Aging In 65 Years Old Essay

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While over forty million people in the United States today are 65 years old or older, not one ages in exactly the same way. The speed of the aging process depends upon biological and psychological factors, and social factors that influence them. Senescence, the physical decline of the body’s functioning leading to the increased the likelihood of death, accompanies aging and is unavoidable. The physical body starts to wear as body systems, such as the nervous system and immune system, start to slow down. The integumentary system, skin and hair, shows many visible signs of aging - wrinkling, sun damage, greying, while the skeleton starts to compress from the effects of gravity and the muscles, kidneys, and blood vessels perform less efficiently than before. Sensory perception dulls as one ages as well, and many older people struggle with hearing and vision in particular. Naturally, this would lead to an …show more content…

Trends show that aging people tend to have improved psychomotor responses, being able to perform a task more slowly, but with more accuracy, and increased memory loss. However, memory loss is often over exaggerated as a sign of psychological aging; while, senility, abnormal condition of confusion and serious loss of memory, is a notorious condition that tends to occur among the aging, it is not all that common, but is perpetuated as being common by stereotypes. Change in personality also tends to occur. Crystalline intelligence, wisdom and insight into the human condition, tends to increase with age while fluid intelligence, the ability to grasp abstract relationships in math or science, may or may not decline with age. Generally, the negative changes in an older person’s psychology cause them to have an increased likeliness to make a life threatening mistake, which may be one of the reasons society finds psychological aging unnerving and over exaggerates its

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