THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, November 16, 2020 |R5
JOURNAL REPORT|ENCORE
ROBERT NEUBECKER
hours and the gig economy expand-
ing, it’s easier for many older people
to remain employed, says Jack Rowe,
a professor of public health at Colum-
bia University.
Of course, not everyone has the
ability to work into their 70s or beyond.
Some are in poor health, have jobs they
can no longer perform or are victims of
age discrimination.
“As a society, we will have to provide
ways for people who cannot work to re-
ceive support,” says Prof. Carstensen.
Our views on
aging will change
Coronavirus has, at least in the short term,
reinforced ageist stereotypes, including the
notion that older people are frail and
should be “segregated and isolated,” says
Dr. Thomas.
The virus and the economic downturn
are also inflaming intergenerational con-
flict.
Some “younger people see older people
as the reason they have to sacrifice,” says
Prof. Carstensen. At the same time, Ms.
Goodman notes, “younger people are being
blamed for being irresponsible” with re-
gard to social distancing.
Still, Prof. Carstensen says the pandemic
has also unleashed countervailing trends
that may ultimately change our views of
aging for the better.
It helped fuel the election of Joe Biden,
who, at 77, is poised to become the oldest
president in U.S. history, a development
that contradicts the notion that older
adults are weak or frail.
Adding to that view are surveys and
studies that show what many are noticing
in their own lives: that older adults are
psychologically more resilient in the face of
the disease than younger people are, says
Prof. Carstensen.
As with past crises, including Sept. 11,
psychologists are finding that people
across generations are focusing on what
matters most to them, including relation-
ships, she says.
Amid Covid, Ms. Goodman says, “there
are some signs of a deeper understanding
of how we need each other.”
Ms. Tergesenis a reporter for The Wall
Street Journal in New York. She can be
reached [email protected].
In a Pandemic,
The Advantage
Of Age
BYCAROLHYMOWITZ
The 401(k) will
morph into a
multipurpose account
The economic crisis has shown that for
many people, the priority should be to
build an emergency fund before putting
money into a 401(k), where savings can
be hard to access before retirement.
David John, a senior policy adviser
at AARP, says employers are already
starting to use a new kind of flexible
savings account that lets workers fun-
nel salary deferrals to more than one
goal, including emergencies and retire-
ment. Other future uses could include
health-care and college expenses. Mr.
John predicts that once the accounts
become popular the government will
apply the current tax advantage for re-
tirement savings to them.
Lifespans will decline
With so many people dying of Covid,
virus-related deaths are projected to
reduce the aggregate life expectancy of
Americans age 65 today by nearly a
year, according to researchers at
Princeton University and the University
of Southern California.
But Covid-related lockdowns also are
likely to reduce the life expectancies of
those who avoid or survive the virus,
says Philip Pizzo, former dean of Stan-
ford University’s medical school and
the founding director of Stanford’s Dis-
tinguished Careers Institute, a program
for midcareer professionals transition-
ing to new acts.
In addition to the long-term physical
damage some Covid survivors suffer, the
pandemic is undermining our ability to
engage in activities associated with bet-
ter health and longer lives, including so-
cializing, exercising and helping others.
“These variables are important at all
stages of life and particularly for those
in midlife and older,” says Dr. Pizzo.
Studies indicate that loneliness may
be linked to a greater risk of death,
cognitive decline, depression and
heart disease.
According to a survey of 365 nurs-
ing-home residents conducted by Al-
tarum this summer, only 5% reported
having visitors three or more times a
week, versus 56% before the pandemic,
and 76% said they felt lonelier.
Technology can help overcome some
of these problems. But online platforms
like Zoom are far from a perfect substi-
tute for the human contact we need,
says Dr. Pizzo.
“We are social beings, and we need
human contact,” he says.
We will
work longer
Since the 1990s, the
percentage of
people 55 and older
in the labor force has
risen steadily, to 40%
in 2019 from 29% in
1993, according to the
U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
With bond yields
low, stock values high
and Social Security in
precarious shape, the
trend will accelerate.
“There’s so much
uncertainty about the
future...most people
are going to continue
to work as long as
they can,” says Prof.
Carstensen.
With companies
embracing remote
work and flexible
Under 1 yr.1–4 5–14 15–24 25–34 35–44 45–54 55–64 65–74 75–84 85+
AGE GROUPS
Deaths involving COVID-19 as a percentage of all deaths in the U.S. by age
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Note: From Feb. 1 to Oct.31, 2020
10
0
2
4
6
8
%
At the start ofthe Covid-19 pan-
demic, being over 65 felt like a curse.
Public-health doctors warned that any-
body of that age faced a higher risk
than younger people of suffering seri-
ous complications or dying if they con-
tracted the virus. Then came the
hashtag #boomerremover and angry
tweets from some millennials blaming
baby boomers for disrupting their lives
and livelihoods.
As a boomer, I faced both the fear
and the opprobrium. My daughter cau-
tioned me to stay in my apartment
with my husband and retreat almost
entirely from the outside world.
We’ve pretty much done that. I’ve
remained vigilant even as lockdowns
have lifted. I’ve met a handful of
friends outdoors—just one at a time,
masked and at a safe distance. I’m still
relying on deliveries of groceries, and I
haven’t returned to my gym, eaten at a
restaurant indoors or taken public
transportation as most middle-aged
and young people I know are doing.
