Since when is 70 old?

Others who have refused to slip quietly into old age include Sophia Loren

Others who have refused to slip quietly into old age include Sophia Loren

Published Jul 28, 2011

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New York - Their fathers and mothers wound down gently into a quiet retirement.

But today’s over-50s have no intention of following suit.

Baby boomers believe that middle age lasts until they are 70, a study has found.

When questioned by researchers, the post-war generation said on average they only felt “old” after entering their eighth decade.

Even then a quarter don’t think they are past it until they are in their 80s, the study showed.

The findings suggest that in advanced years baby boomers retain their determination to cling to their youth. After drawing their pensions they are refusing to quietly see out their days as generations before them have.

Baby boomers, or those born between 1945 and 1963, have been called the luckiest generation ever after they enjoyed soaring house values, guaranteed pensions and lives of prosperity.

Their “me generation” values spearheaded the social changes of the Sixties and Seventies that left Britain changed forever. More recently however they have also been blamed for a self-indulgence that has left the country financially, socially and even morally crippled.

The US study found three quarters of all baby boomers considered themselves to be middle-aged or younger, even if they were in their 60s. The average age at which they said they were old was 70.

In general, baby boomers found once they reached their sixties it was nowhere near as bad as they thought. With improvements in healthcare they are able to spend more time with their grandchildren, travel and do the things they have been putting off for years because of work commitments.

The attitude of Marcelle D’Argy Smith, a baby boomer at 64, echoed the findings. She said: “I wouldn’t describe myself as old, I know I’m older and obviously not young.” The former editor of Cosmopolitan added: “When you hit your 50s a new sense of freedom starts to creep in.”

The biggest worries facing baby boomers were that illness would take away their independence - about 45 percent - or that they would lose their memory, an anxiety for 44 percent. Losing financial self-sufficiency was a concern for 41 percent, the study by LifeGoesStrong.com, an online network for “mid-lifers”, found.

Others who have refused to slip quietly into old age include Sophia Loren, who posed for the cover of the Pirelli calendar at the age of 71, saying: “If you are born with it, you will have it even when you are 100 years old.”

Also defying the ravages of time are Dame Helen Mirren, 65, Catherine Deneuve, 67, Alan Sugar, 64, Robert Winston, 70, and Ringo Starr, 71. - Daily Mail

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