Refashioning one's place in time: Stories of household downsizing in later life |
| |
Authors: | Mark R Luborsky Catherine L Lysack Jennifer Van Nuil |
| |
Institution: | Institute of Gerontology, Wayne State University, 87 East Ferry St., 226 Knapp Building, Detroit MI 48202, USA |
| |
Abstract: | Older adults face a daunting task: while continuing engagements in multiple relationships, investment in their own and others' futures, and developing life interests and capacities, they also reexamine and sometimes reconfigure the place where their social lives and objects are housed. Some relocate, downsize, to a new smaller place and reducing possessions to ensure an environment supportive of their capacities and desired daily activities. This article examines how key contours of the experiences of place during residential downsizing are infused with unexpectedly heightened awareness and cultivation of one's sense of place in multiple timeframes. In a discovery mode, the downsizing stories of 40 older adults in southeast Michigan are examined. Findings indicate conflicting temporalities and the natures of cognitions related to decision-making and thinking about being leave-taking and being in place. Findings also highlight in particular how making sense of one's place is predicated on notions of its time, of being on time and downsizing on time. Further, these characterizations of the lived worlds of older adults' modes of conceptualizing the nature of downsizing show how an understanding of the meaningfulness of place in later life relocations requires a layered sense of home as places-in multiple timelines. |
| |
Keywords: | Aging Place creation Time Housing transition among elderly Creativity Narrative |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|