With a Little Help from Our Friends: Creating Community as We Grow Older
In this book, an award-winning journalist tells the story of people devising innovative ways to live as they approach retirement, options that ensure they are surrounded by a circle of friends, family, and neighbors. Based on visits and interviews at many communities around the country, Beth Baker weaves a rich tapestry of grassroots alternatives, some of them surprisingly affordable:

• a mobile home cooperative in small-town Oregon
• a senior artists colony in Los Angeles
• neighbors helping neighbors in "Villages" or "naturally occurring retirement communities"
• intentional cohousing communities
• best friends moving in together
• multigenerational families that balance togetherness and privacy
• niche communities including such diverse groups as retired postal workers, gays and lesbians, and Zen Buddhists

Drawing on new research showing the importance of social support to healthy aging and the risks associated with loneliness and isolation, the author encourages the reader to plan for a future with strong connections. Baker explores whether individuals in declining health can really stay rooted in their communities through the end of life and concludes by examining the challenge of expanding the home-care workforce and the potential of new technologies like webcams and assistive robots.

This book is the recipient of the annual Norman L. and Roselea J. Goldberg Prize for the best project in the area of medicine.
1117227670
With a Little Help from Our Friends: Creating Community as We Grow Older
In this book, an award-winning journalist tells the story of people devising innovative ways to live as they approach retirement, options that ensure they are surrounded by a circle of friends, family, and neighbors. Based on visits and interviews at many communities around the country, Beth Baker weaves a rich tapestry of grassroots alternatives, some of them surprisingly affordable:

• a mobile home cooperative in small-town Oregon
• a senior artists colony in Los Angeles
• neighbors helping neighbors in "Villages" or "naturally occurring retirement communities"
• intentional cohousing communities
• best friends moving in together
• multigenerational families that balance togetherness and privacy
• niche communities including such diverse groups as retired postal workers, gays and lesbians, and Zen Buddhists

Drawing on new research showing the importance of social support to healthy aging and the risks associated with loneliness and isolation, the author encourages the reader to plan for a future with strong connections. Baker explores whether individuals in declining health can really stay rooted in their communities through the end of life and concludes by examining the challenge of expanding the home-care workforce and the potential of new technologies like webcams and assistive robots.

This book is the recipient of the annual Norman L. and Roselea J. Goldberg Prize for the best project in the area of medicine.
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With a Little Help from Our Friends: Creating Community as We Grow Older

With a Little Help from Our Friends: Creating Community as We Grow Older

by Beth Baker
With a Little Help from Our Friends: Creating Community as We Grow Older

With a Little Help from Our Friends: Creating Community as We Grow Older

by Beth Baker

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Overview

In this book, an award-winning journalist tells the story of people devising innovative ways to live as they approach retirement, options that ensure they are surrounded by a circle of friends, family, and neighbors. Based on visits and interviews at many communities around the country, Beth Baker weaves a rich tapestry of grassroots alternatives, some of them surprisingly affordable:

• a mobile home cooperative in small-town Oregon
• a senior artists colony in Los Angeles
• neighbors helping neighbors in "Villages" or "naturally occurring retirement communities"
• intentional cohousing communities
• best friends moving in together
• multigenerational families that balance togetherness and privacy
• niche communities including such diverse groups as retired postal workers, gays and lesbians, and Zen Buddhists

Drawing on new research showing the importance of social support to healthy aging and the risks associated with loneliness and isolation, the author encourages the reader to plan for a future with strong connections. Baker explores whether individuals in declining health can really stay rooted in their communities through the end of life and concludes by examining the challenge of expanding the home-care workforce and the potential of new technologies like webcams and assistive robots.

This book is the recipient of the annual Norman L. and Roselea J. Goldberg Prize for the best project in the area of medicine.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826502919
Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
Publication date: 05/05/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

A former hospital worker herself, Beth Baker is a freelance journalist and a regular contributor to the Washington Post Health Section and the AARP Bulletin. Baker is the winner of two Gold National Mature Media Awards for her reporting on aging.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page

Contents

Acknowledgments

Prologue: The Oncoming Train

I. A Time Like No Other

1. The End of Denial: Taking Charge of How We Live

2. Interdependence: Reconsidering “Aging in Place”

II. A Wealth of Options

3. The Village: Neighbors Helping Neighbors

4. Cohousing: Creating Community from the Ground Up

5. Cooperatives: Living Affordably

6. NORCs: Retiring Naturally

7. Community Without Walls: Weaving a Web of Friendship

8. Generations of Hope: Living Well by Doing Good

9. Affinity Groups: Settling with Your Tribe

10. Housesharing: Finding Companionship with Friends—or Strangers

11. The New Family: Balancing Togetherness and Privacy

III. Getting from Here to There

12. Design for Life: Building Homes and Neighborhoods That Serve Us

13. How Will We Pay? Planning for the Unknown

14. Who Will Help Us?Advocating for Direct Care Workers

15. Is There a Robot in Your Future? Accepting Non-Human Help

16. What If? Mapping Our Plan B

Epilogue

Appendix A: Glossary of Alternative Models

Appendix B: Questions to Help Guide Our Choices

Notes

Index

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