Face To Face Interview Analysis

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On November 27, 2016, I sat down with Dee for a face-to-face interview about her physical, cognitive, social, and spiritual development as a middle-aged adult. Dee is a fifty-three-year-old married women with two children: an eighteen-year-old son and a twenty-one-year-old daughter. The interview was conducted in Dee’s household in Chambers, Nebraska. When asked about physical changes such as her nails becoming more brittle, Dee replied in a surprised tone, “It’s funny you should mention that. I’ve noticed that my nails break more easily now than they ever have before, and I’ve been wondering why. That’s not the only change Dee has witnessed as a middle-aged adult. According to what Santrock (2014) says about maximum physical strength and peak joint functioning occurring in one’s late twenties, Dee affirmed that she feels she possesses less energy than in early adulthood and would agree to Santrock’s estimate of one to two percent muscle loss past the age of fifty (p. 338). She also said she is shorter and heavier than she was twenty years ago, which is typical of an adult her age (Santrock, 2014). While her fifty-six year old husband has allowed …show more content…

She says this because at the age of forty, she still had young children to make her feel young. According to Dee, there is no ideal age at which to say this is when life begins. Instead, exhibited another generativity-focused stance when she said, “The best part of life is when you realize the joy in receiving back what you give.” Dee has much different views about the age of sixty than of forty. She said she will be happy to make it to the age of sixty because she genuinely wonders whether she will live to be that old in the first place. Since her own mother died of cancer at the age fifty-nine, her objective in life is to live long enough to see both of her children graduate from

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