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Vivian Diller, Ph.D.

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The Culture Of Anti-Aging

Posted: 08/23/2011 9:18 am

I was skipping alongside my granddaughter Sadie the other day, when she paused to say: "Grandma, you're like a little kid in an old person's body." Perceptive and blunt -- as 3-year-olds are -- I wasn't sure what to make of her observation. When I realized it was exactly how I felt, I decided to take it as a compliment.

You see, I've never kept my age a secret and feel fortunate to be strong and fit at this stage of my life. Of course, there's effort involved in maintaining my vitality -- regular exercise, healthy eating and good grooming habits. And, sure there are routine visits to my physical therapist. But most importantly, I make sure I have reasons to smile. I love my work as a psychologist and writer -- professions that fortunately improve with age. My children keep me busy, but also bring me lots of joy. And, yes, skipping with my grandchild helps too. At this point of my so-called "mid-life," I have no plans to surgically halt the inevitable signs of aging that are visible on my face or body. Instead, I will try to wring every drop of happiness and fulfillment as I can out of the years that lie ahead.

So, it was with some sadness that I read about 83-year-old, Marie Kolstad, a great-grandmother from California, who opted to undergo cosmetic surgery -- a three-hour, $8000 procedure -- that she said would make her family "proud" of how she looked. In an interview with ABC News she said surgical breast enhancement was "a simple way to go," to look as young as she feels.

"I didn't think it was a big deal, " said Ms. Kolstad, a full time property manager with four children, 13 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. In addition to hoping to please her family, she said going from a 32A to a 36C was a necessity if she wanted to attract a male companion. "That's not going to happen if you don't have the figure these geezers are looking for," remarked Kolstad.

Kolstad is not unique among her peers in deciding to enhance her looks through cosmetic surgery. According to The New York Times, there are many "septuagenarians, octogenarians and even nonagenarians who are burnishing their golden years with help from the plastic surgeon." The American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery reported 84,685 surgical procedures among patients age 65 and older in 2010, including 26,635 face-lifts; 24,783 cosmetic eyelid operations; 6,469 liposuctions; 5,874 breast reductions; 3,875 forehead lifts; 3,339 breast lifts and 2,414 breast augmentations. Baby Boomers are currently the largest group requesting both non-invasive and cosmetic surgical procedures.

While there is some evidence that plastic surgery can increase self-esteem, there's little research to support the positive impact it has on 70- and 80-year-olds. Does anyone really believe that Holstad's grandchildren really cared about her wrinkles and sags -- let alone the shape of her breasts -- or were enthused about her decision to have surgery?

In my practice, I hear the opposite reaction. Offspring are often quite disturbed when they see their parents or grandparents undergo cosmetic alterations. Ms. Kolstad may view surgery as "no big deal," but as with any invasive procedure, there are risks involved. Adult children know that going under anesthesia is a big deal and that the risks increase with age. Watching the recovery is frightening too -- yes, bruises take longer to heal, and aging skin appears more fragile and lacks youthful resilience. Husbands, children and grandchildren wonder, "Why would you do this when we love you just the way you are?"

Surely no one blames Ms. Kolstad for wanting to look vital, active, and even sexy and sensual at her age. Some may even applaud her. We are all living longer and few of us are willing to fade away or resign ourselves to quietly disappearing in senior citizen homes. Kolstad, like the rest of us, has been reminded all too often about the importance of defying age, not only to keep our mates, but to secure our jobs from being usurped by those who look younger. Condemning Ms. Kolstad is to condemn an entire anti-aging culture. But is our only recourse the surgical alteration of our faces and bodies?

What happened to aging gracefully by focusing on the qualities that accrue with maturity and that make us attractive at any age? How about those who are still capable of turning heads when they walk into a room -- not because of their gravity-defying breasts, but because of their elegance, their warmth and their brilliant smiles. Gloria Steinem, at 77 -- recently in public view promoting the new documentary, "Gloria: In Her Own Words" -- continues to serve as a graceful role model for women. Then there's Betty White, who was just voted "most appealing celebrity" in an e-poll this year.

And, what about the complicated message that surgeries like Ms. Kolstad's send to the generations that follow? Don't they reinforce the belief that looking older is to be feared; that it is imperative to wage battle against an aging appearance at the risk of our health and financial well-being? Is there ever a point when we just say, it's time to deal with our changing looks with greater acceptance rather than resistance?

