Friday, January 30, 2026

Missed Signals and Missed Care: Ageism Inside the Health System

In Canada, it has become almost routine to begin any conversation about healthcare with the same phrase: the system is in crisis. Emergency rooms are crowded. Family doctors are hard to find. Nurses and physicians are stretched thin. Everyone knows someone who has waited too long or felt rushed through an appointment.

That reality is undeniable. But it has also created a dangerous permission slip, one that allows poor treatment of seniors, minorities, and other vulnerable people to be excused rather than questioned. Being overwhelmed should never mean being dismissive. Yet for many older adults, that is exactly how care feels.

I experienced this firsthand after having my knee replaced.

The surgery itself went well, but shortly afterward, I fell and was given medication for pain. I had a bad reaction to the drug. Concerned, I was moved to another hospital where staff could keep a closer eye on me. Warnings were passed along. My wife was clear about what had happened and for what to watch.

Still, while I was in a drug-induced delirium, I fell again.

The warning signs were there. The information had been shared. But it wasn’t fully heard. Whether it was time pressure, assumptions about aging, or a belief that confusion was simply “normal at my age,” the result was the same. Dismissal led to harm.

This is how ageism operates inside systems, not through cruelty, but through assumptions. Older patients are often seen as fragile, confused, or inevitably declining. Symptoms are brushed off as part of aging rather than signals requiring attention. Pain is normalized. Confusion is expected. Complexity is simplified away.

Sometimes this leads to under-treatment. Symptoms are minimized. Diagnostic testing is delayed or never ordered. Opportunities for early intervention are missed.

Other times it leads to over-treatment. Psychotropic medications are prescribed too quickly. Sedation becomes a shortcut. Behaviour is managed chemically rather than understood contextually. Especially in long-term care, this can strip people of clarity, mobility, and independence.

A friend of mine has lived with chronic pain for more than seven years. She has seen multiple doctors, told her story countless times, and left more than one appointment feeling unheard. Eventually, she found a physician who did something remarkably simple: listened.

This doctor took her pain seriously. Ordered tests. Asked follow-up questions. Acknowledged uncertainty rather than dismissing it. For the first time in years, my friend feels there may be a path forward.

She told me something that has stayed with me. “Some of them didn’t hear my story,” she said. “They only saw a woman of a certain age.”

That sentence captures the quiet harm of medical ageism perfectly.

When clinicians see age before a person, they stop listening fully. When they assume decline, they stop investigating. And when people sense they aren’t being heard, they begin to doubt themselves. They downplay symptoms. They stop advocating. They accept discomfort as inevitable.

This doesn’t only affect health outcomes. It affects trust.

And yet, this is not a story about villains and victims. Many healthcare professionals are deeply committed, compassionate, and frustrated by the same system their patients struggle with. I’ve seen nurses who insist on slowing down, doctors who ask one more question, therapists who treat older patients as partners rather than problems to manage.

These are the bright spots, and they matter.

What distinguishes them isn’t extra time or special resources. It’s a mindset. A refusal to let age become a diagnostic shortcut. A willingness to stay curious. A belief that older adults are reliable narrators of their own experience.

Systems can reinforce ageism, but they can also interrupt it. When hospitals build processes that encourage shared decision-making, when staff are trained to recognize unconscious bias, and when older patients and caregivers are treated as credible sources of information, care improves. Not just emotionally, but clinically.

The healthcare system may be under strain, but that strain does not absolve us of responsibility. Especially when the cost of assumption is injury, prolonged pain, or loss of dignity.

If there is hope in this moment, it lies in noticing where listening breaks down, and where it holds.

Every time an older adult is heard fully, a different story unfolds. One where age does not obscure symptoms, and experience is not mistaken for confusion. One where care is shaped by evidence, empathy, and respect.

The healthcare crisis is real. But so is the opportunity to decide who gets seen clearly within it.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Words That Wound: Language, Labels, and the Power of “Elder Speak”

The doctor’s office was quiet in that familiar way, paper rustling, keyboards tapping, a muffled cough from behind a closed door. I was mid-sentence, trying to explain something that mattered to me, when I paused. I could feel the right words hovering just out of reach.

Before I could gather them, the person across from me stepped in and finished my thought.

They meant to help. I know that. And I didn’t correct them. I nodded, let the moment pass, and moved on. But something about it stayed with me, because it wasn’t the first time it had happened, and it wouldn’t be the last.

As I’ve gotten older, I sometimes take a little longer to find the exact words I want. Writing is easier for me; I can rearrange, rethink, and refine. Speaking is different. It happens in real time. There are pauses. Small searches. Moments of silence that feel longer than they are.

Those pauses often invite interruption.

What’s interesting is that when I was younger, I did the same thing. I finished people’s sentences. I jumped in when someone hesitated. At the time, it felt efficient, even supportive. I didn’t see it as a problem until life offered me a lesson I never forgot.

When my wife suffered a brain aneurysm and was in recovery, I spent long days by her side. One day, as she struggled to express herself, I did what I’d always done. I finished her sentence.

