Posts Tagged ‘types of discrimination’

Reflections of A Generation (pt.4): Behind the Veil – Women In Iran

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009
Iran Echo Boomers: Women Behind the Veil

Iran Echo Boomers: Women Behind the Veil

By Boomeryearbook.com

With the growing social unrest within the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Iranian government is facing a crossroads of its very existence. Young Iranian echo boomers (mirroring the socially active American baby boomers) are becoming increasingly vocal in their dissatisfaction with perceived social inequities. Chief among these concerns is the rights of women in the Islamic Republic. For now, they are looking toward their government as a means of change. How long, however, will it be before peaceful reformation gives way to forceful revolution?

Gender inequality is a social injustice with which American baby boomers are very familiar. It is certain that many baby boomers view the plight of Iranian women with a great deal of empathy. Iranian women, for their part, are well aware of the limitations they face and have been strong voices for change in their country. It is an ironic twist of fate that the plight of women in Iran actually witnessed significant gains under the previous oppressive regimes of the Shahs.

The Pahlavi government – which featured a line of Shahs from 1925 to 1979 – was a pro-western regime. Unfortunately for the Shah, Iranians were generally conservative Muslims who chaffed under the measures that were being advocated. The Shah was so unpopular, in fact, that virtually every rival faction in Iran was united to bring the government down and to establish an Islamic Republic. However, being a pro-west regime, the Pahlavi Shahs instituted a number of progressive reforms concerning women’s rights over the years.

In 1936, for example, Reza Shah passed a law that forbade women from wearing the hijab (head covering worn by Muslim women). Women also found themselves more involved in the workforce. Educational opportunities were opened up as well. Under the Pahlavi regimes, women rose to such posts as government ministers and even judges. In fact, Nobel Prize recipient Shirin Ebadi, was Iran’s first female judge. By 1963, Iran instituted universal suffrage and women were elected to parliament. American baby boomers, at the time, could have taken heart to some of the Iranian women advances.

Much of this hard won effort, however, would come to an end with the Islamic Revolution of 1979. Again, ironically, women played a very key role in the success of the revolution as they were instrumental in the mass demonstrations. Nevertheless, the problem is two fold. On the one hand, Islam as a religion has defined roles for men and women in certain aspects of daily life. On the other hand, Iran – like many other locales around the world – is a male dominated (some could say misogynistic) culture.

Dealing with the latter is less of a challenge than dealing with the former. Issues such as the weight of a woman’s testimony in court (2 women equals 1 man), mode of dress in public and inheritance guidelines are Qur’anic in nature. In other words, these are areas in which Muslims believe divine guidance has been given. For women to challenge these types of perceived restrictions is to challenge the religious foundations on which the state is formed. These types of challenges are generally met with firm resistance from the government.

However, in regards to measures that stem from cultural bias, Iranian women seem to have more flexibility. Employment opportunities fall into this category. Despite a high number of Iranian women enrolled in higher education (70% of engineering students, for example are women), employment opportunities are routinely denied. Thus the separation of the sexes hinders women in this endeavor.

Much in the same way American baby boomers brought attention and eventual resolution to gender inequality, so to must Iranian echo boomers. The Iranian government, for its part, must recognize the differences between true religious concerns and cultural biasness. Perhaps by relaxing many of the non-religious restraints, the Islamic Republic can begin establishing a constructive dialog for effective reformation for its citizens without compromising Islamic tenants.

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This Psychological Article on Reflections of A Generation (pt.4): Behind the Veil – Women In Iranis part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of psychological articles on World Religions, politics and understanding as a solution to types of discrimination. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers, Echo Boomers and Booming Seniors. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Reflections of A Generation (pt.3): The Islamic Republic of Iran –Fact or Fiction?

Sunday, July 5th, 2009
Iranian Echo Boomer Reformers

Iranian Echo Boomer Reformers

American baby boomers are watching the events in the Islamic Republic of Iran with a keen interest. In the young Iranians, they see a kindred spirit of social activism. These young Iranian echo boomers, so called because they are mirrors of the reformist baby boomers, have taken their voices to the world stage. Their willingness to stand up and be heard has given their government pause. The Iranian government has long conveyed that freedom rings true in the Islamic Republic. Is this government a true republic willing to guarantee the rights and freedoms it espouses, or is it really just another totalitarian regime?

