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The Daily Dad

Make Sure They Spend Time Around Old People

The Daily Dad

Daily Dad

Relationships, Education, Dads, Parenting, Ryan Holiday, Fatherhood, Society & Culture, Self-improvement, Wisdom, Kids & Family

4.6630 Ratings

🗓️ 5 March 2020

⏱️ 3 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In his book, The Vanishing American Adult, Senator Ben Sasse pondered what might strike a person from the distant past as odd about our modern society. Aside from the technology, he said, they’d notice the extreme age segregation. Invariably today we spend time almost exclusively with people our own age. 

Our kids go to school with other kids. We work with other adults. Our own parents and grandparents are shunted off to retirement communities and old folks homes and cruise ships. The average age in the US Senate, where Sasse works, is around 61, and there are only 10 people in it under 50 years old. When was the last time you stayed under the same roof as someone twice your age? How many conversations do you have with people who grew up without the things you completely take for granted?

In Lori McKenna’s song, Humble and Kind, she talks about “visiting grandpa every chance that you get.” It actually requires more than that, more than just seeing your own family. You have to make sure your kids aren’t stuck in a bubble, living their lives away from anyone but other children. Instead, you have to expose them to wisdom. Expose them to people who remember the good and the bad things that humans did in the recent and not-so-recent past. Expose them to people who have learned painful lessons. Expose them to people who have accomplished incredible things. 

The famous Supreme Court justice Oliver Wendell Holmes died two days short of his 94th birthday. But in those years, he managed to shake hands with John Quincy Adams (the 6th US President) and John F. Kennedy (the 35th US President), who were born almost exactly 150 years apart. Indeed, the 19th century remains just a handshake or two away. A few handshakes more and you’re back before the founding of America, a few handshakes more and you’re in uncharted territory. This is humbling. This is inspiring. This is eye opening. This is a human wormhole to timeless wisdom.

People born today might live for a very long time. But the people born a long time ago don’t have many years left. Meet them while there is still time. Let your kids learn from them while there is still time. 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the Daily Dad podcast where we provide one lesson every day to help you with your

0:14.1

most important job being a dad. These are lessons inspired by ancient philosophy, by practical

0:20.3

wisdom, and insights from dads all over the world.

0:24.5

Thank you for listening, and we hope this helps.

0:33.1

Make sure they spend time around old people.

0:36.5

In his book, the Vanishing American Adult Senator Ben Sasse pondered what might strike a person from the distant past as odd about our modern society.

0:46.3

Aside from the technology, he said, they'd notice the extreme age segregation.

0:52.3

Almost invariably, today, we spend time with people our own age.

0:57.3

Our kids go to school with other kids. We work with other adults. Our own parents and grandparents

1:02.4

are shunted off to retirement communities and old folks homes and cruise ships. The average age

1:08.8

in the U.S. Senate where SASass Works is around 61, and there are only

1:12.8

10 people in it under 50 years old. When was the last time you stayed under the roof as someone

1:18.5

twice your age? How many conversations do you have with people who grew up without the things

1:23.6

you completely take for granted? In Lori McKenna's song, humble and kind, she talks about

1:29.7

visiting grandpa every chance that you get. It actually requires more than that, more than just

1:35.3

seeing your own family. You have to make sure your kids aren't stuck in a bubble, living their

1:40.5

lives away from anyone but other children. Expose them to wisdom. Expose them to

1:46.4

people who remember the good and bad things that humans did in the recent and not so recent past.

1:52.2

Expose them to people who have learned painful lessons. Expose them to people who have

1:57.4

accomplished incredible things. The 19th century remains just a handshake or two away.

2:03.3

A few handshakes more and you're back before the founding of America. A few handshakes more and you're

2:10.1

in uncharted territory. This is humbling. This is inspiring. This is eye-opening. People born

...

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