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All of these examples are far beyond the age that many start to worry about mobility. Again, if you are at an advanced age or have a true medical issue, deciding to live in a place which can work with that makes sense.
But if you are healthy, anticipating an issue that may never come to pass decades before just boggles my mind. Not everyone ends up immobilized. And I would argue that the advances in medicine available in 2017 far surpass those of even a few decades ago. In 20 years, it will be further still. People are living longer, healthier lives. Why all this attention to infirmity before it needs to be considered? Some may say its caution, but it seems more like pessimism.
Not pessimism at all. Common sense. I plan on living to a ripe old age and traveling, hiking, exercising hopefully until the day I die. But if I were going to buy a new house I would look for one with a single level. I don't want to have to worry about my mobility keeping me from moving around my house freely. And even though I do everything I can health wise to make my goal come true does not mean it will. I am having a hard time understanding your contempt on this subject.
It would be intetesting to post this in the Retirement forum where folks are more likely at a point in their lives where they have considered this (or not).
It would be intetesting to post this in the Retirement forum where folks are more likely at a point in their lives where they have considered this (or not).
That isn't what the thread is about. It makes sense that if you have retired you may be looking for a different lifestyle. I am not talking about retired people who search for a single story. I am talking about middle aged and younger people who are convinced they need to think about this. I think its been oversold.
And again, wouldn't installing a stair lift be cheaper than a whole new house....
Meh. I'm 50 and have no knee problems. BUT, when we look at houses in our retirement location, preference will be given to single story homes.
I'm not planning on having bad knees, neither is DH.
But injuries happen, and they do more so the older you get. We've already gone through DH having a injury to his pelvis which thankfully healed.... after 2 years.
Plus, we are very active, and end up with a variety of injuries (we are really trying to avoid that now).
It just seems wisest to eliminate stairs if possible.
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That isn't what the thread is about. It makes sense that if you have retired you may be looking for a different lifestyle. I am not talking about retired people who search for a single story. I am talking about middle aged and younger people who are convinced they need to think about this. I think its been oversold.
And again, wouldn't installing a stair lift be cheaper than a whole new house....
Your OP specifically mentions .people in their 50s and 60s . Even if they are not retired yet, that is an age group that is looking toward retirement and planning accordingly.
Not pessimism at all. Common sense. I plan on living to a ripe old age and traveling, hiking, exercising hopefully until the day I die. But if I were going to buy a new house I would look for one with a single level. I don't want to have to worry about my mobility keeping me from moving around my house freely. And even though I do everything I can health wise to make my goal come true does not mean it will. I am having a hard time understanding your contempt on this subject.
Contempt is not the right word at all. Its sadness and confusion.
I see so many people who have already decided that a healthy old age is not in the cards. You may call it "being prepared" but it reads to me like fatalism.
I believe in the law of attraction. I believe in living a healthy lifestyle. I know unexpected things can happen. Why will them into your world with an expectation?
Personally, I think this whole idea is a ploy to sell houses. Why stay in your beautiful 2 story when social pressure is that you need to move to a condo or ranch? Again, I know that some people really do. But I hear so many youngish, healthy, able-bodied people who are "looking ahead" in this way. I also hear young people who decry the dangers of stairs. Humans have lived with stairs for centuries. Its just odd to me. Is this really how we want to be? Afraid of a staircase?
It would be intetesting to post this in the Retirement forum where folks are more likely at a point in their lives where they have considered this (or not).
It's the same over there: people convinced if they live a healthy lifestyle, they will stay that way and they see a single story home as giving up, versus those who want to be able to stay in their home if a problem arises and can see problems happening.
I think it comes down to whether you live in a single or multi story house. People being questioned about their choice of home defend it, on both sides.
It's not whether one choice is better than the other, but what people want for themselves.
Tilting at windmills is a good exercise too apparently.
That isn't what the thread is about. It makes sense that if you have retired you may be looking for a different lifestyle. I am not talking about retired people who search for a single story. I am talking about middle aged and younger people who are convinced they need to think about this. I think its been oversold.
And again, wouldn't installing a stair lift be cheaper than a whole new house....
Well, I'm retired and DH will be next year, so we are talking about a retirement home.
We live in 2 story now because lots are small.
This is really coming across as a psuedo sympathy... "It's so sad you guys plan to get injured and be unhealthy!"
It's like buying insurance, you hope you won't need it but plan for the a worst case scenario, and everything in between.
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Your OP specifically mentions .people in their 50s and 60s . Even if they are not retired yet, that is an age group that is looking toward retirement and planning accordingly.
Sigh.
You could say people are looking toward retirement and planning the day they get into the workforce. We can agree to disagree. I am still see 50s and 60s as young. I don't know what the point is in arguing that they infirm/close to infirmity/looking forward to infirmity.
Well, I'm retired and DH will be next year, so we are talking about a retirement home.
We live in 2 story now because lots are small.
This is really coming across as a psuedo sympathy... "It's so sad you guys plan to get injured and be unhealthy!"
It's like buying insurance, you hope you won't need it but plan for the a worst case scenario, and everything in between.
Why pseudo? I am sad that people seem to expect this in their future.
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