ILLUSTRATION BY PETER FARAGO
Illustration by Peter Farago

Aging Well: Four keys to a rewarding life

January 25, 2025

By Katharine Esty — Columnist

In my late 20s, I was not at all sure about who I was, beyond the fact that I was married with small kids and that I was committed to being a good mother and wife. I assumed I would live out my life like my mother and grandmothers as a stay-at-home mom. I would, like my mother, paint watercolors, be active in the community, and have a garden.

Katharine Esty

But then reality set in. 

I discovered I didn’t like painting or gardening, and I found that being a 24/7 mom was exhausting and stressful. I knew something was not right in my life, but I wasn’t clear what to do.

So here are four pieces of advice I would like to have told my young self. 

1. Know thyself

“Know thyself” goes way back to ancient Greece. It was inscribed on the entrance to the oracle at Delphi and also attributed to Socrates. Wise and so basic — but not easy. 

I got my wake-up call from the iconic book “The Feminine Mystique” by Betty Friedan. She prodded us to question and talk about our vague dissatisfactions: “How exactly did we feel about our lives?” “When in recent months had we felt really alive and engaged?” 

Pondering those questions one night with a group of friends, I took a giant step forward to knowing who I was. As David Brooks wrote in The New York Times: “You can’t know who you are unless you know how to tell a coherent story about yourself. You can know what to do next only if you know what story you are a part of.” 

That night back in 1964, I began to see myself as part of the story of the changing roles of women. I saw for the first time that I needed to broaden what I was doing beyond child care. I was more than someone’s mother or wife. I needed to change.

2. Get help 

Getting help when you need it is one of the key secrets to living a long and happy life — and my second piece of advice to my younger self. Many Americans have trouble asking for help. Too many of us still cling to the Lone Ranger model of a successful adult. Getting help is seen as admitting failure. That outdated notion fails to recognize the value of community, mentorship, or old-fashioned support from someone who cares.

My young self believed that because I had a college education, I clearly didn’t need any help from anyone. Once I did understand that I needed to change, it was easier for me to consider that, just maybe, it might be useful to get some counseling. 

I was lucky to have a minister who was wise and available to counsel. He provided me not only with much-needed advice about how to stop my 3-year-old son from biting other children, but so much more. He empowered me to find my own unique way. I did not have to follow the same life plan as my mother and my grandmothers — and it would be fine.

When we moved to a new state, I continued my learning with a therapist who worked from a Jungian perspective. This time, it wasn’t such a big deal for me to ask for help.  I realized that the best way for me to learn about myself was by talking with a wise and trusted person. Again, such good fortune to find a “just right” person to open my eyes to alternative paths. After some months, I had found my vocational direction: I wanted to go to social work school and become a psychotherapist myself. I did just that, and I have kept on opening doors to new pathways. 

In my 40s, I went back to school to study organizations and social psychology. I worked full time and went to school at night for about five years. By age 50, I had a brand new doctorate.

3. Be your authentic self

As I grew up, I always thought my happiness depended on events in my life. It was the presents at Christmas, having friends, fun experiences, doing well in school. As I grew older, I assumed happiness came from accepting the conventional wisdom about women’s roles and taking the usual life pathways. I was wrong.

Conventional pathways do not work for us all. I thought I would be a better mother when I had a job I loved, and that was true. This was a big leap for me because back in the 1960s, working was not the usual path for women who could afford to stay home. When I told my mother I was going to social work school, she said, “Now, why on earth would you want to do that?” I had been at home for nine years, and I needed to get a job. I wanted to be out in the workforce. Luckily, I had a supportive husband, and reliable help for the kids was available. For me, it was the right time to get trained for a profession. I could “go for it.” 

4. Stop dreading growing older 

Observing the later years of my grandparents’ lives, I concluded that aging was all about decline and loss. But I was oh, so wrong. 

Most people in their 70s and 80s are living active and pain-free lives. Life expectancy is now 79, compared with 65 back in 1934, when I was born. Few of us have caught up with the reality of how aging has changed thanks to modern medicine and new understandings of the plasticity of the aging brain. The big question is, “What shall I do with the additional years so they will be meaningful and purposeful?” If you need convincing that older people are mostly happy, take a look at several confirming studies. Researchers like Laura Carstensen at Stanford, David Blanchflower of Dartmouth, and Robert Waldinger and the Harvard Longitudinal Study are unearthing the truth about aging today.

If you are a young person or an older person reading this, know that aging is about growth, ongoing development, and unexpected happiness. It is about becoming the person you have always wanted to be.

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