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LIVE HOW YOU WANT TO LIVE

I Don’t Want That to Happen to Me: What Beverly Teaches Us About Aging With Agency

When Beverly first approached me after a community talk, her request seemed small, merely a ride to the eye doctor. But behind that simple ask was the real message of this chapter, most of us won’t need everything as we age, but we’ll all need something, and the difference between dignity and distress is planning, advocacy, and a trusted circle.

My framework (3 pillars) is simple.

Finances → Health → Legal:

Know what you have and where it is. Understand your health realities and likely scenarios. Then memorialize your wishes with the right legal instruments (powers of attorney, health-care proxy, living will). Get these pillars in place before a crisis; in a crisis, the hospital’s priority is discharge, not your best long-term fit.

Assisted living ≠ “everything handled”:

Assisted living is a level of support, not a total solution. It typically covers housing, meals, and some personal care, but it assumes family, or a designated advocate will still arrange specialists, transportation, and errands. Even residents who appear independent often qualified because they need socialization, help with meals, or light assistance with daily tasks. Expecting “the facility will do it all” leads to gaps and planning for the gaps preserves quality of life.

Everyone needs an advocate:

Beverly’s journey underscores the power of a steady advocate, someone who shows up at appointments, asks the right questions, coordinates professionals, and protects against pressure decisions. Advocacy is not about taking over, it’s about making sure your voice is heard when systems default to what’s easiest, not what’s best.

Guarding against financial harm:

Well-meaning referrals can go wrong, and charming helpers can be opportunists. The guardrails are clear:

  • Demand statements and paper trails for every financial action.
  • Separate roles: your advocate accompanies and questions; licensed professionals advise; attorneys paper the plan.
  • When something feels off, pause, and verify. Small hesitations prevent big losses.

Designate decision-makers you truly trust:

Paperwork without the right people fails in real life. Choose proxies who will act as you would, not as they would. Revisit designations after life events (death of a spouse, estrangement, moves). Update beneficiaries and powers of attorney so your plan matches your present.

Purpose, not just care:

Beverly’s best days were fueled by purpose such as conversation, art, politics, music, pets, and the small rituals that make a life feel like yours. Aging well isn’t only about safety, it’s about staying socially alive. Build a weekly cadence, visits, classes, faith, volunteering, creative work, that keeps you engaged. Purpose stabilizes mood, strengthens health, and wards off isolation.

“Independent” with smart support:

Needing targeted help (a ride, paperwork, a specialist visit) doesn’t erase independence. The right supports extend independence. Think in tasks, not labels. What can I do solo? What drains me? What requires expertise? Outsource the friction so you can keep doing the things that matter.

Comfort and dignity at the end:

Clarity about end-of-life wishes protects dignity. When advocates know the living will and physicians are aligned, care shifts from default interventions to comfort, presence, and small mercies. A clean face, ice chips, and favorite music can mean everything.

Legacy is every day, not just estate plans:

Legacy lives in stories, relationships, and how you treat people. Beverly’s generosity, her love of conversation, her creativity, and even her beloved pet were part of the life she chose to leave behind. Catalog your stories and label photos. Write a page a week. Decide who and what you want to support. Make it simple for others to honor your wishes.

Takeaways to act on now:

  1. Map your Finances–Health–Legal triangle and fill the gaps.
  2. Name and brief your advocate(s); give them access to documents.
  3. Right-size your care plan and assume facilities don’t cover everything.
  4. Install fraud guardrails: documentation, second opinions, slow down big moves.
  5. Schedule purpose: weekly social, creative, and spiritual anchors.
  6. Refresh your proxies and beneficiaries after any major life change.

Beverly’s message is clear. Plan early, choose your circle, and keep choosing what makes your life feel like you.

September 26, 2025 Posted by | Uncategorized | , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Art of Aging with Purpose and What You Can Expect from My Work

Some people build businesses around trends. I build them around gaps, spaces where people are craving connection, confidence, and purpose but don’t yet have a map.

That’s how Aging Icon™ was born.

I’ve always believed that success doesn’t end when the candles on your birthday cake hit double digits in the six, seven or even 8 or 9 range. And I’m not talking about forced optimism or “just think young” clichés.

I’m talking about real-life reinvention, about doing the things you love even when your knees creak, your schedule shifts, and the world around you seems to think you’re winding down.

Nope. Not on my watch.

Through my speaking, my books, and my ongoing advocacy, I’ve carved out a space for those who want to live with more curiosity, creativity, and courage, especially as they age or are given a life changing health diagnosis. I work with people who’ve built successful lives and careers, but who are now navigating questions that rarely get asked out loud:

  • Can I still do what I love, even if I don’t move as fast as I used to?
  • Is it too late to start something new?
  • What happens when the world stops seeing me as “in my prime”?

I ask those questions too. And I answer them by helping others write a different kind of script.

What You’ll Find in My Work

Whether it’s from a stage, in the pages of a book, or through grassroots advocacy, here’s what I bring to the table:

Clarity without clichés.
You won’t find platitudes in my presentations or in my writing. What you will find is humor, honesty, and practical insight. I speak from experience, not theory, and my stories are grounded in what it actually feels like to be shifting, stretching, and evolving at every stage of life.

Permission to be powerful.
Many of us have been conditioned to shrink a little as we age. I challenge that gently but firmly. My work is about reclaiming space, confidence, and agency, not because we need permission, but because we deserve reminders.

Community and connection.
Aging can feel isolating. One of the most consistent pieces of feedback I hear is, “I thought I was the only one feeling this way.” My books, talks, and initiatives create safe, energetic spaces for people to realize they are not alone and that shared experience breeds strength.

A future-facing approach.
Here’s where my business brain kicks in. I don’t just talk about aging as it is now. I look at where society, tech, and work are headed, and I position people to thrive in that landscape. The result? You’re not chasing a moment; you’re already in it.

Not Just Inspiration, Activation.

People often tell me they feel inspired after hearing me speak or reading something I’ve written. But I don’t stop at inspiration. I want you to feel energized to take action, whether that means dusting off an old passion, starting a new chapter, or simply refusing to fade quietly into the background.

Because you, my friend, are far from done.

And if you’re ready to live how you want to live, you’ll find in my work not just a mirror, but a guide. A spark and a well-timed nudge.

You’ve built a life worth living. Let’s make sure you keep living it, with joy, meaning, and just the right amount of rebellion.

July 9, 2025 Posted by | Uncategorized | , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment