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Love Stories of Later Life

A Narrative Approach to Understanding Romance

Love Stories of Later Life by Amanda Smith Barusch is an eye-opening exploration of romantic love in the lives of seniors. Drawing on personal narratives, Barusch highlights the impact of age-related changes on romantic relationships. With practical tools for self-awareness and relationship-building, this book offers a comprehensive guide for gerontologists, social workers, and counselors. Barusch's fresh perspective and in-depth qualitative research make this book a valuable contribution to understanding love in later life.

Amanda Barusch smiling into camera.

“Regardless of the experiences that await you, I hope your romantic imagination will be enriched and emboldened by heightened awareness of late life’s possibilities.”

Amanda Barusch 

Dive into
Love Stories of Later Life

Closeup of elderly couple holding hands

Preface

As we stood sweltering in a neighbor’s garden my sister-in-law whispered, “Did you ever imagine this?” I hadn’t. Not in my wildest dreams did I ever expect to participate in the wedding of two octogenarians, let alone be related to them. Yet my father-in-law was getting married. I had the usual reservations – she’s after his money; he wants a caregiver; and how on earth are we going to blend these two families? But the bride and groom glowed and when the toasts were over they drove off in a well-decorated car for their honeymoon in the Sierra Nevada. I returned home to work on this book.

About the Book

This book invites you to explore the romantic possibilities of later life. It is designed for anyone who is seriously interested in love and its manifestations, including: students, researchers, teachers, counselors, lovers, and would-be lovers. It incorporates the theory and research of a wide range of disciplines, including: anthropology, neurology, physiology, psychology, history and sociology. Each chapter closes with a set of “try this” exercises designed to stimulate and expand your romantic imagination. Some of these may strike you as irrelevant to your experience, but I hope some will click for you, generating new insights into the way romantic love helps shape the person you are becoming.

The book has four parts. Part 1 explores what researchers and philosophers have concluded about love and aging. Part 2 explores the early possibilities for romance in later life, showing how we create and negotiate illusion in romantic beginnings. Part 3 turns to love’s more stable realities, celebrating commitment and recognizing the important role of family, friends, and culture in determining the shape of romance. Part 4 turns to the darker side of love, exploring betrayal and loss.

Silhouette of an ancient tree without leaves

Introduction: Love in Later Life

“Oh, the places you’ll go!”

—with apologies to Dr. Seuss

“Grow old along with me! The best is yet to be, The last of life for which the first was made . . . “ Robert Browning, wrote these words in 1864, when “old” meant something quite different from what it means today. In 19th century England, life expectancy was under 45 years, and some thought the natural life span of mankind was 58 years.ⁱ The idea that many people would live – and love -- into their 7th and 8th decades was unfathomable!

At the time, Browning was “between relationships.” His beloved Elizabeth had died three years before and he had not met Lady Ashburton, whom he would later invite to be his second wife. (She declined.)

Yet throughout the world, millions are reaching advanced ages. Japan enjoys the world’s greatest longevity, with a life expectancy of over 80 years, but the U.S. is not far behind, and in 2000 over 25 million Americans were 70 years or older.⁲ As these elders chart new territory for those who will follow, they are redefining many aspects of the human experience, including romantic love.

The ranks of older adults now include members of the Baby Boom generation as well. Born between 1946 and 1964, this generation has changed major social institutions as we have passed through our life stages. When our swelling numbers hit the educational system teachers were hired, classrooms went up, and curricula were revamped. (Remember the “new math?) As we entered young adulthood sexual norms were redefined. Over the years we adapted to the workplace with a complacency some found surprising. But our sheer numbers meant that competition for jobs and promotions was stiff. We had to buckle down! Now, in our 50s and 60s, we are redefining the latter half of life and expanding the possibilities in many realms, including romance. Of course, it will take the media and professionals a while to catch up.

Curving road to the horizon
  • Popular romance novels and daytime soaps still perpetuate the myth that only the young and unwrinkled can enjoy romance. For many, late life romance is either comic or disgusting. Even the professional literature on love has little to offer regarding life after twenty. Most love research studies the experiences of college students – a convenient population for professors, but hardly one that can illuminate the lifelong implications of romantic attachments.

    While love researchers neglect age, gerontologists neglect romance. In 1973, Robert Kastenbaum chided the American Psychological Association’s Task Force on Aging for neglecting love. He said: “ . . .we do not have a comprehensive gerontology unless we know something about this realm. . . . Loving is not encompassed by the frequency of reported sexual interests and activities. . . All the ‘dirty old men’ jokes in the world do not dilute the poignancy of love and sex in later life. . .”⁳ In the 30 years since, professional priorities in the field have remained skewed towards the “gero-erotic” with literally thousands of articles published on sex and barely a handful on romance.⁴ Like these scholars, most Americans acknowledge that sex is a possibility for older adults, but few can imagine that life’s second half might offer the intoxication of infatuation or the agony of unrequited love.