The nurse stopped me gently but firmly.

She explained how important it was that I wait. That my wife needed the time and space to find her own words. That interrupting, even with love, could take away her agency, her confidence, and her voice.

I still remember standing there, feeling slightly embarrassed, but mostly grateful. That moment changed how I listen.

Now, when I talk with other seniors, and someone pauses mid-thought, I wait. I resist the urge to help by supplying the word I think they’re reaching for. I let the silence do its work. And more often than not, the words come, stronger for having arrived on their own.

This is where conversations about elder speak begin, not with bad intentions, but with habits we rarely examine.

Elder speak is a way of communicating with older adults that sounds caring on the surface but carries an undercurrent of condescension. It often includes speaking more slowly or loudly than necessary, using simplified language, exaggerated praise, collective pronouns like “we” instead of “you,” or addressing adults with terms like “dear” or “sweetie.” It can also show up in finishing sentences, redirecting answers, or talking around someone instead of with them.

In healthcare settings, elder speak is especially common. Time pressures are real. Providers want to be kind, efficient, and reassuring. And yet, the impact can be damaging.

When an older person is spoken to this way, the message, intentional or not, is clear: You are less capable. You are not fully in charge here. Over time, that message erodes confidence. People may speak less, ask fewer questions, or stop correcting misunderstandings. Important information gets lost, not because it wasn’t there, but because the space to share it disappeared.

What makes elder speak tricky is that it often feels polite. Friendly, even. Many older adults don’t challenge it because they don’t want to seem difficult or ungrateful. Others internalize it, assuming the problem lies with them rather than the communication style.

And this doesn’t only happen in medical offices or care homes. It happens in grocery stores, family gatherings, community meetings, and casual conversations. Anywhere a pause is interpreted as a deficit rather than a moment of thought.

The difference between respectful communication and subtle condescension isn’t always in the words themselves. It’s in the pacing. The tone. The willingness to wait.

Respect sounds like allowing someone to finish, even if it takes longer. It sounds like asking questions without answering them yourself. It sounds like speaking to an adult as an adult, regardless of age, health, or setting.

None of this requires special training or scripts. It starts with awareness.

The next time someone pauses while speaking, notice what happens inside you. The urge to help. The discomfort with silence. The assumption that speed equals competence. Pauses aren’t signs of decline; they’re often signs of care, choosing the right words instead of the quickest ones.

Language shapes experience. The way we speak to one another either expands or narrows the space people feel they’re allowed to occupy. When we slow down just enough to let others speak for themselves, we don’t lose time. We gain understanding.

And sometimes, all it takes to protect someone’s dignity is the courage to wait.

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

When the Message Gets Inside: How Self-Directed Ageism Shrinks Possibility

When I was younger, I made a simple promise to myself. Every year, I would try one new thing.

It didn’t have to be dramatic. Sometimes it was a new skill, sometimes a new role, sometimes just walking into a room where I didn’t know anyone. What mattered was that it was unfamiliar. Each time, I noticed the same thing happen. I learned something, or I grew a little, or I discovered I was more capable than I had assumed.

That habit followed me into later life.

Now, when I present at workshops or strike up conversations with people I’ve just met, I often hear the same response: “I could never do what you’re doing.” It’s usually said kindly, sometimes admiringly. But underneath it, I hear something else. Not humility. Not realism. Self-doubt.

Somewhere along the way, many capable, curious older adults have absorbed the message that certain doors are no longer meant for them. Not because of physical limits or lack of interest, but because of an internal voice that says, people our age don’t do that.

One of the unexpected joys of being a senior is realizing that I don’t have to care as much about what others think. That freedom can be light, almost playful. And yet, I see friends who don’t feel it. Friends who won’t tackle anything new because they’re afraid to fail, or worse, afraid to look foolish.

I don’t feel sorry for them. I feel sad.

Not because their lives lack meaning, but because they’re missing moments that might surprise them. Activities that could be fun. Opportunities that might open new doors. Conversations that could lead to friendships they didn’t know they needed. Self-directed ageism doesn’t take away what we already have. It quietly limits what we’re willing to reach.

A friend of mine offers a powerful example of how strong and how fragile this internal barrier can be.

He lost his wife five years ago. Grief reshaped his world, as it does. Two years ago, he attended his high school reunion. It was emotional, nostalgic, and grounding all at once. About a year after that, he was looking through the list of people who had attended and saw a name he hadn’t thought about in decades. His first girlfriend, back in grades eight and nine.

He paused.

Part of him wanted to get in touch. Another part shut the idea down immediately. What would I say? What if she doesn’t remember me? What if it’s awkward? He told himself it was too late, too complicated, too far away. She lived in the Interior of British Columbia. He lived on the coast. Distance became a convenient reason to stop thinking about it.

Self-doubt won.

Months passed. Then, one day, he found himself thinking about her again. The memory hadn’t faded. This time, instead of pushing it away, he did something that made him deeply uncomfortable. He sent an email.

