Active
Baby Boomers
Dealing Effectively with Midlife Issues
By Garrett Coan
In this
article we would like to help you explore the challenges and opportunities
that come at midlife. You will have an opportunity to take a look at
issues that are specific to the Baby Boomer generation. You will also
have a chance to begin the process of your own midlife assessment with
a list of questions presented at the end of the newsletter. We call
this assessment the Midlife Checkup.
Benefits
of the Midlife Checkup
Taking
the time to assess how your life is going at this point can result in
benefits such as these:
• It can
help you identify and intensify your inner strengths.
• You can
find your own voice and express it your own way.
• You can
accept your changing physical self.
• It is
an opportunity to forgive those with whom you’ve been angry.
• It can
help you find ways to reduce stress.
• You can
learn to simplify your life.
• You can
reenergize yourself in preparation for the second half of your life.
The Baby
Boomers
The Baby
Boomer generation is at midlife right now. This generation includes
almost 78 million Americans born between 1946 and 1964.
The Boomers
are the largest generation in U.S. history. They have had a major impact
on American society as they have passed through every life stage. They
are passing through midlife in their own unique way, differently from
their parents and differently from Generation X, the group born in the
years after 1964.
The first
Boomer turned 50 at the beginning of 1996, and the remaining 78 million
will observe this anniversary sometime between now and 2014.
Typical
Feelings
According
to Rocking the Ages authors J. Walker Smith and Ann Clurman (researchers
at Yankelovich Partners) and authors like Gail Sheehy, people passing
through middle age typically experience the following kinds of feelings.
Great expectations:
Most Boomers are beginning to recognize their own limitations. Growing
up in the comfortable 1950’s, the Boomers learned to expect unlimited
growth and endless possibilities. They believed their good luck would
never end. Now that they are turning 50, many are shocked to discover
that there are limits to life’s possibilities.
Regret:
As people reach midlife, they must face up to the loss of some of their
dreams and regret the mistakes they have made. It is not easy for anyone
to face the person one will never be.
Loss: At
midlife, everyone has to face the loss of beauty and youth, valued by
our society. In her book New Passages, author Gail Sheehy calls this
experience "The Body Blues" or "The Vanity Crisis."
Meaning:
According to Sheehy, the "universal preoccupation" of the
middle years is "the search for meaning in whatever we do."
As they face the fact that time is limited, the Baby Boomers typically
become even more intent on this need to analyze and search for significance.
Change:
The midlife years can be a time of radical change for many people. This
is the result of endless questioning and evaluation of how one has lived
life thus far. Many midlife crises become mid-life meltdowns, says Sheehy,
because some people react to feelings of emptiness or disillusionment
by destroying everything they have built.
The Boomers
developed a value system that is based on a sense of entitlement and
which values individuality. Because they hold these values, Boomers
respond differently to each life stage than do other generations. You
can see these values reflected in scenes like those from television
shows from the 1950s and early 60s.
According
to Smith and Clurman, four important characteristics of the Baby Boomer
value system are:
Self-absorption:
The Boomers (once called the "Me" Generation) have the reputation
of being more narcissistic than other generations. Because of the times
they grew up in, they have always been fascinated with themselves. The
indulgence they experienced at home in the 1950s and the world’s seemingly
limitless possibilities created a fascination with self and a feeling
of specialness.
Sense of
entitlement: As a generation, the Boomers see themselves as superior
to others. They have always assumed that they could have life their
way and that the rules were meant for others, but not for them. They
feel entitled to rewards and view themselves as winners. They expect
success and cannot accept failure.
Need for
control: The Boomers need to feel certain and to sense that they are
in control of life. They have a difficult time dealing with uncertainty.
Reflection:
Baby Boomers have always valued introspection and take pleasure in asking
questions.
For most
people, life at age 45 or 50 doesn’t match the dreams they had at age
20 or 30. When people reach age 45 or 50 and are even slightly disappointed
by their achievements and experiences, their feelings are likely to
be compounded by these factors of self-absorption, sense of entitlement,
and a need for control. But there is also a positive side to this. The
tendency to reflect and explore can help one look for new possibilities
instead of being stuck with feelings of disappointment.
Keep all
of this in mind as you complete the Midlife Checkup. It is a list of
29 unfinished sentences that will help you assess your life to date.
The items on this list provide a framework for conducting your own assessment.
Please add your own ideas that you think will help you reflect on your
life’s direction.
The Midlife
Checkup
1. My most
important accomplishments are...
2. I am
disappointed about...
3. I would
describe the person I turned out to be as...
4. I want
to change the following things about my self and my life...
5. Things
I want to do before I die...
6. If I
knew I couldn’t fail, I would...
7. Things
I have mastered...
8. Things
I want to keep...
9. I want
to keep these relationships...
10. I want
to let go of these relationships...
11. I want
to keep these possessions...
12. I want
to let go of these possessions...
13. I want
to have these experiences...
14. I want
to clean up these messes...
15. I want
to celebrate...
16. I don’t
ever again want to...
17. My
body is...
18. My
children are...
19. My
parents are...
20. My
spouse is...
21. I want
to remember...
22. I want
to forget...
23. I must
apologize to...
24. I must
seek an apology from...
25. I am
most proud of...
26. I wish
I could forget about...
27. I wish
I could do over...
28. I wish
I had never...
29. I wish
I had...
30. Add
your own items
Garrett
Coan is a professional therapist, coach and psychotherapist. His two
Northern New Jersey office locations are accessible to individuals who
reside in Bergen County, Essex County, Passaic County, Rockland County,
and Manhattan. He offers online and telephone counseling services for
those who live at a distance. He can be accessed through http://www.creativecounselors.com
or 201-303-4303.