We hope our Action Day has helped challenge the narrow, negative and stereotypical portrayal of older people and ageing in society. We hope it has given people the opportunity to see a broader and more diverse depiction of later life.
Through our Action Day events, we hope we have given you an opportunity to take part in activities that reflect your interests and passions with like-minded others.
Through our exhibition, we hope we have shown you the sort of images that you have told us you would like to see more of, images that better represent your own lived experience.
We will continue to do this and continue to expand our Image Library so everyone can see themselves and be seen within our collections.
Seeing those brilliant image library photographs writ large on the huge displays of the Now Building was wonderful, inspiring and uplifting.
But they also serve a greater purpose. Narrow, negative and stereotypical depictions of later life can make older people feel excluded and ignored by society and build an inaccurate picture of what we are capable of as we age. These stereotypes become the cultural norm that feeds into ageism.
It is incredible to think that the Age Without Limits campaign is only two months old.
And this is all new territory for us. The Centre for Ageing Better has never had a public-facing campaign of this magnitude. We’ve never run an advertising campaign. We’ve never tried to organise a public exhibition.
We’re extending ourselves as an organisation because we know that the issue of ageism, with all the harm it causes and the lives it damages, will not just naturally melt away over time.
The fight to eradicate ageism from society will not be easy, we’ve always known that.
But if we replicate and grow the spirit that we saw up and down the country on our first Action Day, I’m confident it will only be a matter of time before we succeed. Together we are mighty.