logo
No, age isn't just a number – and the sooner we realise that, the happier we will be

No, age isn't just a number – and the sooner we realise that, the happier we will be

The Guardian21 hours ago
Sitting in a cafe recently, I saw a poster advertising a barista training course for young people interested in a career in hot beverages. Things in the NHS being what they are, I enjoyed losing myself in a fantasy future spent standing behind a sleek, shiny machine, having witty exchanges with customers and colleagues as I skilfully poured smooth, foaming milk into silky dark espresso, tipping and turning each cup to create my own unique artworks on the coffee surface.
That was until I read the small print, which included the rather brutal definition of 'young people' as aged 18 to 24. I realised, with an internal gasp, that my limited ability to pour liquid without spilling it was not the only obstacle to this career choice. There was a core personal reality here from which I had become totally untethered: the passing of time.
This untethering is bad news for anyone interested in building a better life. A lot of nonsense is spoken and sung and written on plates and pencil cases about how we should all stay young and never grow old. But I've discovered as a therapist and as a patient in psychoanalysis that the capacity to anchor yourself in the reality of time passing is fundamental to good mental health, and to the potential for life to get better.
Whether it's infancy, toddlerhood, childhood, adolescence, young adulthood, midlife, early old age or your final chapter, every new life stage brings the opportunity to mourn the loss of what has gone before, to grow through and around it, and develop into the person you are right now. It is a chance to work through something and change. So buying into the 'age is just a number' philosophy – consciously or unconsciously – robs us of the valuable experience of feeling rooted in our personal timeline. Of feeling rooted in something true.
Middle age has a reputation for being staid and frumpy. But when I got stuck into the interviews about this life stage for my book about growing up throughout adulthood, I saw that it can be a particularly fertile period for people who can face the reality that there will soon be more time behind them than there is ahead. Recognising this obvious but shocking fact meant this chapter of their lives was not lacklustre, but more full of life than the ones that went before, fuelled by a different kind of energy. This moment was a chance to make important changes and focus on what they really wanted from their second half.
As I now enter my midlife, I am clearly struggling to truly believe that my 'young person' chapter is ending. I think it's because I don't want to accept the losses.
We expect the feelings of loss that follow a death. As devastating as this grief can be, it can sometimes feel more understandable than the losses that come with life, development and growth. My young daughter has helped me to see this very clearly, forcing me to face ordinary losses that leave me totally gutted. Her 'gooster', which a week later became her scooter will never again be a 'gooster'. I was not prepared for this loss of a word that seemed so entirely her, which has now been so carelessly dropped by her – but longingly clung to by me.
This is my most painful work of motherhood so far. Aside from the sleep deprivation. And the mastitis. OK, maybe not the most painful, but it's up there. How to let these parts of her go, while understanding they are still inside her somewhere; how to let her become her own person, rather than getting so caught up in my own feelings about who she has been to me. How to hold and love her tightly and loosely at the same time, giving her the space to grow into the child, then adolescent, then adult she will be. Some mornings, I collect her from her cot and am momentarily stunned: who is this child who looks so much older than the toddler I sang to sleep last night? Where is my baby?
It's that moment of shock – like the internal gasp when I read the small print of the poster in the cafe – that jolts me out of my comfortable bubble, reintroducing me to the devastating reality of the passing of time and the losses it brings. The good news is that when the bubble pops, growth becomes possible. If we can allow ourselves to move in and out and back again through the different life stages – as my daughter moves through toddlerhood, and as I move into midlife – we can grow around our younger selves, not away from ourselves.
It's like Gianna Williams told me, speaking of her work as a child, adolescent and adult psychoanalyst: 'We're always finding the infant, the young child, the adolescent in the patient. Like the circles in a tree, they're all there.' That's what it means to me to grow up, rather than just growing older. And if we can keep doing that, then we have a chance at building a better life until our very end.
Moya Sarner is an NHS psychotherapist and the author of When I Grow Up – Conversations With Adults in Search of Adulthood
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New school guidance aims to help boys ‘find positive role models' amid misogyny spike
New school guidance aims to help boys ‘find positive role models' amid misogyny spike

The Independent

time20 minutes ago

  • The Independent

New school guidance aims to help boys ‘find positive role models' amid misogyny spike

New school guidance has been published to teach children how to combat misogyny and resist 'incel' culture, aiming to counter the spread of 'manosphere' content. The updated Relationships, Sex and Health Education (RSHE) framework will help boys find positive role models and address topics such as AI, deepfakes, and the link between pornography and misogyny. The Department for Education warned of the "epidemic scale" of misogynistic attitudes among young people, with 54 per cent having witnessed misogynist comments. Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson stressed the importance of equipping children to defy online manipulation and fostering healthy attitudes from a young age. The guidance, which also includes mental health support and suicide prevention, can be implemented by schools from September this year and must be followed from September 2026.