    Some people feel that romance after 80 is simply impossible. My father-in-law felt that way when his wife of 63 years passed away in 2002. He was 83 years old, and his grief intensified with the expectation that he would spend his remaining years alone – an expectation that he would prove false on August 7, 2005. On that hot day in a garden in California, two three-generation families gathered to witness his marriage to the longtime friend who is now his soul mate and companion. Variations of this scene play out daily across the United States, as older adults discover the possibilities of late life romance.This work is grounded in the phenomenological research tradition that seeks to describe, interpret and understand complex human experiences. Our goal was to achieve “critical subjectivity,” described by Yvonna Lincoln, an expert on qualitative methods, as: “an altered state of consciousness or ‘high-quality awareness’ for the purpose of understanding with great discrimination subtle differences in the personal and psychological states of others.”⁵

    This understanding is constructed through a complex reciprocal interaction involving respondents, researchers, and ultimately the readers of this work. It includes three components: the “lived experience” of respondents; the survey as an “expression” of that experience; and the “interpretation” of the experience. In his insightful discussion of interpretive methods Mark Tappan explained that: “interpretation must take as its starting point the historical and psychological reality of the lived experience of both the subject whose expression of experience is being interpreted and the interpreter herself.”⁶ We therefore construct meaning in a dynamic process that integrates the perspectives of all participants.

    Like all of us, I am influenced by my daily experiences. In this book I have disclosed those that seem relevant to my interpretation of the data and the literature. This should help the reader understand where I am coming from and to evaluate the “truthfulness” of the material presented. Coming to the material with a unique life history, each person who reads this book will take away a different message. Nonetheless, a central insight has emerged from the array of romantic experiences reviewed here: love changes people.

    Love as a Force for Change

    Romantic experiences define character in ways that are so subtle that they might go undetected and so varied that they defy generalization. Love opens the door to our potential and helps shape the people we become. The work reported here describes four ways that love shapes our lives and ourselves.

    First, the intense unsettling experiences that come with romantic love create opportunities for personal insight. Coupled with self-reflection, intense romantic experiences can teach us about ourselves – our needs and vulnerabilities and our demons. As we will see in this book, these lessons can change a person’s approach to life and to love.

    Second, love is a training ground for relationship skills. We inevitably learn from interactions with our partners. For some these lessons are adaptive, teaching the value of compromise and the importance of reciprocity. We learn how to communicate our love. Particularly in late life, we confront the boundaries of our personal control and we learn about letting go. Less useful lessons arise when romantic interactions are marked by abuse, neglect or manipulation.

    Third, love stretches us beyond our comfort zones, revealing capabilities we didn’t know we had. We see this in the uncharacteristic acts committed when we are deeply infatuated. Desperately in love, we discover personal capacities we never knew were there. Love can also stretch us by exposing us to different ways of being as when we meet a person unlike anyone else we have ever loved and, in loving them, are transformed.

    Finally, love changes the very course of our lives. Our choice of romantic partners can determine what jobs we take, where we will live, whether or not we have children. In midlife, people who have not experienced love as they long imagine it may set out on a quest – some might call it a “midlife crisis” -- to satisfy this burning need.

    As a gerontologist I have long felt the most interesting part of human development takes place in late life. Some changes are so gentle and slow that we don’t notice them for decades. And most young people have too much on their plates to spend time in contemplation. Besides that their reminiscences are awfully short! Late life provides the opportunity and the perspective to observe changes that romantic love has made in our lives and our persons. Then one day we turn around and realize that even in life’s final decades some of us are still changing!

    Romantic Possibilities

    Much of our interest in other people’s lives stems from the hope of learning something that will expand our own possibilities. Psychologists Hazel Markus and Paula Nurius introduced the idea of “possible selves,” defined as the people we believe we could become.⁷ One way that we learn about our possible selves is by observing the people around us, particularly those who are like us in some way. As Markus and Nurius observed, “What others are now, I could become.”⁸ Thus we observe others closely to vicariously monitor our own possibilities.

    Based on the loving experiences of hundreds of older adults, this book is offers an opportunity to expand your sense of late life’s romantic possibilities. It affords a glimpse at adventurous possibilities and those that are more predictable. Here are a few:

    Infatuation. It happens. Not just to the young, but to 50, 60, 70, even 80 year olds. It’s just one of the possibilities of late life romance. You may find yourself, like 88-year old Ted, reflecting on a lifetime of inappropriate infatuations; or, like Barbara, you may be dancing in the street trilling “I’m in love!” at the age of 79.

    Pursuit. Looking for love can force you to look at yourself in new and sometimes uncomfortable ways. Like 62-year old Candy, late life may be a time for you to seek the relationship in which you will finally get it right. Or, like 68 year old Alice, you might find yourself cruising the Internet for a companion. Love might sneak up when you aren’t looking, like it did for Sandrine in her late 50s.

    Ecstasy. Long-term romance can be ecstatic. Like 87-year old Marty, you may be able to say, “My whole life is a love story!”