It was short. Simple. Almost painfully cautious. “Are you Linda, and do you remember me?”

Then he left on a two-week camping trip with his children and grandchildren, convinced he’d either hear nothing back or return to an awkward silence.

She responded within a day.

And then she waited.

When he came back and finally replied, the restart was rocky. They had both lived full lives. They were careful, unsure, and very aware of what could go wrong. But they kept talking. Slowly, honestly, without pretending to be younger versions of themselves.

Today, they are a couple. And they are both very happy.

This story isn’t about romance. It’s about permission. The permission to risk embarrassment. The permission to try. The permission to believe that curiosity doesn’t expire.

Self-directed ageism shows up when we stop sending the email, stop signing up, stop raising our hand, stop imagining ourselves in new situations. It affects confidence, yes. But it also affects health choices, social engagement, and our willingness to stay connected to life beyond our routines.

The discomfort of trying something new doesn’t disappear with age. If anything, it can feel sharper, because the cultural message tells us we should be narrowing our world, not expanding it.

But the truth is, possibility doesn’t shrink on its own. It shrinks when we quietly agree that it should.

Recognizing self-directed ageism can be unsettling. It asks us to notice where we’ve absorbed limits that were never ours to begin with. And while that realization can sting, it also opens a door.

Because once we see the message for what it is, we can choose, sometimes nervously, sometimes boldly, not to let it have the final word.

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Everyday Ageism: The Quiet Moments That Shape How We Age

The band had taken a break, the music fading into the low hum of conversation and clinking cups. On the dance floor, a group of women stood together, catching their breath, laughing the way teenagers do when the night still feels young. They had been rocking it out, confident, joyful, fully present in their bodies.

I was one of the few men on the floor that evening, and I recognized a couple of the women in the group. Curious, I wandered over and asked one of them what was so funny.

She smiled and said, “We were all commenting on how good we look for our ages.”

The women ranged from about 70 to 85. They were dressed beautifully, faces flushed from dancing, eyes bright. One of her friends chimed in, laughing, “We’re every man’s dream.”

Another woman shot back just as quickly, “You mean nightmare,” and the group erupted again.

I didn’t say much. I simply told them they were all beautiful, which felt true and uncomplicated. But as I stepped back, something lingered with me. A quiet question tugged at the moment.

Why, at this stage of life, were they measuring themselves through the imagined gaze of men? Why was “for our ages” the unspoken qualifier attached to their joy?

That question opens the door to what we often call everyday ageism, the small, normalized moments that rarely make headlines but quietly shape how we see ourselves and each other.

Everyday ageism lives in jokes at family dinners, in offhand comments at work, in compliments that come with conditions. “You look great for your age.” “You’re still so sharp.” “I hope I’m doing as well as you when I’m old.” These remarks are usually well-intentioned. They’re meant to flatter, not diminish. And yet, they carry a message underneath: aging is something to apologize for, to overcome, or to explain away.

Recent data from late 2024 and early 2025 suggest that nearly 70 percent of Canadians aged 50 and older experienced some form of everyday ageism in the past year. Most of it wasn’t overt discrimination. It was subtle. Casual. Easy to dismiss.

And that’s precisely why it matters.

Over time, repeated small messages begin to settle. They don’t land all at once. They accumulate. Slowly, they shape expectations about attractiveness, relevance, competence, and worth. This is where self-directed ageism begins, not because people believe the stereotypes outright, but because they absorb them through a thousand quiet moments.

The women on the dance floor weren’t dramatically expressing self-doubt. They were laughing, enjoying themselves, claiming space. And yet, the humour leaned on an old script: our value is tied to how we look, and age complicates that value. Even the joke about being a “nightmare” carried a familiar edge, the kind that cushions discomfort with laughter.

Self-directed ageism often shows up like this. Not as despair, but as a gentle shrinking of possibility. We lower expectations. We pre-emptively joke at our own expense. We decide not to try something new because “people our age don’t do that.” We measure ourselves against standards that were never designed to grow with us.

What makes everyday ageism so persistent is that it rarely feels malicious. In fact, it often feels like bonding. Shared laughter. Shared understanding. A way to acknowledge reality without making a fuss. But normalization is powerful. When ageist ideas become part of casual conversation, they slip past our defences.

This isn’t about blaming anyone, not the women at the dance, not the people who offer well-meaning compliments, not us when we laugh along. We’re all swimming in the same cultural water. Awareness begins not with accusation, but with noticing.

That night at the dance, the most alive moments weren’t about how anyone looked. They were about movement, music, friendship, and the sheer pleasure of being there. The laughter was real. The joy was real. The bodies on the floor weren’t “good for their age.” They were good, full stop.

Every day ageism doesn’t always announce itself. Sometimes it whispers during a break in the music, disguised as humour, modesty, or realism. When we begin to hear it, gently and without judgment, we give ourselves and others permission to rewrite the script.

And that’s where change quietly begins, not on a grand stage, but in moments just like this one.