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Do What You Love, Love What You Do
Everyone dreams of a life full of love and adventure. But we fill ourselves with reasons not to follow our dreams. Instead of protecting us, they imprison and hold us back. Life will be over before we know it, so now is the time to really live...

HOW TO GET A GREAT ATTITUDE TO LIFE (PART ONE)
WHERE DO YOUR ATTITUDES COME FROM? I believe that heredity (the genes that you inherit) have some part in forming attitudes. However, most important in shaping them, is the family environment, especially in your early childhood: the...

Labeling is Disabling: Achieving Congruent Communication
A small town, somewhere in the world, was managed by a town council of seven or eight members. The council normally met once a week. One member - let's call him Bill - would invariably stroll into the council chamber exactly ten minutes after...

Sorrow and Closure
Is saying a ceremonious “good-bye” an act of closure? Is there really anything as closure in grief? As we say goodbye to the Space Shuttle Columbia heroes, I feel such sadness and emptiness. Is saying a ceremonious “good-bye” an act of...

Top 10 Secrets For Achieving Your Dream Retirement
#1: RETIRE TO SOMETHING: * Leaving your retirement to chance is talking a big risk. Do not expect everything to just fall into place. Be ready for one of the biggest changes in your life. Know you are prepared. * There seems to be an allure...

 
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When Are You Planning to "Get Old"?

When are you planning to get old? According to a recent study, you'd
better move the date back.

"Contrary to common belief, many people can live well into their 90s without becoming cognitively impaired, study findings indicate." - Neurology 2003; 60: 477-480

But statistics are statistics.

Let me give you some examples from my own coaching practice.

*I have a client who is 72 who's a real estate coach. One of his coaching clients just made her goal, doubling her income to $100,000 this year. She's a real estate agent and she plans to do it again next year with his help. Her age? She's 80.

*I have a client who says she's having the best sex of her life. Her age? She's 78. Her lover? He's 80.

*I have someone who designs websites for my marketing clients. She's the best web designer I've found. Her age? 58.

*I have another client who went from ground zero to fluent in German in the last 3 years. Her age? She's 59.

Most of my clients are over the age of 55 and they are all busy learning new things. The layperson best at the computer I know is 58 and learned it all in the past two years. She keyboards at 100 wpm.

And what's the secret to all this? Al Siebert, Ph.D., has studied resilient seniors for 30 years and has defined some of the characteristics. Among them are:

*Retain a childlike curiosity
*Keep learning
*If you have a victim mentality, replace it with something better
that gets you what you want.
(Try my Optimism course (


href="http://www.susandunn.cc/courses.htm" target="_blank">http://www.susandunn.cc/courses.htm
).
*Learn to tell your 'survivor' stories so they inspire others (don't
whine)
*Find meaning in your adversity. If Victor Frankl did, you can.
*Stay connected. The single worst thing for your health, mental and physical, is isolation, and you can be isolated in a room-full of people if you aren't connecting. Isolation is worse for your health than obesity, smoking or high blood pressure.
*Have a sense of humor, remain playful.

A lot of this has to do with your attitude and your emotional intelligence. Living long and well means going through lots of changes, and, alas, some adversity. We build resilience by going through hard times and one of the keys is staying flexible and learning.

According to Siebert, individuals who die in their 5th and 6th decade have this trajectory: study, then work, then leisure. Resilient seniors have combined all three throughout their lifetime.

Key to all this is learning optimism. Optimists live 19% longer, enjoy better health, are more likely to fulfill their potential, and enjoy life more. Would you be willing to trade some of the ways you think now in order to gain those things just mentioned? If so,
learn optimism.

When are you planning to "get old"? Apparently it's up to you and I wouldn't hang on to old stereotypes.

Susan Dunn, The EQ Coach, offers positive psychology coaching and Internet courses on emotional intelligence, optimism and strengths. Email for FREE ezine.