It should be noted – and this is an important note – that Iranian echo boomers are not fighting their government. Rather they are protesting their government’s resistance to proffer specific social freedoms. It is the opinion of this author that this is the legacy that American baby boomers have inspired. Iranian activists are not calling for a revolution to overthrow the government. This alludes to a hope and a belief among the Iranian people that their government is a viable instrument through which to effect change. This sentiment is one that was held by American baby boomers and ultimately proved to be true. Can the same be said of the Iranian system of government?

To answer this question, one has to evaluate the government system in question. Iran’s government is ostensibly a republic. It has elected representational bodies that legislates and administers the affairs of government based on Islamic principles. Indeed, there are three branches of government – executive, parliament, and judicial. There is even a national constitution that provides a conceptual foundation (Islamic) of national identity.

However, all of these branches of governments and the positions within them are subordinate to the office of the Supreme Leader. In fact, the Supreme Leader has a significant and influential hand in appointing (directly and indirectly) the officials who serve in the other branches of government – including the government body that selects and can remove the Supreme Leader: the Assembly of Experts. There have only been two Supreme Leaders since the Islamic revolution of 1979; the founder of the revolution himself, the deceased Ayatollah Khomeini and the current leader, Ali Khamenei. While the office of president is the highest elected office in the country, the president is also subordinate to the supreme leader.

While this system may seem foreign to American baby boomers and other Westerners, one has to remember the general mindset of Iranians. Most Iranians – at least up until the revolution, were conservative, religious minded, and generally had an unfavorable attitude towards the west. As Muslims, Iranians generally accept the concept of having a guardian (a single leader) who safeguarded the Islamic underpinnings of the budding Islamic state. Even today, Iranian echo boomers – whose parents ignited the Islamic revolution – don’t have a significant issue with this political structure. This is evident by the recent protest over the recent presidential elections. The protests are over a legitimate election process – not the legitimacy of the system itself.

Nevertheless, this is a time of opportunity for both the Iranian government and the Iranian people. The government has the chance to illustrate that it is a true republic in fact and not just name by listening to the voices of the people and taking significant resulting action. For the people, this is a chance for the protests to be heard as it is difficult for the government to silence the Iranian echo boomer reformers International media attention.

The government should remember that its own existence is the result of a disgruntled population that eventually lost all hope that the prevailing political system could effect positive change. The desire for reformation always precedes the need for revolution. There are real social issues, such as the rights of women that are at the forefront of concerns for Iranian echo boomers. These concerns need to be addressed by a receptive Iranian government while the people are still tolerant of the current political and social structure.

Psychological Articles as Solutions to Types of Discrimination

Psychological Articles as Solutions to Types of Discrimination

This Psychological Article on Reflections of A Generation (pt.3): The Islamic Republic of Iran –Fact or Fiction? is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of psychological articles on World Religions, politics and understanding as a solution to types of discrimination. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers, Echo Boomers and Booming Seniors. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Reflections of A Generation (pt.2): Reformation Vs. Revolution In Iran

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

 

 

Iranian Echo Boomer Reform Movement

Iranian Echo Boomer Reform Movement

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Psychological Articles

By Boomeryearbook.com

There is a growing dissatisfaction among Iran’s large population of young adults. Some of this unrest exploded for the world to see with protests associated with the allegations of voter fraud with the recent presidential elections. As thousands of protestors took to the streets to voice their concerns (and the whole world watching on television), the Iranian government struggled to fashion a response that would quiet the crowds and not embarrass the regime. The current government is the result of a revolution itself – a popular uprising amongst the people at the time. Faced with eerily similar circumstances, the question is whether the current government faces a reformation or another revolution.

The difference between the two – in general terms – is significant. In this, there are lessons to learn from history. American baby boomers, for example, have defined the process of social reformation. The so-called counter-culture; baby boomers set out to redefine society in a mold that was in conformity with their understanding of the American dream. This redefinition, however, was to be accomplished within the scope of the established political framework. In other words, baby boomers wanted change but did not want to overthrow the established government.

Social revolution, however, is a different concept. A revolution identifies the problems that a society faces as inherent symptoms of a corrupt or failing government. In such a circumstance, the only viable solution is to effect regime change. Obviously, this wasn’t much of a consideration for American baby boomers. Ordinarily, such a decisive measure is costly in terms of human lives and infrastructure damage. Still, there are two points of interest that are derived from all of this.

The first is that in times of social unrest, the initial goal of the dissatisfied is reformation. Secondly, despite the constant chatter from talk shows and news pundits, it does not appear that the Iranians are not looking to overthrow their government. At this point in time (which is a key point for the Iranian government and its citizens) the call is for social reformation and not revolution. To better understand the significance of this and the lessons that should be well understood by the Iranian government if no one else, is illustrated in recent historical events.

