Background And Objectives: Research regarding the role that cherished possessions play in experiences of aging and daily life has tended to focus on how possessions assist individuals in "looking back" and remembering important experiences, relationships, and identities. Here, we consider how the possessions that older adults keep at home inform their present experiences of aging and also facilitate the ongoing maintenance of aging in place.
Research Design And Methods: We employed an interpretive phenomenologically inspired research strategy that enabled an in-depth examination of older adult's experiences of cherished possessions. This approach emphasized participants' own situated meanings. In-depth interviews were followed by participatory photo-elicitation interviews and journaling.
Results: The majority of study participants interacted with cherished possessions to connect with their past selves, but also to cope with times of challenge and change in the present, and in some cases, to cultivate a sense of being able to maintain aging in place. For some older adults, however, possessions disrupted sense of self, place attachment, and daily life. Cherished possessions, therefore, play a significant role in opportunities to maintain aging in place.
Discussion And Implications: The material culture of home and its relationship to experiences of aging may provide or disrupt opportunities to maintain aging in place. Interventions based on possessions that are easy to access and employ to provide comfort and affirm peoples' preferred relationships to self, others, and the living environment could make a difference to the quality of life for older adults.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geront/gny142 | DOI Listing |
J Aging Stud
December 2023
Department of English, University of Delhi, India; Honorary Associate, Sociology, La Trobe University, Australia. Electronic address:
Through close readings of three Indian short stories, this essay seeks to show how cherished possessions, such as a bed, a blanket and books, are not stable repositories of past memories but a means of materializing intergenerational relations within the family in the lived present and, perhaps even more interestingly, catalysts for new and hitherto unforeseen possibilities of self-discovery and connections with the world beyond. Part of the apparatus of self-care that older people can summon in the moment to supplement their selfhood, objects as presented in these stories appear to exceed their limited understanding as passive recipients of externally imposed meaning, with their complex and unstable signification finally shown to emerge through their mutually transformative entanglement with people.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMemory
February 2023
Leibniz-Institut für Wissensmedien, Tübingen, Germany.
Beloved objects are cherished and valued possessions that we feel attached to. Previous research has demonstrated that the functions of beloved objects change across a lifespan. However, beloved objects may not only be appreciated because of their functions but also because of their sensory qualities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Qual Stud Health Well-being
December 2022
Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care, University of Bergen Faculty of Medicine, BERGEN, Norway.
Aims And Objectives: The aim was to explore frail older people's lived experiences of managing life at home on the verge of moving to a nursing home.
Background: As people age, their reserve capacity decreases, increasingthe risk of morbidity and frailty..
Sociol Health Illn
July 2021
School of Health Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.
Materiality has become an increasingly important topic in sociological studies of health care. How objects support the identity of people with dementia in care homes is an emerging area. While early research has tended to focus on sentimental or cherished items (such as photographs or keepsakes), the present study focused on functional objects (such as curling tongs or a hairdryer) as a mechanism to actualise citizenship.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGerontologist
January 2020
School of Population Health, Social and Community Health, The University of Auckland, New Zealand.
Background And Objectives: Research regarding the role that cherished possessions play in experiences of aging and daily life has tended to focus on how possessions assist individuals in "looking back" and remembering important experiences, relationships, and identities. Here, we consider how the possessions that older adults keep at home inform their present experiences of aging and also facilitate the ongoing maintenance of aging in place.
Research Design And Methods: We employed an interpretive phenomenologically inspired research strategy that enabled an in-depth examination of older adult's experiences of cherished possessions.
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