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How My Son’s Surgery to Remove a Tumor Confirmed…

How My Son’s Surgery to Remove a Tumor Confirmed
We Can Learn From the Younger Generation


In this episode you will hear how my son’s mindset, humor and radical acceptance got him through not one but two potential life threatening events. I actually considered dropping the idea entirely of staying on schedule for this episode simply because I wasn’t able to have one prepared as my focus has not been on loving later life…literally.

However, I think that on some level I knew I would feel the need to debrief after this experience…even if it meant it wasn’t as perfect as I could make it. I think I also knew on some level that there would be some important take-away’s that I would want to share with you since we all at some point or another go through difficult times.

I deeply believe that sharing our stories and vulnerabilities opens the door for others to do the same. Please join me.

Not be missed take-ways:

  1. Ageism works both ways, and it is equally wrong.

  2. Though we often can’t control a situation we are facing, we can accept it and we CAN control how we look at it, and what we do with it.

  3. It takes pushing to make a tree strong enough to keep growing.

  4. It was not in spite of the adversity they survive, but it is because of it, that they thrive. We can turn adversity into something beautiful and wonderful.

  5. Sharing our stories and vulnerabilities opens the door for others to do the same.

And your mission, that I hope you’ll choose to accept…

Join me in working on accepting the things we cannot change with the mindset that we can do what we need to do when we need to do it. Acknowledge and fully embrace all the goodness that there is and make the very most of it. Love, allow love in, and search out those who lift you up and appreciate you for who you are.


Thank you so much for listening! And until the next time, live passionately, vulnerably, and keep loving later life!

Download The First 5 Steps to Loving Later Life

Subscribe/Follow where you get your podcasts: 

   

And please…Rate and Review…if you liked it! 😊 A positive rating and review will help other women find us so they can become a part of our community.

It’d be great if you would like Loving Later Life on Facebook and Instagram!

Also: If you have a story you’d like to share for the podcast or have questions or comments for Nancy email nancy@lovinglaterlife.com

Last but not least: If you’d like to know more about having Nancy as a private coach, click here!

If you’d like to advertise with us, email nancy@lovinglaterlife.com

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ASHTON APPLEWHITE: AUTHOR & ANTI-AGEISM ACTIVIST

ASHTON APPLEWHITE:
AUTHOR & ANTI-AGEISM ACTIVIST

What is Ageism? Ableism? What are everyday ageism’s? What can we do to liberate ourselves from the challenges of aging?

Hello, Happy New Year, and welcome back to Loving Later Life! I am so excited for you to hear this conversation that wouldn’t have happened if I hadn’t said what the f*ck! I’ve always said, it never hurts to ask, and I am walking that walk these days.

About a month ago on a Sunday my mom sent me a clip of a segment from CBS Sunday Morning that she happened to see and thought I’d find interesting. Not only was she correct, I was also pulled to reach out to one of their featured guests even though I feared it would be a long shot.

Loving Later Lifer’s, I am beyond happy to say that Ashton Applewhite said yes.

Ashton is an internationally recognized expert on ageism, and the author of This Chair Rocks: A Manifesto Against Ageism. A co-founder of the Old School Anti-Ageism Clearinghouse, she speaks widely at venues that have included the TED mainstage, the United Nations and is at the forefront of the emerging movement to raise awareness of ageism and to dismantle it. In 2022 the Decade of Healthy Aging, a UN + WHO collaboration, named Ashton one of the Healthy Aging 50: fifty leaders transforming the world to be a better place to grow older.

I know without a doubt that you will find this a compelling conversation. Treat yourself to this 47-minute episode to gain awareness about this ‘ism’ that can be used as a catalyst for change.

Not be missed take-ways:

1. Aging is not just something sad that old people do. It is how we move through life. We’re all aging from the minute we’re born.

2. Young people also experience ageism.

3. Ageism is any judgement about people or a group of people on the basis of how old we think they are. WHO (World Health Organization) defines it as: how we think, feel, act about aging.

4. Ableism: It is a prejudice and discrimination on the basis of physical or mental capacity.

5. It’s hard to get old in an ageist, and sexist, misogynist, capitalist society.

6. “Everyday ageisms” is a term that came from Julie Ober Allen. It talks to the way in which age is referred, that are almost always negative. Trendier term: microagression ie: you look good for your age.

7. Practice asking for help. People love helping. It makes them feel good.

8. Any action you take, changes the culture and the first most critical starting point is to examine your own attitudes toward age and aging.

9. We’re all biased.

10. Even if all you do is think about how you use the words old and young, you’ll start to use them differently.

11. Any change in ourselves ripples outward. It’s never too late, it’s never too small, the only way to screw up is not to try.

12. Looking at something that scares you always makes it less scary, no matter what it is.

13. Learn as much as you can and it will liberate you.

To find Ashton Applewhite: 

www.thischairrocks.com 

Facebook: www.facebook.com/ThisChairRocks

Instagram: www.instagram.com/thischairrocks

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/AshtonApplewhiteVideos

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ashton-applewhite-64658/


And your mission, that I hope you’ll choose to accept…

1) Take time to learn more about ageism. A good place to start is to read Ashton’s book. You can go to thischairrocks.com for the scoop on the book and for free content as well.

2) Take time to reflect on how you view aging. How does it affect how you feel and perhaps how it makes others feel. As Ashton said,

3) Learn as much as you can and it will liberate you.

 

Thank you so much for listening! And until the next time, live passionately, vulnerably, and keep loving later life!

 

Download The First 5 Steps to Loving Later Life

Subscribe/Follow where you get your podcasts: 

And please…Rate and Review…if you liked it! 😊 A positive rating and review will help other women find us so they can become a part of our community.

It’d be great if you would like Loving Later Life on Facebook and Instagram!

Also: If you have a story you’d like to share for the podcast or have questions or comments for Nancy email nancy@lovinglaterlife.com

Last but not least: If you’d like to know more about having Nancy as a private coach, click here!

 

 

If you’d like to advertise with us, email nancy@lovinglaterlife.com