By implication, Ms. Kolstad's actions seem to suggest that there is no age where we draw the line. If we're never too old, then maybe we're also never too young to correct our "imperfections." Let's not forget the recent peauty pageant contestant whose mom felt she was just the right age, at 8-years-old, to receive Botox injections for that "perfect" look!

Maybe Ms. Kolstad has been taking advice from actress Jane Fonda, who recently talked about how to look hot and sexy at age 73? Although she has previously made no secret about her eating disorder and struggles over her aging appearance, she spends 50 pages of her new autobiography, "Primetime," sharing her secrets for looking and feeling younger. And while we may admire her candor, it seems unreasonable for everyday women to view Fonda's artfully reconstructed body as a model for success. Wouldn't it be more useful to talk about sexuality at 70 and 80 in terms of sensuality and intimacy -- qualities that are ageless -- rather than focusing on being hot and sexy through surgical alterations?

I steer clear of fashioning myself after movie stars, or for that matter anyone whose life is about perfecting their appearance in print and on screen (or making sure Photoshop does)! Instead, my role models come from everyday life. Like my 95-year-old mother-in-law, Marcia, who somehow still commands attention when she enters a room with her flaming white hair, her straight back and her radiant smile. No doubt her self-confidence is aided by the fact that her 99-year-old husband, Arthur, is palpably in love with her. There's a noticeable easy intimacy in their exchanges. They hold hands and show each other genuine affection. Arthur frequently can be heard telling Marcia how beautiful she is, yet I don't think a surgically sculpted "hot and sexy" is what he has in mind.

Neither Marcia nor Arthur have had plastic surgery. They seem to accept that their lives are growing increasingly constricted -- Arthur is hard of hearing and Marcia is losing her vision -- but they continue to appreciate the faculties and abilities they have. My mother-in-law tends her lovely garden, while my father-in-law reads voraciously. With Marcia's sight failing, Arthur reads books out loud to her. Every once in a while they pause to talk about what they've read and to acknowledge how fortunate they are to have each other, their children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren -- even if they can no longer skip with them.

Do you have a role model for aging gracefully? Do you think there should be age restrictions on cosmetic surgery?



****

Vivian Diller, Ph.D. is a psychologist in private practice in New York City. She has written articles on beauty, aging, media, models and dancers. She serves as a consultant to companies promoting health, beauty and cosmetic products. "Face It: What Women Really Feel As Their Looks Change" (2010), written with Jill Muir-Sukenick, Ph.D. and edited by Michele Willens, is a psychological guide to help women deal with the emotions brought on by their changing appearances.

For more information, please visit my websites at www.FaceItTheBook.com and www.VivianDiller.com. Friend me on Facebook (at http://www.facebook.com/Readfaceit) or continue the conversation on Twitter.

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I was skipping alongside my granddaughter Sadie the other day, when she paused to say: "Grandma, you're like a little kid in an old person's body." Perceptive and blunt -- as 3-year-olds are -- I was...
I was skipping alongside my granddaughter Sadie the other day, when she paused to say: "Grandma, you're like a little kid in an old person's body." Perceptive and blunt -- as 3-year-olds are -- I was...
 
 
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Scholastica8
PEOPLE MATTER!
03:49 PM on 10/22/2011
Here's the problem. One hopes to have aged gracefully and well if one lives to be 95. However, odds are now that if you live to 95, you'll have to somehow continue to work at least until 80.

Unfortunately, if you are over 55 and unemployed, odds are you'll never have a sustainable, meaningful job again. Along with an application or resume, potential employers check FaceBook even before they interview you. If you have no FaceBook page, they assume you are too old to know what FaceBook is, and therefore way behind the technological learning curve. If you do have a FaceBook page, but you look over that sort of "indeterminate" age that happens between 35 and 45, you are not going to get the job either.

