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Happiness Is a Choice You Make: Lessons from a Year Among the Oldest Old

por John Leland

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
1769156,304 (3.79)6
Family & Relationships. Self-Improvement. Nonfiction. HTML:

"[Narrator Robert Petkoff] is a steady performer whose measured pacing allows each subject's story to unfold naturally against the background of Leland's personal inquiry. A particular highlight comes at the very end, when listeners get a chance to hear the actual voices of some of the men and women who have shared the lessons of their lives." - AudioFile Magazine

This program includes original recordings of interviews from the New York Times series

Based on the popular New York Times series, life-changing wisdom from an unexpected source: America's oldest old

In 2015, the award-winning New York Times journalist John Leland set out to meet some of the city's oldest inhabitants for a series on America's fastest-growing age group: those over eighty-five. Leland was at a crossroads in his own life. His marriage had fallen apart, and at fifty-five, he was alone for the first time. He was also caring for his elderly mother, whose main desire was to die. He understood aging, like many of us do, as nothing more than the relentless deterioration of body, mind, and quality of life. He wondered: Is there a threshold at which life is no longer worth living?

But the six elders Leland interviewed took him in a different direction. Beyond illuminating what it's like to be old, physically and materially, they provided a life-changing education in resilience and joy. They had lived long enough to master the art of living, and they shared their wisdom generously. Leland did not anticipate all that he would learn, nor did he anticipate the popularity of the series: Its following grew to nearly half a million online views for the finale, plus print readers.

Happiness Is a Choice You Make, based on the series, is a rare, intimate glimpse into the end of life, and the insight that can enhance the years preceding. What he finds is deeply heartening: Even as our faculties decline, we still wield extraordinary influence over the quality of our lives. Happiness is a choice we make.

Learn how to live from those who have mastered the art

.
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» Ver también 6 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 9 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
I hope that people don't dismiss Happiness Is a Choice You Make as another bit of platitudinous fluff based on the title. It is by far the best non-fiction book I've read this year. If you can get a paper copy as well as the audiobook, I highly recommend it. I started out reading a library copy, and loved seeing pictures of "the elders," but life got in the way of my having enough time to sit and make much progress with it, so I downloaded it on Audible and finished up that way. The narrator (who is not the author) does a great job, and has a warm, pleasing voice, but the surprise at the end is really what made the audio copy worth any price you pay. ( )
  CaitlinMcC | Jul 11, 2021 |
Being in the moment, enjoying what I have, and not lamenting what I don't are all lessons I can get behind. I don't gain anything by wishing circumstances were different. ( )
  beautifulshell | Aug 27, 2020 |
What a lovely book about being very old.

I recently read an article by John Leland and it was so well written I decided to see if he had written any books. I found this one, and it is lovely.

He spent a year with six very different, very old people, and wrote about what he learned from them. I learned a great deal from them in the process myself.

I am not very old yet, but I am old enough to see my life changing already, and this book tells me it’s not what I imagine.

A clear, candid, thoughtful book that was a pleasure to read. Recommended. ( )
  dmturner | Jun 29, 2020 |
This is pretty good. I liked the lessons he took away from the elderly people. However, I thought he made himself part of the story a bit too much. I understand that he needed to explain the perspective he had when doing the interviews and forming conclusions, but he weaved himself into those conclusions more than necessary. ( )
  grandpahobo | Sep 26, 2019 |
No offense to the author but I only skimmed through the book as I did not like it. I found the stories from his six elderly New Yorkers just as depressing as my current real life experiences with a 93-year-old mother in the throes of late stage dementia. Also at age 65, I am starting to feel the limitations and worries that come with being a senior citizen. There are moments when those of us with some gray in our hair and tread on our tires feel happiness. However many of us see darkening clouds – – disease, memory loss, loss of control, financial issues, loss of function, loss of mobility etc. Our society does not treat the elderly with respect or the consideration that they deserve. Few look forward to getting older in their 80s or 90s.

Leland's attempt to write a feel-good story to this reader fell flat given what I see every time I visit a long-term care or dementia unit. ( )
  writemoves | Jun 17, 2019 |
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Family & Relationships. Self-Improvement. Nonfiction. HTML:

"[Narrator Robert Petkoff] is a steady performer whose measured pacing allows each subject's story to unfold naturally against the background of Leland's personal inquiry. A particular highlight comes at the very end, when listeners get a chance to hear the actual voices of some of the men and women who have shared the lessons of their lives." - AudioFile Magazine

This program includes original recordings of interviews from the New York Times series

Based on the popular New York Times series, life-changing wisdom from an unexpected source: America's oldest old

In 2015, the award-winning New York Times journalist John Leland set out to meet some of the city's oldest inhabitants for a series on America's fastest-growing age group: those over eighty-five. Leland was at a crossroads in his own life. His marriage had fallen apart, and at fifty-five, he was alone for the first time. He was also caring for his elderly mother, whose main desire was to die. He understood aging, like many of us do, as nothing more than the relentless deterioration of body, mind, and quality of life. He wondered: Is there a threshold at which life is no longer worth living?

But the six elders Leland interviewed took him in a different direction. Beyond illuminating what it's like to be old, physically and materially, they provided a life-changing education in resilience and joy. They had lived long enough to master the art of living, and they shared their wisdom generously. Leland did not anticipate all that he would learn, nor did he anticipate the popularity of the series: Its following grew to nearly half a million online views for the finale, plus print readers.

Happiness Is a Choice You Make, based on the series, is a rare, intimate glimpse into the end of life, and the insight that can enhance the years preceding. What he finds is deeply heartening: Even as our faculties decline, we still wield extraordinary influence over the quality of our lives. Happiness is a choice we make.

Learn how to live from those who have mastered the art

.

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