It is argued that most Americans have a longer lifespan than any other generation worldwide Herbes-Sommers, Riseborough, Glover, Cram, Daring, In Rutenbeck, In Thomson, (2017). This longer life span has its implications for the experts and the entire society. The general population, as well as the policymakers, are trying to come up with ways of how we can reframe our ideas on aging. Coming of age in aging America films try to evaluate what it means for societies, policies, and programs and also estimates how we work and live. The documentary emphasizes change. It suggests that Americans ought to adopt a new demographic transformation where more than half of the world’s population will get too the age of fifty. The documentary explores the recent social security systems. The film shows a city that is redefining itself for generational use and looks at a medical system that will improve its working environment that will accommodate the older workers and welcome the new younger workers Herbes-Sommers, https://youtu.be/ZOA1v4-2Fos (2017)
Christine Herbes Sommers, a lead producer of the documentary, says that it has been proven that people can now live for more than eighty years. The retirement age is sixty-two, and so she tries to explain what in the documentary one can efficiently live for the next twenty or twenty-five years after retirement and what their productivity can be increased. She says that it is essential that people learn how to recreate the social institutions that will incorporate thinking and change the notion that people get to seventy and die. Instead, they will adapt to the fact that people live longer. The documentary shows that people have all the information they need. People know that there is a strain on social security. All we need to do is use the available structural and demographic information that will assist us to establish a blueprint and come up with the groundwork that will generate a productive aging society.
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The documentary also explains how to get to that point considering the growing society. Jacoby (2011) states that, we won’t be calling the next generation an aging society instead it will be referred to as the new normal. It will be as we expect. Instead of people dying in their houses due to lack of federal policy to provide meals and their isolation, we should come up with the short, mid and long-term possibilities and try and curb this menace. We need to come up with solutions not trying to save the system but instead, try to modify that system so that it accommodates the changing demographics.
Coming of Age in Aging America proposes that as we modify the structures to accommodate the productive aging community, we also need to improve on the conception of the basic life course. For instance, the middle age folks could take some time off to take care of their families, regenerate through education and also take some rest. After the regeneration period, work would efficiently continue in our seventies although not as the younger ones it would be productive Jacoby, (2011). Innovations in the Social Security System are not only provided for solvency but also to create incentives to work for a more extended period. We can also try and transform our suburbs that are built for younger American but where today, most of the older Americans still live. It is necessary that we figure out how we can rezone areas to bring a corner store nearer. One of the urban advisors called this rezoning a toilet paper rule. It merely means or tries to analyze how far one needs to go to get a primary commodity like a toilet paper. Also, how suburbs can provide the necessary social connectedness.
References
Herbes-Sommers, C., Riseborough, W., Glover, T., Cram, B., Daring, M., In Rutenbeck, J., In Thomson, K., Northern Light Productions. (2017 ). Coming of age in aging America .
https://youtu.be/ZOA1v4-2Fos
Jacoby, S. (2011). Never say die: The myth and marketing of the new old age. New York: Pantheon Books.