AgeSong Institute is the elder care program of Pacific Institute, a nonprofit educational organization that promotes awareness in the way we understand aging, growing old and the role of eldership. It does so through residential care, counseling education, publications, and research. AgeSong Institute seeks to help change the paradigm for teaching and learning how to care for the elderly through the programs and services it provides at its elder care communities — AgeSong at Hayes Valley and AgeSong at Laguna Grove — from a humanistic, process-oriented perspective.
Through its internship program and deepening its awareness of the many dimensions and expressions of human nature, AgeSong Institute teaches new perspectives in the fields of mental health, gerontology, and education.
For more information, please visit AgeSongInstitute.org or PacificInstitute.org

AgeSong Institute was a proud sponsor of Age March San Francisco, celebrating Age Pride on Saturday October 1, 2011 at the Little Marina Green near Crissy Field.
Age March (www.agemarch.com) was founded in 2010 by author and activist Barbara Rose Brooker, who says: “Age is not about a number. It is about living life to the fullest, asking new questions and always forming new goals. We must get rid of ageism, age segregation, and promote age pride.”

Old Age as Opportunity for Inner Growth
May I suggest that human beings’ potential for change and growth is much greater than we are willing to admit and that old age be regarded not as the age of stagnation but as the age of opportunities for inner growth? Old people must not be treated as patients, nor regard their retirement as a prolonged state of resignation.
The years of old age may enable us to attain the high values we failed to sense, the insights we have missed, the wisdom we ignored. They are indeed formative years, rich in possibilities to unlearn the follies of a lifetime, to see through inbred self-deceptions, to deepen understanding and compassion, to widen the horizon of honesty, to refine the sense of fairness.
One ought to enter old age the way one enters the senior year at a university, in exciting anticipation of consummation. Rich in perspective, experienced in failure, people advanced in years are capable of shedding prejudices and the fever of vested interests. They do not see anymore in every fellow human a person who stands in their way, and competitiveness may cease to be their way of thinking.
We must seek ways to overcome the traumatic fear of being old, the prejudice, the discrimination against those advanced in years. All human beings are created equal, including those advanced in years. Being old is not necessarily the same a being stale. The effort to restore the dignity of old age will depend on our ability to revive the equation of old age and wisdom. Wisdom is the substance upon which the inner security of the old will forever depend. But the attainment of wisdom is the work of a life time.
Abraham Joshua Heschel (1961)