculator developed by Dr. Thomas Perls of the
New England Centenarian Study. If you exercise regularly, for
example, you can cut down the loss of such key biological functions
as aerobic capacity, muscle strength, and immune functioning by as
much as 50%. That will make your biological age at 60
chronological years at closer to 50.
You can also estimate your biological age with a relatively simple
method that, though crude, may provide you with some ideas about
what’s going on inside of you and what you need to fix. This simple
measure is your height. You've probably heard it said that people
“shrink” with age. Loss of height occurs in many people due to loss
of bone density, which causes the vertebrae to compress. The
height loss due to bone loss becomes a measure, then, of
biological age. You can lose as much as half an inch every 10 years
after the age of 40. However, exercise using resistance training can
lower the rate of bone loss, and therefore keep your bone age
younger than it would otherwise become.
Some of the factors that contribute to biological age are less
obvious, such as the ability of your kidneys to clean toxins from the
body. However, if you’re exercising regularly, even your kidneys will
age less rapidly. Embarking on a program of regular exercise,ji
control of your diet, and avoidance of bad habits may not cause the
progression of your biological calendar to stop completely, but
these behavioral controls will slow it very substantially.
Psychological Age
Your psychological age can be broken down into cognitive
functioning-- your abilities to learn and remember—and emotional
functioning—your ability to handle and manage your feelings. As
people get older they tend to have more difficulty with some
aspects of memory, so to keep a younger psychological age requires
that you beat these memory problems. On the other hand, people’s
abilities to cope with negative emotions improve as they get older.
To stay younger would mean that you have more of those
emotional highs and lows that can make your life more chaotic.
When it comes to your emotional age, being older actually has
many benefits.
Let’s start with memory. Your psychological age is a direct function
of how well you can use your brain to handle the cognitive load you
put on yourself. Perhaps you feel that your memory is slipping
compared to how it used to be. You go into a room and forget
what you were looking for. You’re at the grocery store see that you
don’t have your list and can’t, for the life of you, recall what you’re
supposed to be buying. “Uh-oh,” you say, “I’m having a senior
moment!” To keep your psychological age younger, throw that
expression out of your vocabulary. A senior moment will only
happen if you think it will. Once you start to label your memory as
getting worse, you increase the chances that it will go downhill.
Instead of attributing your occasional brain freezes to aging, look at
all the other factors that could be influencing you such as stress,
anxiety, or even worries about getting older and getting Alzheimer’s
disease. We’re so hyped by the media to blame minor memory
problems on this dreaded illness that, if you’re not careful, these
occasional lapses become self-fulfilling prophecies.
Once you set aside the myths from the reality of memory changes
with age, you can move on to estimate objectively this component
of your psychological age. It is possible that it takes you longer to
react and process new information than it used to, because this is
one of the most significant age-related changes in mental functions.
It’s difficult to put a number on exactly how much you can expect
your mental acuity to slow, particularly if you can’t put your mind
to the test in a computerized lab. However, your brain requires
oxygen to function, and we know that aerobic capacity, which
reflects how much oxygen reaches your brain, declines at about 1%
a year. You can figure that your cognitive abilities will decline at a
similar rate, all other things being equal, particularly if you don’t
freak out about small memory slips. So your memory at age 60
would be 20% worse than it was at age 40, if we apply this rule.
Here’s where you can intervene and keep this feature of your
psychological age as young and healthy as possible. Just as exercise
can train your body and lower the rate of physical decline, it can
also lower the rate of cognitive decline. Once you start to exercise,
your mental abilities will be less likely to deteriorate and may even
take a turn for the better. Your psychological age clock can slow,
perhaps by as much as 50%, with a regular program of physical
activity. Conversely, if you become convinced that your getting
"senile" (a terrible word!), you can accelerate your psychological
aging clock.
You may want your psychological age to be young when it comes to
memory, but when it comes to your emotions, you’re actually better
off being older. We know from extensive studies in the psychology
of aging that older adults are truly “wiser,” in that they can better
control their temper, take negative situations and spin them in a
positive light, and get along more easily with other people, even
people they don’t particularly like. With an older emotional age,
you’ll actually increase your chances of maintaining a younger
psychological age overall. With less stress from unpleasant
situations, you’ll free up your mental resources to handle your
cognitive problems more effectively. The overall result is a net
slowing of the psychological calendar.
Social Age
Your social age reflects your position along the so-called “social
clock” of life. The social clock is based on the set of expectations
that people in a given culture have about when life’s major events
“should” occur. We can divide the social clock into the two major
areas of life: family and work. The family social clock of our culture
expects that people become parents at some point in their late 20s
or early 30s, at which point they also are married or in a serious
relationship. We become grandparents, according to this clock, in
our 60s, reflecting the fact that our children are following a similar
social clock. The work social clock says that we graduate from high
school in our late teens, and then from college a few years later, at
which point we start our career. We retire in our 60s, and at that
point the work social clock stops ticking.
Now that you know the age markers on the social clock, you can
calculate your own social age. If you’ve hit all those age points at
the expected times, then your social age will equal the ages at
which those points are set. You’re 65, according to the social clock,
when you retire. However, depending on how your life evolves,
your social age may be much younger or older than the norm. You
can become a parent for the first time in your late 30s or early 40s
(or later) and so you have now deducted at least 10 years from
your social age. You can retire at age 25 if you happen on some
good luck at the lottery or are in a job that people typically leave at
a young age, such as high-intensity sports. Your social age then
becomes 65.
People can speed up or slow down their social clock at dizzying
speeds. In some cases, the social clock is set by biology in that, for
most women, it’s impossible to have a child after a certain age.
Biology also forces certain athletes to leave their profession at a
relatively young chronological age. However, with that caution in
mind, you have a great deal of freedom to determine your own
social age. If you are an older parent, your young social age might
also affect your psychological age. Being the parent of teenagers
may automatically keep you younger, just by virtue of your exposure
to the youth culture. If your emotional age is older, that might even
help you handle the stress of raising an adolescent. At work,
changing career paths can also keep your social age young. Given
that we’re expected to be in the opening stages of our career in
our 20s, should you change directions in our 40s, you now have
deducted 20 years from your work-based social age.
By knowing that you don’t have to define yourself in terms of the
social clock, you can feel better about breaking its expectations.
There’s no need to feel embarrassed about being the oldest person
in your night school class if, by doing so, you’re getting ready to
reboot your job trajectory.
Finally-- The Age That Really Matters
How did you rate along these three dimensions of functional age?
How much do they agree and how do they relate to your
chronological age? Now you can take one more test of your age, a
test that may be the best of all. Ask yourself this very simple
question: How old do you feel? Forget what the calendar says, and
even forget what your functional ages are. The age you feel may
very well be the most important factor determining your health,
happiness, and longevity. In my research on physical changes and
identity, I’ve consistently found that the people who are happiest
and best adjusted in their middle and later years are the ones who
don’t focus on their limitations, worry about their memories, or
become preoccupied with whether others view them as old. Being
able to subtract a few years from this subjective age, or age that
you feel, may actually buy you a few more objective years of healthy
and productive life.
Re: What’s Your True Age? by hardeyincah(m): 10:45pm On Nov 22, 2013
By Susan Krauss Whitbourne, Ph.D. on november 22, 2013 - 4:27am

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