ENGAGE - ENERGIZE - EMPOWER

Friday, March 20, 2015

Late Adulthood, Abraham Maslow & a sense of purpose

Late Adulthood – a nice, solid phrase.  Describes people 65+ without the tagline of senior, older or elderly, each of which has its peculiar baggage. 

Late Adulthood is the culmination of all previous ages, from Infant & Toddler to Young & Middle Adulthood, with all the comes in between.  
 
Yet, what should be the apex, the highest point, is too often experienced as the opposite, only worst.  A baby can’t do anything for itself, a toddler has limited independence, a preschooler & even adolescent still needs support & caring from others.  But they look forward to gaining full personal freedom.  
 
Folks at Late Adulthood – even at the tag end of Middle Adulthood – see increasing dependency stretching in front of them, out to a final edge of their horizon.  
 
Even the most vibrant, active among the “young-old” have an always dangling sword over their head – one fall, one hospitalization & their freedom could be limited, reduced, even disappear.  If Young Adulthood is hallmarked by achieving & Middle Adulthood by accumulating, Late Adulthood is generally characterized by…  what?  Fear of what might come?  Fear of what is already here?  Fear of worse to come?  Too often, all three seem the case.
 
Which leads me to Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.   
 
If I learned about the pyramid in Psych 101, had forgotten about it until teaching Health to at-risk high school kids (you called their parole officers, not their parents).  It was an eye opener – not the chart, the students.
 
Image result for maslow hierarchy of needs
It is one thing to teach the Hierarchy of Needs to a class of students in the somewhat preppy high school I attended, filled with students who range from families that are just getting by to the mega wealthy.  There might have been a range of problems they faced in their lives, with their family, but they all had a roof over their heads, food on the table & most at least appeared to be in stable families with more or less healthy relationships.
 
Image result for prep school students
 
That wasn’t true for my at-risk students.  I had a fifteen year old student with a three year old child, several who’d been thrown out by parents, all of whom had lost at least one friend or relative to a stabbing or shooting.  I’ve sat in my classroom while a fight was being calmed out in the hallway & a knot of girls hunkered down in a corner, contraband cell phones miraculously appearing from who knows where on their bodies, calling friends to lay an ambush to jump whoever dared mess with one of their cohort.  The school was a fifteen minute drive from the my old school & worlds apart. 
 
Image result for girls fighting
 
How many of my students had the basic, primary level of their needs – healthy food, clean water, shelter, warmth – met?  How many were even aware that the second level – security, stability, freedom from fear – were even possible?  Belong, Self-Esteem, Self-Actualization - - those are non-starters if Physiological & Safety needs aren’t met.
 
 Image result for feeling safe
 
Got to thinking about that this morning, triggered by a passage in Virus of the Mind.   Richard Brodie notes, “Psychologists & psychiatrists such as Abraham Maslow & Viktor Frankl have noticed that when people are willing or forced to stopped worrying about their own survival and immediate crises, they have another set of drive, referred to alternatively as ‘higher purpose,’calling,’ or ‘self-actualization.’”  
 
 I first read Virus of the Mind back in 2009, over ten years after it was published.  I’ve looked over it at least twice since that first read.  Yet, it never hit me to ponder how Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs matches up against needs of folks in Late Adulthood.  Not surprising - six years ago, all my Late Adulthood family, friends & pleasant acquaintances seemed to have their Physiological & Safety needs fairly well met.  
 
Image result for elderly people
In 2015, am aware that having our first level met - healthy food, clean water, shelter, physical comfort – is no guarantee our second is, or even can be.  Which poses a problem with helping Late Adulthood friends recognize, value & pursue their late-in-life purpose. 
 
When they have the presence of mind to see beyond the day-to-day hassles of life, people hunger deeply to fulfill whatever is their own personal life purpose.   Page 217   
 
How many of my Late Adulthood friends – especially one in the upper ranges or ones who’ve experienced a fall or serious hospitalization – are ever fully free to see beyond day-to-day worries?  What can be done to help people in Late Adulthood – or anyone whose situation leaves them in chronic worry about their safety & security – get past this barrier to reach up to the next levels – Belonging, Self-Esteem, Self-Actualization?   
 
Well worth – and going to get – a long ponder.



Image result for purpose

No comments:

Post a Comment