Asking Eric: I went into the photo booth and it changed my life

Asking Eric: I went into the photo booth and it changed my life

Dear Readers: On Sept. 23, I published two letters from older adults experiencing loneliness (“Still Grieving” and “Wants a Connection”). I asked those of you who have successfully found connection at a later stage in life to write in.

Related Articles

Advice |


Asking Eric: They’ve called a meeting about my mom, and I don’t know what to say

Advice |


Asking Eric: I can’t believe they waited a day to check on us after the hurricane

Advice |


Asking Eric: I realized later that they were staging an intervention with me

Advice |


Asking Eric: I don’t want my boyfriend hanging out with this toxic person

Advice |


Asking Eric: If her dogs are in my house, can I insist on discipline?

And write in you did! I received so many wonderful letters, full of anecdotes and suggestions, that I’m splitting them into two columns — some today and some on Nov. 9. Hopefully, these will inspire new connections at any stage of life.

Dear Eric: I left a marriage of 35 years, retired and moved to a new town. For one year I went to every fundraiser hosted by the area’s nonprofit to determine “who are my people?”

At the fundraiser for our local music venue, I entered the photo booth to have my picture taken. To my surprise, the photographer, also recently divorced and new in town, was taken by my smile. It’s been eight years of happy times, getting to discover the area together.

– Unexpected Profit

Dear Unexpected: “Who are my people?” is such an important question! Love this way of finding them.

Dear Eric: “Still Grieving” stated that he was a secular humanist, so church was off the table. Not so at all!

The Unitarian Universalist church has no theology, requires no belief in anything, supports each member on whatever spiritual path they happen to be on (or not on). No Bible readings; the hymns are about love and support and nature but not God. There are atheists, Buddhists, humanists, agnostics, earth-based spiritualists, people just looking for community.

– UU Community

Dear UU: Good point. Many Unitarians reached out to me.

Dear Eric: One month after my dear dog died, I felt I urgently needed another dog. After adopting my new dog, I went to a website where cities and neighborhoods post events. The first post I saw was “Looking for a puppy for my puppy to play with.”

In short, the woman had the same breed of dog, which was a month older than mine, and lived walking distance from my house. All four of us have been best friends ever since. I am certain that my dog and my friend were heaven-sent.

– Dog Delight

Dear Delight: Pets can provide wonderful companionship, as well as connect us to others.

Dear Eric: In our 70s, my husband and I moved into an independent living apartment in a 400-person continuing-care retirement community with lecture series, musical programs (mainly classical), and a multitude of activities from climate advocacy to painting to exercise classes to poker.

– Aging Well

Dear Aging Well: Many wrote about the numerous benefits of their retirement community, as well as organizations like the Village Movement for older adults living alone.

Dear Eric: There are senior centers in nearly every town, and here in Colorado, the members are in catalogs filled with opportunities. I started line dancing and met so many new friends!

Our seniors sign up for hikes, trips to so many local locations and events and plays and restaurants that it would take me 40 pages to list them all. Get out of your house and get out of your comfort zone.

– Always Active

Dear Always Active: Dancing came up in a lot of answers, especially square dancing and line dancing. People love the opportunity to meet people and the benefits for mental acuity.

Dear Eric: I decided to try an online dating site for seniors. By coincidence, my now-husband was on the same dating site, albeit more than 900 miles away in a different state.

Despite the physical distance, we each felt a connection that grew stronger with regular emails. We actually bought our present home together before we had met in person, a mere six weeks after our first email. We did “see” each other as we Skyped nightly.

Finally, after three months, he packed his van, and we moved in together. That was three years ago. I am now 85 and he is 84.

Yesterday, we bought a new car together which may be our very last car, but that’s OK as the future is now, not someday.

– Crossing the Distance

Dear Crossing: What a lovely sentiment. Finding connection through online sites – many folks also talked about Match.com – proved to be the key for a lot of folks.

Dear Eric: Last winter, I enrolled in a film developing class at the junior college. Everyone in the class could’ve been my grandchild, age-wise.

Related Articles

Advice |


Harriette Cole: Our mom isn’t coming home to take care of the kids

Advice |


Miss Manners: I felt like stealing her groceries when she broke the self-checkout rule

Advice |


Dear Abby: Was I wrong to send this group text about their child?

Advice |


Asking Eric: They’ve called a meeting about my mom, and I don’t know what to say

Advice |


Harriette Cole: After 3 years of silence, she sent me this text

It was fun to be around young people. One in particular, a high school senior, introduced herself to me early on and we bonded over photography and writing. She moved her seat next to mine. Nine months later and class long gone, we are still friends.

– Friendship Developing

Dear Friendship: I adore this – lifelong learning and intergenerational friendship.

Send questions to R. Eric Thomas at [email protected] or P.O. Box 22474, Philadelphia, PA 19110. Follow him on Instagram @oureric and sign up for his weekly newsletter at rericthomas.com.