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How to Live Forever

The Enduring Power of Connecting the Generations

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Using this helpful book, learn how the secret to happiness and longevity can be found through mentoring the next generation.
In How to Live Forever, Encore.org founder and CEO Marc Freedman tells the story of his thirty-year quest to answer some of contemporary life's most urgent questions: With so many living so much longer, what is the meaning of the increasing years beyond 50? How can a society with more older people than younger ones thrive? How do we find happiness when we know life is long and time is short?
In a poignant book that defies categorization, Freedman finds insights by exploring purpose and generativity, digging into the drive for longevity and the perils of age segregation, and talking to social innovators across the globe bringing the generations together for mutual benefit. He finds wisdom in stories from young and old, featuring ordinary people and icons like jazz great Clark Terry and basketball legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
But the answers also come from stories of Freedman's own mentors—a sawmill worker turned surrogate grandparent, a university administrator who served as Einstein's driver, a cabinet secretary who won the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and the gym teacher who was Freedman's father.
How to Live Forever is a deeply personal call to find fulfillment and happiness in our longer lives by connecting with the next generation and forging a legacy of love that lives beyond us.
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    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2018
      A veteran advocate for mixing rather than segregating the generations returns with a volume whose title is hyperbolic but whose subtitle tells the story.Social entrepreneur Freedman (The Big Shift: Navigating the New Stage Beyond Midlife, 2011, etc.) writes that he's "never much trusted self-help books or advice," but he's written one of the former and dispenses plenty of the latter. Regardless, the author's principal point is important: The warehousing of our elderly, the establishment of elder-only communities all over the Southwest and elsewhere--these are turning out to be grievous wounds that we are inflicting upon ourselves. Their existence and proliferation deny the young easy access to the experience and wisdom of their elders, and they also deny (or make difficult) opportunities for older Americans to employ the skills--social, intellectual, emotional--that so many of them possess, skills that could have great social benefit. One of the strengths of the book is Freedman's use of specifics: He tells stories about people who are doing what he advocates, communities that are working to mix the old and the young, and programs that he thinks are hopeful, including his own Generation to Generation, part of his organization encore.org. He also celebrates some individuals who have had an enduring effect on his own thinking and life, most notably the late John W. Gardner, the author of such classics as Excellence: Can We Be Equal and Excellent Too? (1961), a man whom Freedman revered and who, the author tells us, once said that Freedman was like the son he never had. The author's tone is enthusiastic and hopeful throughout, but the diction is occasionally clichéd ("the road hasn't been entirely smooth"). Nonetheless, his enthusiasm is infectious and affecting, and his agenda bristles with sincerity and significance.A book that grabs us by the shoulders, turns us toward an important issue, and grips us until we truly see and understand.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      October 1, 2018
      A veteran advocate for mixing rather than segregating the generations returns with a volume whose title is hyperbolic but whose subtitle tells the story.Social entrepreneur Freedman (The Big Shift: Navigating the New Stage Beyond Midlife, 2011, etc.) writes that he's "never much trusted self-help books or advice," but he's written one of the former and dispenses plenty of the latter. Regardless, the author's principal point is important: The warehousing of our elderly, the establishment of elder-only communities all over the Southwest and elsewhere--these are turning out to be grievous wounds that we are inflicting upon ourselves. Their existence and proliferation deny the young easy access to the experience and wisdom of their elders, and they also deny (or make difficult) opportunities for older Americans to employ the skills--social, intellectual, emotional--that so many of them possess, skills that could have great social benefit. One of the strengths of the book is Freedman's use of specifics: He tells stories about people who are doing what he advocates, communities that are working to mix the old and the young, and programs that he thinks are hopeful, including his own Generation to Generation, part of his organization encore.org. He also celebrates some individuals who have had an enduring effect on his own thinking and life, most notably the late John W. Gardner, the author of such classics as Excellence: Can We Be Equal and Excellent Too? (1961), a man whom Freedman revered and who, the author tells us, once said that Freedman was like the son he never had. The author's tone is enthusiastic and hopeful throughout, but the diction is occasionally clich�d ("the road hasn't been entirely smooth"). Nonetheless, his enthusiasm is infectious and affecting, and his agenda bristles with sincerity and significance.A book that grabs us by the shoulders, turns us toward an important issue, and grips us until we truly see and understand.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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