The Third Chapter (Hardcover)

Author: Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot
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Product Summary
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780374275495
Publisher: Farrar Straus Giroux
Publish Date: 1/6/2009
Buy.com Sku: 208357154
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Buy.com Sales Rank: 68799
Dimensions (in Inches) 9.5H x 6.25L x 0.75T
Pages: 240
 
Renowned sociologist Dr. Lawrence-Lightfoot challenges the still-prevailing and anachronistic images of aging by documenting and revealing the ways in which the years between 50 and 75--the third chapter--may, in fact, be the most transformative and generative time in a person''s life.
 
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As the Baby Boomer generation reaches retirement age, they are increasingly finding that their lives are not just getting longer--they are getting better. Thanks to the relatively recent proliferation of 401K plans, advancing medical technology and, of course, Viagra, people aged 50-75 are living fuller, richer, more adventurous lives than ever before. Sociologist Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot has labeled this portion of life THE THIRD CHAPTER, and her book explores a few of the exciting new possibilities now available to retirees. Her subjects include a lawyer who shifts to divinity school, a businesswoman who renews her passion for international relief work, and an executive who becomes a novelist. These stories, and many more collected here, clearly demonstrate that this is a crucial age range, when increased leisure time and financial stability can create wonderful opportunities for discovery and transformation. Rather than settling into a subdued retirement, people are increasingly able to reinvent themselves during what may ultimately be the most important stage of their lives.

 
 

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Introduction: Facing the Mirror

Perhaps it is my age. I am sixty-two, and for the last several years my conversations with friends, colleagues, and even casual acquaintances have often been punctuated by what I have now come to call "confessional moments." Certainly there is the expected chatter and grumbling about minor and major infirmities or unwelcome signs of deterioration—lower-back pain, varicose veins, bald heads, and gray hair—and there is the usual whining about offspring, now finished with college, maybe even married with young children, who return home to live and still need to be provided with health care and spending money. When I refer to confessional moments, however, I do not mean the habitual grumbling about our inevitable decline as we grow older. (One of my friends refers to these gripe sessions as "organ recitals.") Nor am I referring to the odd and troubling sensation of gazing into the mirror and seeing not yourself, but someone decade

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