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Wendy Gordon

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The Longevity Revolution: Time to Get Out and Change Things

Posted: 01/02/12 01:43 PM ET

"When I grow up I am going to be a little old lady in tennis shoes," Mary Catherine Bateson, the septuagenarian writer and cultural anthropologist, told the audience at the TEDx Women conference held in New York City near the end of 2011. To the room full of 50+ women, the reference to Rachel Carson -- and the attempts to dismiss the burgeoning environmental movement she helped found -- came through loud and clear. As did Bateson's call to action: "If there is one thing we should all be working on, it is preserving the environment."

It's an urgent message, especially when you consider the 191 anti-environmental votes taken by the House in 2011. Polls consistently show that Americans value strong government protections against pollution. But if our Congressional representatives aren't listening well enough to their constituents, Americans may not be doing all they can to be heard.

Bateson strongly urged seniors to take up the slack and advocate for a healthy environment. Seniors -- women in particular -- have a unique role play, Bateson argued. It seemed a fitting lesson for a new year. Let me explain.

Jane Fonda kicked off the TEDx Women conversation with a jaw-dropping statistic: "We are living on average today 34 years longer than our great-grandparents." Looking at our society as a whole, this is a "longevity revolution." Fonda challenged the panel to consider how we use this time.

To Bateson, this added longevity may be the major source of hope we have in the world. She recognized that people in their 30s, 40s and 50s -- overly busy with work and family -- have too much to deal with in the short term. But those in their 60s and later -- "Adulthood II" as she called it -- have more time and wisdom, and Bateson believes are better at problem-solving for the long term.

Both Fonda and Bateson spoke of Adulthood II as a creative, productive period -- a new phase of the life cycle that has been inserted before old age. Besides Carson, who wrote Silent Spring when she was 55, Bateson recalled that Betty Friedan was 58 when she wrote Feminist Mystique and Maggie Kuhn was 66 when she founded the Gray Panthers.

Bateson also pointed out that women entering Adulthood II include large numbers who remember the '60s, and the '70s, who were activists at some point in their lives, and "who in the beginning years of feminism had to rethink who am I, what do I want, what am I going to do with my life?" These women are on the frontier once again, "pioneering a part of life that did not ever exist before."

Where should they direct their energy, skills, wisdom, and time? To Bateson it was clear: "Be impassioned advocates for a positive future," and for future generations one will never see. Check out these 15 women, including three over 90, who according to Nuke Register, were arrested in June at the Entergy Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant. The women were charged with trespass after advocating for replacing nuclear power with solar power. I like The Huffington Post story of 69-year-old Sue Kelso in southern Oklahoma who stopped the Calgary-based TransCanada from running the Keystone XL pipeline under her family's peanut farm. And no one will ever forget the brave and visionary Nobel Laureate, Wangari Maathai, who passed away last fall. Rightfully, much has been written about her life, the Green Belt Movement she launched, and the 40 million trees that have been planted as a result of her work.

There are countless stories of women of all ages taking up the cause of a positive future. Tell us yours. And let's make 2012 the banner year for women's environmental activism.

 
 
 
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06:34 PM on 01/04/2012
I recycle (most of the time), I purchase organic products (whenever possible), and I'm constantly "writing my congressman" about the environmental issues that worry me the most, but there are so many current issues and more developing all the time. I would truly like to do more. These women are an inspiration to us all - thank you for you courage!
06:05 PM on 01/04/2012
My environmental activism really launched when I started my website www.budgetmindedorganics.com and began researching subjects for articles on my blog. My main passion is urging consumers to buy more eco-consciously, with my main interests in bamboo, hemp and organic products. I feel that we as women have a lot of power in the marketplace and that our purchases will ultimately influence the course our planet will take environmentally.
05:37 AM on 01/04/2012
My environmental activism started when my children were young and our local authority sprayed insecticide along our street. Now, at 75, green issues are my passion. In my book ‘Elderwoman: Reap the wisdom, feel the power, embrace the joy,’ (Findhorn Press 2002), I listed ‘Earth-centeredness’ as one of the key principles of the true elderwoman. The following year I began producing a newsletter for other women who share my interest in conscious, green elderhood and went on to create the invitation-only social network ‘Elderwomanspace.’ Since then I’ve published two books on how people of all ages can live simpler, greener lives: ‘The Lilypad List: 7 steps to the simple life’ (Findhorn Press, 2004) and ‘Downshifting Made Easy: How to plan for your planet-friendly future’ (Earth Books, 2011). I also birthed an anthology on green spirituality ‘GreenSpirit: Path to a New Consciousness’ (Earth Books, 2010). The archetypal elderwoman, with her deep understanding of life and death, her closeness with other species and her store of Earth wisdom, was a mentor to the young hero, a counterbalance to the impetuousness of leaders and a guardian of all that is green and sustainable. This is a role that mature women in our culture are finally (after the setback of the Burning Times) beginning to reclaim and I am so happy to be a small part of this much-needed revolution. Please visit me at http://www.elderwoman.org and http://elderwoman.blogspot.com (or find me on Facebook).
07:28 PM on 01/03/2012
As a woman just finding her environmental voice, I wish to thank you for your article. Last May I started a website: www.unearthme.com, with my main goal to archive past pollution on our planet, that may still effect us, so that it will not be forgotten. We are non political and accept no advertising, in an effort to remain unbiased. So far most of our information has come from mainstream media, but we are looking for input from other sources. We need to hear from individuals telling their personal story. Hope all will visit this site!!
07:27 PM on 01/03/2012
I am 60 and I use a bike for transportation as often as I can. It is simple, inexpensive, green and fun.
06:08 PM on 01/03/2012
I started a page on Facebook called Eco-Activity where I (or a member) pick a topic of the month and everyone has to make at least one change related to that topic. For example, one topic was getting toxins out of your home. Now a few members and I make my own cleaning products. It is mandatory that the members participate, so if they don't then they get called out on. I'd like to expand it and perhaps give a prize each month or a grand prize at the end of the year. But in the meantime, it's going really good.
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Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
04:14 PM on 01/03/2012
divisive. inherently..