Beware the Super Senior Myth
Are society's standards for aging boomers too high?
by Kathi Wolfe
May-June 1999
Wouldn’t you know it? Baby boomers start getting old and suddenly aging is cool. John Glenn, at 77, returns to space. Seniors travel the globe, do volunteer work, and run marathons. No more doddering codgers, no more grannies in rocking chairs. Is this the future of aging, or simply the birth of another stereotype—the supergeezer?
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“Americans over 50 make up the fastest-growing segment of society,” notes historian Theodore Roszak in Civilization (Oct.-Nov. 1998). And aging boomers “will have more savvy and more wealth and be better educated than previous generations,” he says. When they’re elderly, he claims, “it won’t be possible to maintain the image of older people as a small, powerless minority. They’ll be dominant—the majority.”
Roszak, author of America the Wise (Houghton Mifflin, 1998), believes that boomers, as they age, will draw on their experience of youthful political protest to fuel a “longevity revolution” and, as he notes in his book, “join with others in building a compassionate society where people can think deep thoughts, create beauty, study music, teach the young, worship what they hold sacred, and care for one another. It [the longevity revolution] has given this remarkable generation the chance to do great good against great odds.”
Unless they’re all laid up in nursing homes, of course. Roszak acknowledges that boomers aren’t “superhuman” and that “time still inevitably takes its toll on mind and body,” but his—and society’s—expectations of seniors have risen so high in recent years that many elders, however gifted, powerful, or wise, cannot possibly live up to them.
Cultural stereotypes of older people are similar to myths about disabled people, says Joseph P. Shapiro, author of No Pity: People with Disabilities Forging a New Civil Rights Movement (Times Books, 1993). “Because Americans fear disability, we tend to celebrate people who seem to make the disability go away. The media love stories about the blind sailor who solos across the Atlantic or the man with a prosthetic leg running across Canada.”