Love and companionship has no age limit
- Share via
AVIVA GOELMAN
In April, romance filled the air at the Costa Mesa Senior Center. As
the Senior Center’s director, it has been rewarding to see people
meet and form lasting relationships. In fact, one pair of love birds
will be marrying in September. A few other couples have become
live-in companions. Still others are quite content to simply date or
be good friends.
Numerous studies by medical scientists and demographers confirm
that we are all living many more years than previous generations. In
fact, those on the cusp of their golden years -- and our younger
generations -- can look forward to enjoying more years of healthy and
vigorous life than ever before.
Yet, in the latter years of their lives, seniors often find
themselves alone. And loneliness can be terribly debilitating. It
foments periods of anger, sadness, pain and grief. Often the question
is asked: “Why me?” Indeed, facing life alone after many years of
marriage or friendship is very difficult. It is all the more
difficult for today’s seniors, who grew up during an era when life
was a sheltered experience. They are not used to the independent
single lifestyle that many of today’s younger generation practice.
Many seniors find a way to struggle through their loneliness.
Companionship is a glimpse of light for them. And as new friendships
form, lonely seniors emerge from their solitude and seclusion with a
new sense of empowerment, the rediscovery of trust and a resolution
to replace feelings of self-doubt and hopelessness.
Through interviews I have conducted with several seniors at the
Senior Center, I have found that seniors have a realistic and upbeat
insight into companionship and enjoying life. We can better our own
lives by listening to what they have to say. Whether the subject was
of dating, long-term relationships or beginning new friendships, most
of the seniors I’ve spoken with talked of their lives with warmth and
candor.
One such couple met at the Senior Center during lunch. One in this
pair has been single for many years; the other is a recent widower.
They wanted to get to know each other better. One had many female
friends at the Senior Center and was happy with her daily routine.
The other was looking to learn how to laugh again. Both skeptical, as
they were set in their ways, they shared with me why their newfound
relationship works.
Important keys, they said, are keeping up with prior friendships
and learning to compromise and to respect each other. These
principles are true with female friends, male friends and lovers.
They know and accept, too, that there are things about their pasts
they can’t change or make go away. But they can stop them from
controlling their happiness. They have learned to better understand
their strengths and weaknesses and begun to once again enjoy life and
move on to the future rather than live in the past.
By leaving their “baggage” at home, they increase their
opportunity to learn what it is about this new person in their life.
Their interest isn’t in discovering what they don’t like about the
person, so they can launch into a mission to change them. They know
by their wisdom that we like and love those in our lives for who they
are, warts and all. And they accept them.
These seniors also know they need to live each day to its fullest.
Their experiences have taught them that lasting relationships are
constructed slowly, are courted one day at a time. This builds
understanding, then friendship. And friendship leads to a deeper
relationship. They value courtship and all its trimmings -- quiet
dinners, moonlight and music, and small gifts. These, they say, are
the simple but deeply meaningful gestures that build a future
together.
It’s very important to many seniors to learn the practice of best
behavior in the development of new relationships. The simple act of
holding a hand, giving compliments, listening, showing affection and
dusting off words like “please” and “thank you” are pillars of
friendship building.
As we look to celebrate the wonderful years of our seniors’ lives,
we discover that there are very few ceremonies marking the
significance of longevity. At the Senior Center, we strive to mark
milestones in a memorable way. For instance, the Senior Center will
be hosting a party to celebrate our seniors who have reached the
wonderful age of 80. I invite all of you who have reached this
magical age to share your stories, memories and blessings with all of
us on Friday, June 18, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. For more information,
please call (949) 645-2356.
If you are a senior looking for the companionship of your peers,
come to the Senior Center and take classes that are of interest to
you. Whether you participate in arts and crafts, computer classes,
dance classes, health and fitness, fun and games, painting, personal
enrichment support groups or just enjoy lunch, you are certain to
find new friends -- and perhaps romance.
I am blessed to have the unique opportunity to work with so many
special seniors from whom I learn new things every day. Our elderly
don’t have to be youngsters in old bodies, wondering what happened.
They can be seniors with a youngster’s zest for life, friendship and
discovery.
* AVIVA GOELMAN is the executive director of the Costa Mesa Senior
Center and will write occasional columns about the center, its
members and senior issues.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.