Drug linked to cancer given to mothers years after supposed ban, ITV News finds
Drug linked to cancer given to mothers years after supposed ban, ITV News finds

STV News

time31 minutes ago

  • STV News

Drug linked to cancer given to mothers years after supposed ban, ITV News finds

Up to 300,000 women are thought to have been prescribed Stilbestrol over four decades, as ITV News Social Affairs Correspondent Sarah Corker reports ITV News has discovered new evidence that a dangerous drug linked to cancer was given to mothers nearly a decade after it was supposed to have been banned. Now, in a major development, the Health Secretary Wes Streeting confirmed the government is considering enhanced cancer screening for those impacted by the use of Stilbestrol, also known as DES, and has vowed to 'look seriously at these allegations.' What is DES? Stilbestrol, also known as DES, was prescribed on the NHS to prevent miscarriage and to stop breast milk production from 1939 until the late 1970s. Marketed as a 'wonder drug' – a synthetic form of female hormone oestrogen – it has become one of the biggest drug disasters in the NHS's history. ITV News can reveal that doctors, regulators, and successive governments failed to act and protect women from the dangers. Other countries around the world, such as the United States, banned the drug in the 1970s as scientific studies linked the use of DES with breast, cervical, and vaginal cancers. In the UK, health authorities failed to do the same. The UK government claimed that in 1973, a letter was sent to all doctors telling them to stop using DES for pre-menopausal women, but ITV News has found dozens of women who say they were given it after that date, some as late as 1980. Susan Miller, 73, from London, believes she was given the drug in 1975 after the birth of her daughter to stop her breast milk – that is two years after the government said GPs were told to stop prescribing the drug. She recalls questioning the doctor about the drug's side effects whilst on the maternity ward, but told ITV News those concerns were dismissed. 'I was lied to. It's absolutely disgusting. I should have never been given the drug. It's ruined so many people's lives.' It's estimated that up to 300,000 women were prescribed Stilbestrol over four decades. Mrs Miller is among more than 200 people who have contacted ITV News after seeing our ongoing DES investigation. 'It's not just me, it's other women as well. They are walking around with time bombs in their breasts, because they don't even know, so they can't even get checked,' she said. The mother of one believes the effect on her health has been devastating. She's survived blood cancer but now has an aggressive form of breast cancer and is undergoing treatment. Stilbestrol was prescribed on the NHS to prevent miscarriage and to stop breast milk production from 1939 until the late 1970s. / Credit: Research suggests that DES mothers may have a 30% higher risk of breast cancer. If the drug was taken while pregnant, the harm can be passed down through the generations. Daughters exposed in the womb are at increased risk of clear cell cancer of the cervix and vagina and reproductive abnormalities. Despite the known increased risks, successive governments have failed to introduce enhanced screening, which women say would be 'lifesaving.' ITV News has also spoken to former midwives who recall administering DES on maternity wards as late as 1979, and doctors who later treated women with aggressive forms of cancer which have since been linked to DES exposure. 'Massive regulatory failure' In 1971, US scientists proved DES was unsafe for use on pre-menopausal women. The medicines watchdog, the MHRA, repeatedly told ITV News that in May 1973, 'the Committee on Safety of Medicines wrote to all doctors to advise against the use of DES in pregnancy and women who have not yet gone through menopause.' No evidence of that letter can be found. A series of Freedom of Information requests and internal reviews from ITV News to the MHRA were rejected. Our team has searched through hundreds of pages of public health records at the British Library and National Archives, and there is no evidence of that 1973 letter. In fact, there is no evidence to show that DES was withdrawn or restricted, despite mounting evidence of the drug's sinister side effects. Dr Sonia Macleod, from Oxford University and an expert on pharmaceutical safety, said, 'There are clear indications that more could and should have been done by the regulators at the time, and if you look at it in this way, that becomes a regulatory failure.' Dr Macleod believes the government bears ultimate responsibility for the impact on women. 'I think women have been hugely failed in the UK, and particularly because this was a drug that was developed through government funding,' she said. 'There must be accountability and responsibility. Compensation should come from the government. The impacts are horrendous and have been ignored and unseen. It is so wrong,' she said. Dr Sonia Macleod, from Oxford University and an expert on pharmaceutical safety. On the south coast in Bognor Regis, Mary Jarman believes she was given DES in 1977, years after warnings about the drug. Then aged 19, she was prescribed the pills by her GP to stop her breast milk after giving birth prematurely. Ms Jarman later suffered a severe reaction, resulting in emergency breast surgery. 'It was a drug that nobody should have had, and they realised what it was doing, they should have stopped it. But I think because I had an old family doctor, they just kept handing it out,' she said. Decades later, in her 40s, she developed cervical cancer and had a full hysterectomy. 'If that has caused all the trouble, now I can understand I wasn't just unlucky to have all those women's problems, it was all connected.' Mary Jarman believes she was given DES in 1977, years after warnings about the drug. Poor NHS record keeping and the casual way DES was given out means women may never know for sure what they were exposed to or the long-term impact it has had. There are growing calls for a nationwide investigation. There has still been no attempt to trace and inform those exposed to this dangerous drug, and limited research into the long-term health implications. While thousands of DES victims have sued pharmaceutical companies in the US, France, and the Netherlands, there have been no successful cases in the UK. In response to our investigation, Dr Alison Cave, MHRA Chief Safety Officer, said: 'We express our sympathies with those harmed by the historic use of Diethylstilbestrol (DES). 'We are continuing to invest significant resources to locate historical documentation relating to regulatory decisions on DES made in the 1970s, over 50 years ago. Due to the age and format of the records, this is a complex and time-consuming process. 'We are living now in a different regulatory era….Today, the requirement for patients to be directly provided with information about their medicine is underpinned by legislation.' A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said the Secretary of State has been clear that he will look seriously at these allegations. Health Secretary, Wes Streeting. For more information or support about the issues raised in this report, visit: Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Fundraiser for Gasgow DJ Keith McIvor after diagnosis
Fundraiser for Gasgow DJ Keith McIvor after diagnosis