Therefore, if you hope to become that 90+ role model, you'll need to keep working, but to keep working, you'll be backed into that anti-aging group whether you want to be or not.
traceymarie
Independent to Dem in 2007
02:28 PM on 10/10/2011
How about not judgeing others by your barometer. What works for some does not necessarily have to be the norm for all. Mind your business and live your life and stop with the sanctimonious jusdgements about others. 'k
01:48 PM on 09/02/2011
I have enjoyed all of your blog posts, and I have a request for a possible future post. Two books about attractiveness have recently been published, "Beauty Pays," and ":"Honey Money." I am very interested in the ideas discussed in these books, and I would like it if you were to incorporate some of them into a post. I realize that your post is more about aging than innate unattractiveness, but there still may be a connection. Thanks!
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see-ellen2001
05:03 PM on 08/30/2011
The headline needs to be changed to 'The CULT of Anti Aging'.
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04:01 PM on 08/30/2011
Our culture doesn't value anything about aging so why wouldn't people try to do everything to embody the values of our society? I don't say that I agree with that, but an entire generation's culture (the Boomers) was based on questioning authority and "not trusting anyone over 30." I was actually contemplating this earlier before reading this article and was wondering what there is to value about aging. Wisdom? Mellowness? Experience? Realness? I don't say that derisively, I just ask, What is it that we can value as a society so that we can lose our fixation on youth? To be quite honest, 39 is a hell of a lot better than 25; I am more myself, more comfortable in my own skin, more straightforward and less sucked in by the gossip and minutia that were the hallmarks of "youth."
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09:45 AM on 08/30/2011
Do I have a role model for aging, yes my own my mother. Restrictions on plastic surgery, ONLY if you're physically capable of handling the surgery and the recovery. Times they are a changing. This is the future. We're not going to be questioning older adults like the lady who opted for breast enhancement in the decades to come. We don't know the leaps that cosmetic surgery are going to achieve. We just won't be here to see it.
But I hear what the Doctor is saying. My family can accept the way I look all they want, but how do I look and feel about myself. It's all about me Period. No one else.
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Bryneen Gary
No cash no post
02:56 PM on 08/25/2011
Shea Butter
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Kim Stagliano
Author All I Can Handle I'm No Mother Teresa A Lif
07:37 PM on 08/24/2011
When I see a woman with cosmetic surgery I note that she does looks smoother and plumper with fewer or no lines - but never actually YOUNGER. It seems impossible to capture that youthful glow or young fat under the skin no matter how much work I see.
08:55 PM on 08/24/2011
If a procedure is really well done, it is hardly even noticed. The person just looks better, more refreshed, and just a little happier in some way. You have seen people in passing who have had work done--you just didn't see it. We are so used to bad cosmetic surgery that so many celebrities have done, we don't see the good work on regular people. The last question you want to hear is: "Who did your work?" The best question: "Did you lose weight? You look great." That's a job well done.
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millebocca
veni, vidi, clicki
07:29 AM on 08/24/2011
i think the desire to please family, esp grandkids etc via implants is a really weird rationalization.
i think the mention of attracting men is the honest reply.
small busts over time lend a far greater appearance of youthful sveltness - i can personally vouch for that.
then there is a reality i have come to know: the absolute coolest men - brains, personality, drive, sense of humor, hobbies (esp when it comes to liking healthy activities ie outdoors stuff vs bar-hopping and night-clubbing) - like their gals real, not implanted, inflated or stretched to smithereens.
i have to ask, young or old, what kind of guys are we wanting to attract?
09:57 PM on 08/23/2011
I read something so funny recently that I'm going to quote it here, even though it goes against everything I've been saying here. It's Celia Rivenbark in "We're Just Like You, Only Prettier", and this is it: "Every time I hear a fifty-something friend crow about how she's finally old enough to explore her inner self and really get to know who she is in this life, I tell her I'm sure she'd trade all that self-awareness in a nanosecond for a chance to be a fit and bra-less twenty-six doing Jell-O shots with Jude Law."
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millebocca
veni, vidi, clicki
07:23 AM on 08/24/2011
if one thinks that doing jello shots w jude law is an achievement of any merit whatsoever - well, um, have at it. reaching a tad low in my roster of daydreams.
08:57 PM on 08/24/2011
Finally, some REAL HONESTY in this discussion. You made my day!
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WilliamL
09:12 PM on 08/23/2011
At one point, all my grandparents and my great grand parents were alive and can not immagine them spending money on such surgeries. Perhaps it is because they lived during the depression and were part of that generation that had cellers full of mason jars full of food.