The current Iranian government is the result of the Islamic (sometimes called Iranian) Revolution of 1979. Prior to the revolution, Iran was governed under a monarchy. It would suffice to say that history views this government as unpopular. Psychological articles inform us that the ruler of Iran, Shah Pahlavi, stood over a pro-western, liberal, and generally agreed upon, oppressive regime. A measure of the discontent in Iran with the Shah is that virtually each of the normally rival factions in Iran – religious, Marxist, leftist, etc. – all had one thing in common; a desire to see the Shah ousted.

Calls for social change and efforts for such (i.e. reformation) were often brutally suppressed by the Shah’s government.

Naturally, the widespread discontent eventually united the factions to action. Under the leadership of Ayatollah Khomeini, Iran witnessed staged protests of immense proportions. As one observer noted, there were more protesters than the secret police could ever hope to arrest. The Shah went into exile in 1979.

The lesson is that the Shah, recognizing the writing on the wall, finally attempted to enact many of the social changes that had been called for; only too late. Once revolutionary momentum has been attained, reformation is no longer an option. American baby boomers never had to face this dilemma – the Iranian government does. Now, Iranian officials have to weigh the choice of reformation or revolution in regards to its own continued existence.

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This Psychological Article on Reflections of A Generation (pt. 2): A Mirror of Social Unrest In Iran Influenced by Baby Boomers? is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of psychological articles on World Religions, politics and understanding as a solution to types of discrimination. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers, Echo Boomers and Booming Seniors. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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The Younger Heart in the Elderly Mind

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

Feeling Forever Young


By Boomeryearbook.com

Elderly bodies sometimes carry a tragic burden: a younger heart.

Everyone has heard the phrase, ‘Mutton Dressed as Lamb’ or ‘There’s Life in the Old Dog Yet’ – not always in a complimentary context. Such expressions are usually used to describe an elderly person, probably experiencing elderly problems and trying to push away the unpleasantness of advanced age by emulating a much younger person: a younger version of oneself.

A prettier and more energetic model of the elderly reality is certainly something everyone might like to experience, if only science would hurry up and make such a thing possible. Unfortunately, life just does not work that way and elderly problems set in despite our resolve not to have anything to do with them!

The quest for the fountain of youth is some way from complete, even in the modern age of cosmetic enhancement and plastic surgery. Any number of processes designed to halt the ageing process might be tried with limited success but none will prevent the inevitable stampede and triumph of time over physical endurance.

From late middle age, the human form deteriorates in body and brain. Sometimes, this deterioration goes at a dignified pace in time with the gentle onset of all the elderly problems associated with ‘getting on in life’. For some, however, the body breaks down more quickly and more seriously, as a result of any number of factors: poor diet; insufficient exercise; ill health or stress. The mind stays alert, active and eager to interact socially with much younger companions, sometimes with disastrous results.

The unfortunate victims of an accelerated ageing process are left wondering how to cope with the elderly problems brought on by wrinkles and crow’s feet and may sometimes attempt to back pedal in an effort to regain lost years. The elderly problems encountered during this process cause people extreme emotional discomfort as they struggle with an active mind inside a tired and worn outer casing.

People who display the misguided antics associated with being ‘The Youngest Swinger In Town’ should be helped rather than ridiculed, as quite often their emotions are in a state of panic as they fight against the elderly problems they are ill equipped to resolve by themselves.

The reputation of being young at heart is a complimentary one and not to be confused with the foolish and sometimes embarrassing behaviour indulged in when elderly problems force a lonely individual into masquerading as a younger person to recapture youthful sensations best laid to rest. Elderly problems present themselves in thousands of combinations which should be addressed carefully and compassionately to achieve peace of mind for any elderly youngster suffering hidden agonies associated with an unnatural ageing process.

The Psychological Article on The Younger Heart in the Elderly Mind is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of coaching suggestions on how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Senior Moments and How to Accept Them

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009
Social Interaction to Alleviate Elderly Problems of Senior Moments

Social Interaction to Alleviate Elderly Problems of Senior Moments

By Boomeryearbook.com

We have all experienced the humiliation of walking into a room and standing bewildered, wondering what on earth we went in there for! Or opening the freezer and gazing stupidly into the void, thinking, “What the heck am I looking for?” These are lost seconds in time; that annoying space between comprehension and coma; the forerunners to more serious elderly problems, affectionately and sometimes patronizingly known as ‘senior moments’.

