Sadly, Tony Bennett just passed away. He died at 96, and people say, “Well, what are you sad about? He lived to a ripe old age and left a rich singing heritage for fans to continue to enjoy.”

Tony Bennett and singer Lady Gaga celebrated his 95th birthday with a concert at Radio City. When I was a boy, the Music Hall was a favorite place for my family and me to visit to enjoy a live performance and watch a movie.

The music band, The Eagles, are on their final music tour. They are leaving behind a rich musical heritage that, with “Welcome to Hotel California,” hearkens back to the 1970s.

The “What are you sad about?” answer is complicated. There is also sentimentality.

Sentimentality is an intense emotional response with tenderness, sadness, or nostalgia. It often arises from reflecting on emotional situations involving relationships, personal affiliations, or significant experiences. People might feel sentimental about various things: particular objects, places, periods, relationships, or even certain ideas or concepts.

Sentimentality can be triggered by stimuli that connect an individual to a past emotional experience or something they perceive as carrying deep emotional weight. These triggers might be a photograph, a familiar scent, a piece of music, a particular location, or a specific event, such as a holiday or anniversary. When such stimuli connect people with their memories or emotions, they can evoke a sentimental response.

Sentimentality plays a crucial role in human emotional life. It allows us to form and maintain emotional connections to our past, others, and the world. It can also cope with loss or change, providing comfort and a sense of continuity with the past. Overall, sentimentality is a complex emotional response that reflects our capacity to feel deeply about our experiences and the people, places, and things that matter to us.

Aging is an inevitable facet of life, eliciting multifaceted experiences that are deeply personal and unique to every individual. As people age, they look back at their lives, engaging in a process known as reminiscing.

Reminiscing is recalling and reflecting on experiences, often with a sense of nostalgia or sentimentality. It involves revisiting memories and emotions associated with past events, people, or places. Reminiscing can be a way to cope with difficult emotions, to celebrate happy memories, or to connect with others over shared experiences. It is a natural and common human activity that helps us make sense of our lives and find meaning in the past.

Growing older is a natural process accompanying physical changes and many life experiences. People gain many experiences, memories, wisdom, and perspectives with age. Reminiscing is often a by-product of aging, as it involves recollecting experiences or events. This retrospective thought process serves multiple purposes, such as facilitating life review, maintaining self-identity, and coping with present circumstances or impending mortality.

Reminiscing serves as a coping mechanism to deal with the challenges of aging. Older adults often look back at their lives to make sense of their past and present. It serves as self-affirmation and validation of their lived experiences. It allows individuals to reflect on their achievements, joys, regrets, and failures.

These retrospective narratives offer solace, evoke a sense of accomplishment, and infuse positivity in one’s self-perception.
Reminiscing also helps older adults maintain a sense of continuity and identity. Aging changes societal roles, sometimes causing a feeling of disconnection or loss of self. By reminiscing, older adults can connect with their past selves, reaffirming their identity and bridging the gap between the past and the present.

Reminiscing has many psychological benefits. It can foster a sense of purpose and meaning in their lives. By recollecting and sharing experiences, older adults may gain a sense of closure or acceptance, vital for maintaining emotional health and achieving a sense of life satisfaction.

It is also normal to grow older to engage in a life review.
I fondly remember my grandparents talking about their lives growing up on the Lower East Side of New York. Even though their stories were repeated many times, I always enjoyed hearing them. Many years ago, my wife and children visited the old tenement buildings of the Lower East Side, as well as the Tenement Museum, where guides describe what life was like for people decades ago.

Now, I reminisce about my life, my late wife, raising our children, and music from days gone by.

It is an interesting and ironic fact that what begins as reminiscing ends as history to be studied by school children.

dransphd@aol.com

 

The post Aging and Reminiscing appeared first on DocTalk, Explorations in Psychotherapy.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *