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How to Stop Striving for ‘Happy’ and Find True Well-Being

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Release Date: 07/01/2024

Encore - Can We Stay on the Crest of Ken Dychtwald’s Age Wave? show art Encore - Can We Stay on the Crest of Ken Dychtwald’s Age Wave?

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The first time I met Dr. Ken Dychtwald was in 1989, when I was writing a cover story about older workers as a business reporter for Newsday, Long Island’s daily newspaper. I remember it well. I was interviewing job experts and workers who talked about the frustration they felt being overlooked by employers—especially at a time when most companies, facing acute labor shortages, could ill afford to do so. Ken was the author of a best-selling book, “Age Wave,” (he now has written 19 books) and was the founder of an acclaimed think tank bearing the same name. At the time Ken explained what...

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How Do We Move on from the Sudden Loss of a Loved One? show art How Do We Move on from the Sudden Loss of a Loved One?

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As we come to the close of another year, it is a time when we naturally look both backward and forward. In looking back, it is often a time when we (individually and collectively) reflect on passings—the death of important people in our lives. Some of them are lost through long, debilitating declines; others are lost suddenly, wrenched from us without morning. Either way, we mourn the losses; we seek ways to cope with and process our grief; to preserve their memories and find ways to move on. In today’s episode, I’m talking with Rachel Zimmerman, the author of “Us, After,” a memoir...

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Cultivating a “Growth Mindset” to Help You Age Well and Wisely show art Cultivating a “Growth Mindset” to Help You Age Well and Wisely

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Several years ago, as Scott Fisher and Ben Green approached their 70th birthdays, the challenges of aging loomed large for these two lifelong friends.

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The Unexpected (and Rewarding) Journey of a Later-Life Actress show art The Unexpected (and Rewarding) Journey of a Later-Life Actress

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When we think about the career track of actresses today, we often envision a challenging path, auditioning for myriad jobs, hoping for breaks, and meeting the right director—but more often than not, working as a restaurant server or in some other temporary job to pay the rent. That’s not how Judi Allaire started her acting career. In today’s episode, Judi tells her singular journey as an actor, after starting out in the fashion business, then founding a women’s sportswear chain, then owning a Long Island winery, and now garnering multiple roles in film and TV. She’s talk about what...

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Navigating the Challenging Landscape of Mental Health Law show art Navigating the Challenging Landscape of Mental Health Law

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You can’t open a newspaper or go online today without seeing articles about anxiety, depression, burnout or suicide rates—clearly, we’re struggling with our mental health, individually and as a society.

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A Different Perspective on Family Caregiving—from Hong Kong show art A Different Perspective on Family Caregiving—from Hong Kong

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As National Family Caregivers Month comes to a close, we have the unusual opportunity to take a different view of caregiving from abroad—from Hong Kong.

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Can We Stay on the Crest of Ken Dychtwald’s Age Wave? show art Can We Stay on the Crest of Ken Dychtwald’s Age Wave?

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The first time I met Dr. Ken Dychtwald was in 1989, when I was writing a cover story about older workers as a business reporter for Newsday, Long Island’s daily newspaper. I remember it well.

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A Veteran Leader Reflects on How to Better Serve Aging Families show art A Veteran Leader Reflects on How to Better Serve Aging Families

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As we celebrate National Family Caregivers Month, it’s important not only to honor the contributions of 48 million family caregivers nationwide, but understand how they fit into our government-supported care system for older adults.

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Want to ‘Age with Attitude’? Check Out Senior Planet show art Want to ‘Age with Attitude’? Check Out Senior Planet

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Wherever we go these days, we feel the impact of technology. It’s part of every workplace, in our digital devices, our “smart homes,” cars, virtual reality tools and games, and, of course, the inevitable AI.

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How to Identify and Prevent Nursing Home Abuse and Neglect show art How to Identify and Prevent Nursing Home Abuse and Neglect

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If you’ve ever had a loved one living in a nursing home, you may have worried at times about the quality of their care—especially when high-profile cases of neglect and abuse make their way to the top of the news headlines.

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More Episodes
As we enter the second half of the year, it’s a good time to pause and take stock of how we’re feeling about ourselves as we move into the second half of 2024. Are we happy with our life? Well, that’s not really the right question. There’s an unspoken myth that somehow, we “should be happy,” at least most of the time, and when we aren't, we feel like something is wrong—perhaps even something wrong with us. But in today’s episode, Dr. Beth Kurland, a clinical psychologist with three decades of experience, talks about how to stop forcing ourselves to feel “happy” when we’re faced with difficult, uncomfortable emotions that reinforce messages of “not good enough.” Instead, Dr. Kurland, the author of the recently published book, “You Don't Have to Change to Change Everything,” will offer ways we can change our perspective instead of changing ourselves, shifting six “vantage points” to cultivate inner stability, greater awareness of our internal resources, and perhaps most importantly, self-compassion. Rather than strive for happiness, which is dependent on mood, she says, we should seek a deeper well of inner resources that we can draw upon, no matter what life’s circumstances might throw at us, even in our darkest hours. Dr. Kurland will share her own healing journey, and how the six vantage points helped her find ease in the midst of life’s challenges—and how they can become an essential part of our daily well-being toolkit.