There are grades of senior moments, just as there are grades of sanity and insanity. A split second flash of memory loss hardly qualifies as an elderly problem. However, opening a can of beans and pouring them all over the cat might constitute a more serious lapse in comprehension.

Inching toward old age is certainly preferable to taking fences at a gallop and hurtling toward full blown senility. Senior moments are part of the journey of the mature mind into limited functionality: eventual shut down might only come with death and until then we are stuck with the elderly problems that increase as the years wear on.

Not wishing to depress anyone, it is rare for brain function to be recovered to any degree for those experiencing elderly problems of a serious nature. However, having occasional senior moments is generally acknowledged to be a less serious condition than that associated with other, more complicated elderly problems and certainly easier to cope with if a degree of amusement is allowed at your expense.

Senior moments are part of life’s rich tapestry. They need not make anyone miserable or be difficult to accept. Everyone becomes old enough to experience absent mindedness and forgetfulness. Interestingly, in cases where grandparents spend a considerable amount of time with younger members of the family, senior moments and even the more serious elderly problems associated with senility or dementia seem to be held at bay for longer; probably due to the amount of stimulation on hand to keep old age from baying at the door.

Senior moments are just that: senior spaces in time filled with nothing, while the brain struggles to remember what the heck you were supposed to be doing before the senior moment arrived to spoil it! Take it in your stride and always remember that everyone gets elderly problems and senior moments sometimes: it would be less normal not to have them.

Seniors who spend a great deal of their day interacting with friends and family are less likely to be bothered by either senior moments or elderly problems to any serious degree until extreme old age. So if you want to get the best out of your years; spend them sociably and avoid all the elderly problems associated with isolation and solitude.

The Psychological Article on Senior Moments and How to Accept Them is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of suggestions on coaching and how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Exercising the Elderly Mind

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009
Exercising to Avoid Elderly Problems

Exercising to Avoid Elderly Problems

By Boomeryearbook.com

Elderly minds, just like elderly bodies, vary from person to person. Not all elderly minds exhibit the symptoms of elderly problems. The frailest elderly people can shock the socks off those who deal with them on a daily basis by grasping ideas and concepts with razor sharp alacrity. Contrarily, another elderly person might have all the muscle tone of someone thirty years younger but little mental agility to compliment their physical capabilities.

It is perhaps one of life’s little practical jokes that the human mind sometimes deteriorates at a slower – or even a faster – rate than the body. Elderly problems manifest themselves in combinations, making individual treatment a matter of individual assessment. And so it should be. Human beings are a complex bunch and no two are the same, we are assured. If they were, they would be a boring set of critters, albeit with all the same elderly problems and related nuisances!

Exercising the mind in the elderly need not be the kind of project requiring a towel around the neck and a bottle of Bourbon before you can even consider what to do next. Elderly problems, especially those of the mind, do not hit the population with the force of a meteorite collision. Such things appear in a gentle mist of forgetfulness, each day filled with more absent mindedness than the last, until the person is beset by all the practical obstacles caused by their inability to think clearly. Independence slowly fades away and elderly problems triumph, leaving the elderly victim confused and condemned to living a dependant old age.

With the possible exception of those suffering the onset of diseases widely associated with the elderly, such as Alzheimer’s Syndrome, the older mind can be encouraged to stay alert long into advanced old age simply by exercising brain cells on a regular basis. Elderly problems may be minimized and sometimes entirely eradicated by keeping the mind functioning in a productive manner. Elderly problems such as forgetfulness, confusion and losing a grip on reality can all be kept at bay simply by doing daily crosswords or puzzles, exercising the brain by completing aptitude exercises on handy electronic games, playing Scrabble or Poker and being generally sociable within peer groups.

Activities that have a hand-to-brain function are even more valuable, such as knitting, sewing, model building and painting, requiring a compatibility of faculties to keep cells both physical and mental on their toes and in ship shape condition.

Slowness and inactivity need not be a feature of old age. Vigilance and frequent activity can lead those who anticipate elderly problems into a confident and enjoyable old age without any of the inherent difficulties. An optimistic program of care combined with a determination to enjoy life can achieve wonders.