Yet after more than seven months
of constraints, I’ve realized there also
are advantages to being older during
this time of Covid. Because I’m retired
from full-time employment, I haven’t
worried about how I’d cope if I was laid
off, or protect myself from contagion if
I worked in a crowded factory or gro-
cery store. I haven’t felt stressed and
exhausted juggling Zoom work meet-
ings from my bedroom while supervis-
ing remote learning for kids who aren’t
back to school full time. And unlike col-
lege students, I haven’t had to choose
between taking all my courses online
or taking a gap year.
My husband and I have only our-
selves to look after, and we know how
fortunate we are to have sufficient
savings to live comfortably, especially
now when so many don’t have enough.
But it’s more than good fortune that
keeps us less stressed than those of
younger generations that we know.
We’ve lived through difficult times be-
fore, including illnesses that required
hospitalizations, the deaths of our par-
ents and close friends, job losses, and
tumultuous political and financial
events. We recall these times, and we
tell ourselves we’ll get through the
pandemic, too.
“People have better emotional experi-
ences and manage their emotions bet-
ter as they get older, and that’s continu-
ing now even in a time of prolonged
stress,” says Laura Carstensen, a psy-
chology professor at Stanford University
and founding director of Stanford Cen-
ter on Longevity. “Study after study
shows that as we age and our future
time horizons grow shorter, we savor
the good times in life and have more
perspective about the bad times.”
In a study of 945 men and women
ages 18 to 76 conducted in April at the
initial height of the pandemic in the
U.S., Dr. Carstensen and researchers in
her lab found that despite “grave risks
to physical health, uncertainties about
contagion and restricted social con-
tacts,” older adults had less frequent
and less intense periods of anxiety, an-
ger, stress, boredom and other negative
emotions than younger people.
This doesn’t mean older people deny
their difficult emotions. In fact, they
are more likely than younger people to
experience mixed feelings, such as sad-
ness and happiness at the same time,
and to be more accepting of sadness,
which may be helping them weather
the pandemic, says Dr. Carstensen.
I’ve certainly felt frightened about
the possibility of having to be intu-
bated on a ventilator because of
Covid-19, especially this spring when I
awoke every day to the sound of am-
bulance sirens. I felt sad when I
couldn’t visit with my daughter, sisters
and other relatives, and when friends
in my New York neighborhood vacated
their apartments for second homes in
less crowded rural areas.
Yet overall, I’ve been more content
and calmer than I would have pre-
dicted. Instead of dwelling on what I
can’tdo,IfocusonwhatIcanenjoy. I
relish the long, daily walks I take in a
park that I’velived half a block away
from for 15 years, yet never before ex-
plored so much. My walks spurred me
to spend several weeks this summer
and fall in western Massachusetts,
where my husband and I hiked trails
and marveled at the foliage changing
colors with the seasons.
I not only cook dinner every night,
but cooking has become more fun as I
constantly try new recipes. I’ve finally
mastered flourless chocolate cake,
roasted vegetables and a dozen new
fish and chicken dishes. I’ve also over-
come my tech-phobic tendencies and
learned to use Zoom, Crowdcast, An-
chor and other apps so I can join webi-
nars, continue to mentor a high-school
student and create podcasts.
Before the pandemic, my husband
and I were busy with work and volun-
teer activities that kept us apart sev-
eral hours each day. We also spent a
lot of time as a couple socializing with
others. Now it’s just the two of us all
the time—in a 1,000-square-foot apart-
ment. Have we gotten on each other’s
nerves and argued? Of course. We’ve
had to negotiate and renegotiate sepa-
rate space to work and exercise.
But with fewer distractions, we’ve
also talked more about how we want
to spend our time together after the
pandemic. We’ve gotten closer and
more patient with one another as
we’ve observed each other’s daily rou-
tines and moods.
I’ve spoken with others my age who,
like me, welcome the chance to slow
down, cherish what we have and re-
connect with the most important peo-
ple in our lives. And we’re more accus-
tomed to being less on the go than
millennials or Gen Xers.
“I like eating dinner out at restau-
rants and going to the theater, but not
constantly, so being home most of the
time is comfortable—and not very dif-
ferent than what I’m used to,” says
Joan Goldsmith, a psychoanalyst in
New York who is now working virtually
with patients.
Dr. Carstensen says there is another
reason seniors have been resilient dur-
ing the pandemic.
“As people recognize they won’t live
forever, they are more attuned to what’s
good in life in the present,” she says.
I’m not ready to concede that I notice
happy faces more than sad ones, or that
I focus on smiles more than frowns. But
one thing is for sure: Instead of seeing
my age as a liability, I’ve come to appre-
ciate it as an asset. I couldn’t ask for a
better gift at the moment.
Ms. HymowitzisawriterinNewYork.
Email:[email protected].
*Represents people's predicted score if all that is known about them is their age.
Note: There was an online sample of 974 adult participants ranging in age of 18-76 years-old. Frequency of emotions was rated
on a scale of 0 (never) to 4 (all or nearly all the time); intensity was rated from 0 (not at all [emotion]) to 4 (extremely
[emotion]). Ratings were averaged across positive and negative emotions separately. Data from all participants were collected
April 23-24, 2020.
Source: Laura L. Carstensen, Yochai Z. Shavit, and Jessica T. Barnes Department of Psychology, Stanford University
Gauging Emotional Strength During Covid
Results from a study early in the pandemic suggest there are emotional advantages
that increase as we age, even in times of crisis. The study shows more positive
emotions overall, and negative emotions of less intensity, for older respondents
compared with those younger.
= Emotional experience rating = Predicted value by age*
2.5
2
1.5
1
0.5
0
Age: 20 40 60
2.5
2
1.5
1
0.5
0
Age: 20 40 60 20 40 60
Positive
emotions
Negative
emotions
Frequency
Intensity
20 40 60