Title : "What accounts for the growing number of octogenarians and beyond who are accomplished and still accomplishing?"
link : "What accounts for the growing number of octogenarians and beyond who are accomplished and still accomplishing?"
"What accounts for the growing number of octogenarians and beyond who are accomplished and still accomplishing?"
Asks Jane Brody in "A Birthday Milestone: Turning 80!" (NYT).
The article doesn't really answer the question, not any better than you'd answer it on your own: Maintain your physical and mental well being so you can continue accomplishing, and also get yourself into some line of accomplishment that's intrinsically motivating. Brody names some famous people who are still productive in their field after the age of 80 (but fails to mention Bob Dylan, who's about to turn 80).
Here's a little text from the end of the article, about regrets (which is really a different topic!):
Have I any regrets? I regret taking French instead of Spanish in high school and I keep trying to learn the latter, a far more practical language, on my own. I regret that I never learned to speed-read; whether for work or leisure, I read slowly, as if everything in print is a complex scientific text. Although I’d visited all seven continents before I turned 50, I never got to see the orangutans in their native Borneo or the gorillas in Rwanda. But I’m content now to see them up close on public television....
I thought speed-reading was a hoax. And I think it's best to leave the great apes alone. I'm put off by the elaborate fakery of traveling to Borneo/Rwanda in pursuit of an authentic encounter with orangutans/gorillas.
And is Spanish a "more practical language" than French? French is as practical to French-speaking people as Spanish is to Spanish-speaking people, I would imagine. I think she doesn't mean Spanish is a "more practical language" but that someone living in America will find it more practical to know Spanish than to know French. One reason for slow reading is that people writing in their first language are not taking the trouble to think about what they are writing.
ADDED: My line of accomplishment is blogging, and I find it continually intrinsically motivating. So though I'm only 70, let me offer some different advice about remaining active while aging. You don't have to keep powering along in the career you chose for yourself decades ago. You can discover something within or adjacent to it that is more purely what inspires you and brings you flow. Then retire and do exactly that. I called blogging a line of "accomplishment," but I'm no longer oriented toward accomplishing anything. I live in the day. A day lived now is as good as a day lived anywhere else in the string of days that is your life. What does it matter how close to the end of the line it is?
Thus articles "What accounts for the growing number of octogenarians and beyond who are accomplished and still accomplishing?"
You now read the article "What accounts for the growing number of octogenarians and beyond who are accomplished and still accomplishing?" with the link address https://usainnew.blogspot.com/2021/05/what-accounts-for-growing-number-of.html
0 Response to ""What accounts for the growing number of octogenarians and beyond who are accomplished and still accomplishing?""
Post a Comment