    Complications. Late life romances involve more than two people. You might find, like Barbara did at 83, that even after the romance is over you remain close to his children. On the other hand, when you fall in love in your 80s you might discover, as Ginny and Al did, that his children are a serious impediment.

    Loss. Grief happens, and life goes on (usually). You may lose the love of your life, like Susan did and find that you are not looking for or even interested in love. This doesn’t mean you won’t find it, but it does mean the late life experiences of divorced, single, and widowed adults can be rich and fulfilling even without romantic partners.

    Awareness of these possibilities might change the way you think about love and about your own aging. Far from being a romantic wasteland, late life provides unique opportunities to experience love fully and intensely. Of course, these are just possibilities, they are not guarantees. Without paying attention, we may walk right past them on our way to something else.

    More than anything, this book is an invitation to explore the romantic possibilities of later life so you will know them when you see them. It might also help you interpret your own romantic history and decipher the role love has played in making you the person you are today.

    Try this:

    The road not taken – By the time we are 50, most of us have at least one romantic road not taken. It might be a relationship nipped in the bud, an infatuation stifled, or a rejection from a long-time lover. Starting with the premise that romantic experiences shape you – your habits, personality, even your physical self – imagine for a moment what you would be like had one of those romantic roads actually been taken. Would you be sweeter? Happier? Bitter? Would you eat differently? Would you live someplace else? What might your children be like? In this exercise you can use your imagination to enrich your life experience.

    NOTES FROM INTRODUCTION

    ⁱ Haley, Bruce (1978). The Healthy Body and Victorian Culture. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; Himes, C.L. (2001). Elderly Americans. Population Bulletin, Vol. 56/4, Washington DC: Population Reference Bureau (from Hudson 2005).

    ⁲ U.S. Bureau of Census (2000). Census 2000 PHC-T-9. Population by Age, Sex, Race and Hispanic of Latino Origin for the United States: 2000. Table 1. (http://www.census.gov/population/cen2000/phc-t9/tab01.pdf).

    ⁳ Kastenbaum, R.J. (1973). Loving, Dying, and Other Gerontologic Addenda. In C. Eisdorfer & M.P. Lawton (Eds). The Psychology of Adult Development and Aging. Washington DC: American Psychological Association. pp. 699-705.

    ⁴ Please see Appendix A for relevant tables.

    ⁵ Lincoln, Y.S. (2002). Emerging criteria for quality in qualitative and interpretive research. In Denzin,N.K. & Lincoln, Y.S. (Eds). The Qualitative Inquiry Reader. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Press. 327-347. p. 337.

    ⁶ Tappan, M. (2001). Interpretive psychology: Stories, circles, and understanding lived experience. In Tolman, D.L. & Brydon-Miller, M. (eds). From Subjects to Subjectivities: A handbook of interpretive and participatory methods. New York: New York University Press. P. 45-56, page 49.

    ⁷ Markus, H. & Nurius, P. (1986). Possible Selves. American Psychologist 41(9), 954-969.

    ⁸ Ibid, p. 954.

Praise for
Love Stories of Later Life

The 224 pages of Barusch's narrative provide a deep understanding of romance and love that younger generations can learn from and that older generations can reflect on and relate to in their lives. . . The stories and commentary from study participants that are woven into the text give this book a unique flare.

—Karon L. Phillips
Trust for America's Health, writing in Journal of Women & Aging

The book is delightful, hopeful and inspiring . . .I encourage both academic and public libraries to adopt this fine work.

—Stephen M. Marson
University of North Carolina, writing in Age and Aging

Rediscover Romance

Even with baby boomers retiring and greater media and research attention being lavished on older people, most gerontologists have studiously avoided examining romance among the elderly. Love Stories of Later Life is an appealing and eye-opening remedy to this neglect, as leading gerontologist Amanda Smith Barusch presents original research into what love and romance mean in seniors' lives. The result is a glimpse into a world many people didn't know existed - that of romantic love in later life.

Unlike superficial guidebooks that purport to help seniors find a new mate, Love Stories of Later Life integrates theory and the latest research on love and the aging process. Drawing on a wealth of personal narratives collected during a landmark five-year study, the book presents the lived experiences of older adults from all walks of life. It addresses the impact of common age-related changes, both emotional and physical, on romantic relationships and argues that love continues to sculpt our personalities and our lives, even in life's later decades. Each chapter includes practical tools for the serious student of love, including exercises designed to increase self-awareness and relationship-building as well as annotated lists of suggested reading that are at once comprehensive and accessible.

Barusch's fresh perspective, engaging voice, and in-depth qualitative research make Love Stories of Later Life an important contribution to the study of individual lives and the aging process. This book will guide gerontologists, social workers, and counselors as they in turn help their older clients navigate love's challenges.

Genre: Love & Romance, Gerontology, Marriage & Adult Relationships

Pages: 240

Far from being a romantic wasteland, late-life provides unique opportunities to experience love fully and intensely.
— Amanda Barusch