I can deal with a certain level of elective surgeries esp in regards to the impact of carrying children as understand as a husband that being pregant and carrying children wages war on a women's body. I get that. As far as inserting bags of silicone, that is a bit much.

It just does not seem that women get the fact that noone believes those breasts at full attention on a middle age women are ever seen as anything besideds fake. The "fake" aspect is what I see as being the line. When a woman/man is entirely manufactured with surgeries, it is esp difficult to see that person as real.

As far as sr. citizens with eight backs and stand up breast, well, to each their own and all that but seems to me that the area of the body that needs the most work is, perhaps, what is going on behind the eyes. A sad fact that some people have to go to such extremes to feel good about themselves and/or feel they need to do so to be desired by others.
05:11 PM on 08/23/2011
I don't see the need to pretend. Given the ageism in the job market, I am not going to criticize anybody for trying to take a few years off their appearance while they are working or looking for work. Doing so is reasonable. As for the rest:

"Getting old sucks"

"Beats the alternative"

"That it does"
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
09:49 PM on 08/23/2011
I accept aging, I have a gray sideburn, I like it. I have a friend that colors his hair -- he looks like Duran Duran in the 80s in the sunlight. I would rather give my money to bums to buy night train than spend it on prentending to look younger -- looking younger comes from the inside. I get hit on by people 30 yrs younger than me, and its not because of my gray sideburn -- its because i never accepted getting old on the inside. if i gain 5 lbs i will walk every trip to the grocery store until i lose the 5 lbs -- that even costs less -- gas is 4. a gallon, walking is free.
04:47 PM on 08/23/2011
I dislike comparisons of tv actors v. real people. At this time, the pressure to be young and thin is relentless and knows no bounds. I'm single and men don't mind one bit telling you how imperfect you are. I give it right back, and point out all their flaws, hence I stay single. At work I was openly given invitations to botox and other plastic surgery "specials" I am 51. I finally caved in and got retinoid cream, dysport and fillers. yes, I look younger, but really can I just get a tattoo on my foreheard declaring "conformed" ? But I need to work and this, no matter what you read, is the REALITY of keeping a job.
04:32 PM on 08/23/2011
Nothing wrong with trying to look better if possible. And also, this is none of anyone's business. No one who has cosmetic surgery done properly is ever trying to look 24 again. That is just not possible, and any good doctor will tell you this should you harbor any illusions. There is also nothing wrong with having nothing done if you don't want to. And exercise, fresh air and good food will not help sagging skin--nor will any expensive cream or treatment. At some point you need a cosmetic surgeon whose goal will be to make you look better--not necessarily much younger.
10:02 PM on 08/23/2011
I guess it's the idea that "better" is necessary that bugs me. Whatever happened to aging with grace and not minding the bags and sags and wrinkles? And yes, I'm 62, so I know what I'm talking about.
Bianca S
You can't go trick-or-treating. Ever. For a week
12:22 AM on 08/24/2011
You can age gracefully with plastic surgery, you just have to use it very conservatively and know you will never look 25, or use it as a crutch to "fix" problems that run deeper. There is nothing wrong with getting the bags under your eyes removed if you feel it is taking away from your other features. There's also nothing wrong with wanting to look "better" as well. It's becoming obsessed and trying to become someone you're not that's the problem.

If some women and men feel "better" means a nip or tuck that leaves them looking refreshed, not radically different, I don't see why it's anybody's concern of business and they are welcome to aging 100% naturally themselves.
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sparkygirl91
Never apply lipstick while driving on gravel
04:04 PM on 08/23/2011
I guess it just goes to show doesn't matter which generation you grew up in - if you have issues (on aging), you have issues. I grew up in the 50's/60's and the importance of a woman's look was thrust down our little girl throats - just look at the ads and commercials from that era. If surgery will help a woman, or man, feel better about themselves, I'm all for it. I am not, however, for the over-stretched, plastic, constant wind-blown, look. I'm on the fence as to what age a person should stop but, again, if a person is cleared medically and mentally............... Genetics have a lot to do with it too. I admit I'm one of those who is not too thrilled with aging, but fortunate I come from good genes - at 58, most folks think I'm in my mid-40's (I wish!). Believe me though, if these jowls don't slow down - who's sick joke are they? - I'll be going for that "mini".