Glasgow Times

time37 minutes ago

  • Glasgow Times

Fundraiser for Gasgow DJ Keith McIvor after diagnosis

Keith, one half of the pioneering DJ duo Optimo, was recently diagnosed with glioblastoma—an aggressive, inoperable and untreatable form of brain cancer. His condition has rapidly progressed, affecting his speech, mobility, and independence, and he now requires 24-hour nursing care. READ MORE: Glasgow DJ Keith McIvor has reveals brain tumour battle The fundraiser was created in response to a wave of messages from friends, fans and supporters worldwide, many of whom have asked how they can help. While Keith's family and close friends emphasise they expect nothing, the campaign is offering a way for supporters to make a direct impact in his final weeks. The organisers explain: 'We've held off to explore every option. "But now believe this crowdfunder is the most concrete and transparent way to channel people's goodwill.' The fundraiser has so far surpassed the halfway mark of their goal with a current total of £26,738. The family made the difficult decision to move Keith into a private residential nursing facility. This environment currently offers him the best quality of life, with full support from his GP. While still able to communicate with patience and support, and not in pain, Keith is now extremely vulnerable, unable to walk unaided and dependent on others for his safety and care. READ MORE: Still Game icon spotted at TRNSMT – and was buzzing to see this one huge act Efforts are still being made to explore alternative accommodation with a full care package, but organisers say that establishing this in time has been stressful, complex, and logistically challenging. The fundraiser's initial goal is to support 8 to 12 weeks of respite care. Immediate funding will go towards: Private nursing care, where Keith is currently being looked after. Physiotherapy, speech and language therapy, and counselling; Accessible transport, equipment, and other palliative care essentials. If funds allow, future support may include: Setting up accessible private accommodation; Securing a long-term full private care package; Exploring non-NHS treatment options, should any viable therapies emerge. Organisers also stress that 20% income tax and platform fees apply to all donations, as this is a personal fundraiser rather than a registered charity campaign. The crowdfunder highlights the emotional and practical toll on Keith's family, especially his wife, who lives with her own serious long-term health conditions and has cancelled major surgery to remain by his side. The campaign states: 'Navigating this situation has been incredibly hard. 'We know we're fortunate to even have private care as an option and realise this is a very privileged position to be in. "We're painfully aware that access to safe, appropriate end-of-life care is often out of reach for so many families — and we believe this is a failing of the system, not of those needing care.' READ MORE: Nearly 10 roads to close for 'extra special' event taking place in Glasgow Keith McIvor is best known for helping shape Glasgow's electronic music scene over two decades through Optimo and their legendary Sub Club night. Known for his fearless musical experimentation and community-driven ethos, Keith remains a beloved figure in the global music scene. If more money is raised than needed, the remaining balance will be donated equally to causes close to Keith's heart: Glasgow NW Foodbank Coalition for Racial Equality and Rights (CRER) Brains Trust Taki's Shelter, an animal rescue organisation in Crete The crowdfunding concluded: 'We still hope that Keith can look forward to many happy days ahead. 'In comfort and with his loved ones — to live out the remainder of his life in dignity, surrounded by support and good vibes flowing toward him.' The fundraising page can be found here.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store