The Psychological Article on Exercising the Elderly Mind is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing coaching series of suggestions to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Dependency Between Elderly Partners

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009
Can't Live Without You: Co-Dependency in Elderly Couples

Can't Live Without You: Co-Dependency in Elderly Couples


By Boomeryearbook.com

Dependency can be a king pin in an elderly relationship, especially one that has been established for many years. Elderly problems may be experienced by elderly partners both individually and as a couple, as a result of the deep rapport that exists between them.

‘So what is wrong with long term devotion?’ You may well ask. Absolutely nothing is wrong with a long serving and loving relationship that mutually benefits two elderly people. However, extreme dependency can lead to elderly problems in one or both partners as a result of their long term reliance on each other.

In cases where the individuals are of a similar age, elderly problems are likely to be easier to deal with. Where one of the partners is very much older, the younger will often experience enormous pitfalls when trying to adjust to a life without the other in the event of death or serious illness.

Lengthy partnerships or marriages of forty or fifty years are usually deemed to be highly successful, simply by virtue of survival! Some people cannot imagine spending an entire lifetime with one partner. As extremely long partnerships continue into the sixty year bracket, living a single life must be unimaginable for both parties and when it becomes necessary through death or illness, elderly problems result.

In traditional marriages, either the husband or the wife takes responsibility for carrying out tasks such as household accounts, getting the car serviced, making tax returns, and so on. Left to tackle such things alone, a bereaved partner struggles against a mountain of difficulties and related elderly problems that are a direct result of being dependent upon a long term personal relationship.

The solution to such elderly problems is hard to define, as elderly couples often see no reason to change their lifetime habits. Why would they? Gentle encouragement might be shown to exercise a little independence, however, as a safeguard against a lonely and frightening situation to come, where grief and isolation are aggravated by not being able to deal with day to day routines previously handled by a partner now departed.

Elderly couples sometimes share a devotion rarely found in modern relationships and often this devotion itself becomes an emotional support for individuals experiencing elderly problems. While the other partner is safely resident within the relationship, all is well: the loss of this relationship can send a perfectly balanced and grounded elderly person into a tailspin when they are required to survive alone in a world they no longer recognize or feel comfortable in.

Dependency between elderly couples is a plus while both partners are still living and free of elderly problems but a little self sufficiency does not go amiss to allow for future isolation.

This Psychological Article on Dependency Between Elderly Partners is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of coaching suggestions on how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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The Psychology of Attention Seeking in the Elderly

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009
Attention Seeking in the Elderly

Attention Seeking in the Elderly


By Boomeryearbook.com

The elderly have an inherent gift for turning minor elderly problems into major dramas when they feel the occasion warrants a little attention seeking. Just as children will seek attention from a parent intent on ignoring them, the elderly will turn cartwheels (figuratively speaking of course) to feature as the main attraction, usually when you least desire to be attracted!

Attention seeking is a symptom of a greater need. Old age can be tough and sometimes elderly problems wash over the most confident and sunny disposition, rendering a person vulnerable and susceptible to loneliness. This is when an elderly friend of relative is likely to seek your attention, as this is when your attention is most needed: it’s as simple as that.

An unfortunate feature of attention seeking behaviour is that it is not always important to seek attention of a particular quality – any attention will do! As a result, the behaviour which is designed to draw attention can sometimes be embarrassing and unwelcome; the worst kind of elderly problem.

The elderly do not seek attention simply to cause inconvenience to loved ones and friends. Such antics are usually only employed as a last resort and likely after a prolonged period of isolation or loneliness. Elderly problems come in a variety of packages and coming to terms with solitude and isolation is something few people tackle successfully in advanced old age or even much earlier.

Most caring professionals who deal with elderly problems on a daily basis deal with attention seeking behaviour firmly but gently. There is nothing to be gained in reacting angrily to situations where compassion and friendliness bring better results.

For those who seek attention and those who strive to provide attention to the seeker, the advice is the same – activity and social interaction. Keeping the brain alive and the body active is the only answer to the kind of loneliness and solitude that prompts such elderly problems; that and making such activities available on a continued program, on a regular basis.

The antidote to attention seeking is attention itself. The lack of interaction with others is the worm that eats away a person’s sociability, making them a target for all kinds of dysfunctional attitudes and elderly problems.

For elderly people who are wheelchair bound or unable to attend formal groups, a provided companion will stave off the symptoms of isolation sufficiently to eradicate attention seeking behaviour and its related elderly problems. There is no need for the elderly to run marathons and take degrees in applied science to achieve a sense of worth and freedom: stimulation may be just as easily acquired by an hour’s socializing with a good friend by your side.

