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Futuristic Suit Lets You Feel What it's Like to be an Old Man

Accepted submission by HughPickens.com http://hughpickens.com at 2016-04-01 19:26:40
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Andy Newman writes at the NYT that an exhibit at Liberty Science Center in Jersey City lets users walk a proverbial mile in their elders’ orthopedic shoes and experience the stooped shuffle, the halting speech, and the dimming senses of an 85-year old man [nytimes.com]. It is not a very pleasant experience. An attendant cranks up a fader and your vision dissolves into melty, grayed-out blobs, like a memorably unvivid psychedelic experience, more knobs twiddle, and your hearing is subsumed in a fog of tinnitus, muffling and distortion. Loaded with hardware and a computer, the suit itself weighs 40 pounds, distributed as uncomfortably as possible. “It’s going to get much worse,” promises Bran Ferren, the suit's inventor. “You haven’t lived.”

According to Newman, in just 10 minutes, the aging suit induced a remarkable amount of frustration, depression and hopelessness and there are entire realms of wretchedness attendant upon owning and operating an 85-year-old body that the exhibit does not even touch upon: Comprehensive sagging, internal and external. Pain in places you did not know could hurt. Difficulty urinating. Difficulty not urinating. Watching your friends die off. Watching yourself become irrelevant, an object of pity or puzzlement if acknowledged at all. By allowing a younger generation to feel the effects of aging firsthand [lsc.org], the suit provides a newfound perspective that hopefully inspires a conversation with loved ones about getting older so, collectively, family and friends can better prepare for the future. If doing even the most basic tasks of daily living is this much trouble, you wonder, why bother? But it also makes you a little less likely to lose patience and a little more likely to feel empathy with the older people in your life. "My father, Aaron Newman, happens to be 85," says Newman. "I called him up. I described the treadmill experience and asked if that sounded about right." “No,” he said. “It’s much worse.”"

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