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Journal Article

Citation

Panek PE, Hayslip B, Pruett JH. Educ. Gerontol. 2014; 40(3): 157-171.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/03601277.2013.802183

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

In order to evaluate the gender differences on the experience of aging, 142 individuals 50 years of age and older completed an interview regarding experiences with another individual conveying the message that they were "old." Interviewees were asked about the type of situation, the age and gender of the response person, and the perceived intent and feelings associated with the experience.

RESULTS showed that 72.3% of the experiences could be classified into one of three categories: discount/benefit, physical features/appearance, and performance. While no gender differences were found in the location/setting of the incident, the response person, or the age of the response person, findings indicated that for men, the incident was classified as a "benefit/discount," while for women it was classified as "physical features/appearance." In addition, the presumed intent of the situation was viewed as negative and hurtful by women, and both genders reported that the incident made them feel self-conscious and/or elicited a negative self-assessment. These results illustrate that the self-reported experiences that make one feel old and potentially change an individual's identity are important to understand in the context of growing older as a gendered experience.

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