This Psychological Article on The Psychology of Attention Seeking in the Elderly is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of suggestions on coaching and how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Journaling for Elderly Problems

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009
Journaling to Alleviate Elderly Problems

Journaling to Alleviate Elderly Problems

By Boomeryearbook.com

Psychological comparisons for the elderly or for those trying to fight off the effects of elderly problems can be helpful when looking for a program of stimulation.  Physical and mental agility is imperative to combat the uglier symptoms of elderly problems, especially those that affect a person’s ability to function within a family unit or socialize in general.

Boomers are an inquisitive set: not content with sitting around and waiting for extreme old age and elderly problems to remove life’s enjoyments one by one, boomers are more likely to ask WHY they can’t remember to switch off the television, or WHY hands no longer listen to brain when making a three point turn.

To identify some of the problems that might rear their ugly heads in later life, it is sensible to instigate a gentle program of assessment to prevent elderly problems taking too strong a grasp too early in the game. 

Ask yourself whether you can still manage the coordination exercises you played around with in your teens.  No?  Make a note of it.  Do you enter a room and then stand around wondering why?  Write it down and also write down how often.  Make a note of how often in the course of a week you join friends for a game of cards or a fund raising quiz or for a walk in the park.  If your weekly interaction with friends is less than weekly, make a note of it and also make an effort to change things.  Elderly problems sneak up when you least expect them to but there is no need to hold the door open.

When you have finished writing about yourself and making rude remarks in the margins, take an honest look at just how much of your life is spent in actively using your brain and your body to keep yourself young, alert, happy and free of the elderly problems that beset the less vigilant victims of old age.

Stimulation comes in the form of having fun.  The days when you went surfing or hang gliding to perk up your cells might be over but you could always try ballroom dancing, casino evenings and dinner clubs to ward off senility, early dementia and any other nasty old thing you can think of associated with elderly problems and having your life run for you because you are too worn out to run it yourself.

The price of complacency is high for those who are horrified at the thought of elderly problems blighting their lives and turning old age into a death sentence.  There is no need for it and no need for you to sign off on it.  Get your pen and paper and start a program of self comparison.  Make a start.  Make a life.  

The Psychological Article on Journaling for Psychological Comparisons of Elderly Boomers is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of suggestions on coaching and how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Staying Active While Dealing With Elderly Problems

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009
Psychological Article on Staying Active to Deal with Elderly Problems

Psychological Article on Staying Active to Deal with Elderly Problems

By Boomeryearbook.com

Elderly problems are only worrying for those ill equipped to deal with them. Like everything else in life, if you have the tools to tackle the job, you are halfway to being successful. The tools required to deal with elderly problems, however, are things you cannot always see and touch: they are the life skills we all have in our tool kits in early life but have no need for, until old age comes knocking…

We all know that the secret to a successful old age is activity because it is drummed into us over and over by those whose professional job it is to educate us on how to live an enjoyable life without all the inconveniences caused by elderly problems and those associated with advanced old age. They are right. Activity is the answer – the key to the secret of a happy and longer life.

We sometimes misunderstand the word ‘active’ to describe something exclusively physical. It is important for anyone, especially someone experiencing elderly problems, to be active both physically and mentally. The physical maintenance of the human body is hard work but easy to carry out: just buy the books or movies and do what they advise you to do! Go to the gym; take frequent walks and so on. Fitness of the mind, however, can be a tricky old thing to master and not so easy when you might have other problems to conquer.

Just as the body needs to exercise muscle to stay supple, a mind that is seldom used to its maximum capacity will atrophy and develop elderly problems as its faculties are under utilised and left to vegetate. The resources available to the elderly to encourage activity, both physical and mental, are designed to stimulate the mind and keep cells ticking over well into later life.

Mental activity need not necessarily mean joining an intellectual society or writing a thesis on brain surgery! Join the library instead and while you are about it, try out the local chess club or learn to salsa! Staying active into old age need not be an unpleasant chore and in fact you could ensure you keep elderly problems at bay simply by joining the Knitting Circle or the UFO Spotting Club! What is important is using your body and your brain (both sides, preferably) to ward off lethargy and ennui; the biggest enemies of the qualities of youth.

By staying alive in your outlook and being determined to enjoy what is left of your life, you could extend your life expectancy and stave off elderly problems indefinitely. Let someone else worry about elderly problems and use your life for something better!

The Psychological Article on Staying Active While Dealing With Elderly Problems is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of suggestions on coaching and how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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