
   
What do you see when you look at this image? The young beauty--or the "feared self" of the future?
Afraid of aging? Most of us are, if we judge by the  number of products and ads aimed at helping us avoid the “feared older self” the  marketers keep holding before us. (Last week’s blog Princesses and hags  addressed attitudes toward aging and  how we train ourselves to fear and  dislike it.)
  Researchers Brett Martin from the University of  Bath and Rana Sobh from Qatar University found that when beauty  products, diets, Botox, and plastic surgery didn’t seem to be working, women  were more likely to keep using them.
  That’s right: failure to look younger kept aging anxiety high, and women continued  doing more of the same to try to keep the wrinkled old woman at  bay.
  On the other hand, when the products and interventions  seemed to work, women stopped using them. Their anxiety eased, they no longer  worried so much about the face of the future.
  This research finding in 297 women delivers an odd  message to anti-aging manufacturers and providers: if you want people to  continue using your product, market with fear (the wrinkled hag of Christmas  Future)—and make sure your product doesn’t do the job it promises to do. Because  if it works, they’ll stop being so afraid. And they’ll stop coming back to  you.
  In another study, Martin found a different result with  men and women working out in gyms. As they became happier with their bodies,  their frame of mind improved. Success—and a positive image of what they might  become—were the motivators to keep on going.
  When you’re making your New Year’s resolutions, keep  these studies in mind. You’re much more likely to succeed—and stick  with--changes that improve health, like working out.  Even if the goal is  cosmetic, the healthy body has a sneaky way of creating a healthy, positive  mind.
Have a wonderful New Year! May you walk (run, skip, dance) toward the future in happiness and health.
Please share your New Year's resolutions about aging well in the comments section!
 
 
 
1 comment:
"Aging well" sounds like an oxymoron. I guess it depends on your perspective of life -- your wine glass half-empty or half-full.
Health issues make aging a challenge for me let alone aging well. I would like to believe the Christian way, that salvation is at hand, that there's a better life beyond the physical and emotional suffering experienced on earth.
Therefore, I would have to say that though I don't care for the expectation of carrying out a New Year's resolution, I will make a conscience effort in 2008 to devote more energy to the spiritual sphere of things.
G
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