- The
three plagues of loneliness, helplessness and boredom account
for the bulk of suffering among our Elders.
- An
Elder-centered community commits to creating a Human Habitat
where life revolves around close and continuing contact with
plants, animals and children. It is these relationships that
provide the young and old alike with a pathway to a life worth
living.
- Loving companionship is the antidote to loneliness. Elders
deserve easy access to human and animal companionship.
- An
Elder-centered community creates opportunity to give as well as
receive care. This is the antidote to helplessness.
- An
Elder-centered community imbues daily life with variety and
spontaneity by creating an environment in which unexpected and
unpredictable interactions and happenings can take place. This
is the antidote to boredom.
- Meaningless activity corrodes the human spirit. The opportunity
to do things that we find meaningful is essential to human
health.
- Medical treatment should be the servant of genuine human caring,
never its master.
- An
Elder-centered community honors its Elders by de-emphasizing
top-down bureaucratic authority, seeking instead to place the
maximum possible decision-making authority into the hands of the
Elders or into the hands of those closest to them.
- Creating an Elder-centered community is a never-ending process.
Human growth must never be separated from human life.
- Wise leadership is the lifeblood of any struggle against the
three plagues. For it, there can be no substitute.