Sunday, September 29, 2019
Religion and spirituality Essay
As Table 4 indicates, the members of admin body (100%) concur that the elderly engaged in religious activities and they did have their own personal devotions. All of them perceived this was a powerful means of coping for the elderly at this point of their life. According to them (67%), the elderly took pride in considering themselves to be religious, and 83% of them observed that prayer or spirituality was a source of strength and peace. The administrators report what the elderly had shared with them at different occasions: The devotion to Mary (the recitation of rosary in the chapel) keeps me busy the whole dayâ⬠¦I hardly get time to think about the pain on my kneesâ⬠¦and as pray for all of themâ⬠¦my children and grandchildren I know God will keep them safe. Even if I donââ¬â¢t to get to see them it is alrightâ⬠¦let them be well and happy. I attend mass daily morning and eveningâ⬠¦if Iââ¬â¢m alright. It is there actually we get the strength. Even if I donââ¬â¢t feel alright I go to chapel and spend time thereâ⬠¦it is so healingâ⬠¦after all, all of us (the elderly) have our own burdenâ⬠¦of the past and the present. So it is a place to unburden all those. God is kindâ⬠¦He sees everything. Though life here is comfortableâ⬠¦everything is providedâ⬠¦we are aloneâ⬠¦we have only God. Discussion Concept of Subjective Well-Being among the Institutionalized Aged: Administratorsââ¬â¢ Viewpoint The findings suggest that the concept of subjective well being among the elderly as perceived by their administrators could be defined as the experience of being at home with their past, at ease with the present and at peace with the future including the inevitable death through a willing surrender to God. It goes with the definition of well-being adopted for the purpose of the present study. Accordingly, well-being is the pervasive sense that life has been and is good. It is an ongoing perception that this time in oneââ¬â¢s life, or even life as a whole, is fulfilling, meaningful, and pleasant (Myers, 1993). These findings further ties up with Veenhovenââ¬â¢s (2000) contention that as happiness denotes an ââ¬Ëoverallââ¬â¢ evaluation of life and this appraisal of life can concern different periods in time: how life has been, how life is now, and how life will probably be in future. As perceived by administrators, the elderly at Gladys Spellman believe that when one has no regrets about the past and that they have lived a meaningful life, and having done oneââ¬â¢s duties in life, they are at home with the past. This concept of well-being is supported by Butler et al. (1973; 1998), and Knight (1996) that the feeling that one has left undone those things which one ought to have done; and one has done those things which one ought not to have done could lead to sense of guilt, which would negatively affect the sense of well-being. Similarly, when they have satisfaction with the the present stage of life including the acceptance of the pain of growing old and physical decline or to put it differently, when they feel at ease with the present in the given situation, they expereince a sort of contentment and peace in their life. According to Knight (1996) and Butler et al. (1998), the elderly who go through life review and address the unresolved issues in the past (Erickson, 1963) like a righting of old wrongs, making up with enemies, coming to acceptance of mortal life, having a sense of serenity and quietitude, pride in accomplishments, and having a feeling of having done oneââ¬â¢s best. And finally, when they are at ease with the future, they experience wellbeing. That is when they are not anxious about what is to come and not distressed about but reconciled with the final reality of death, which primarly comes from their willing surrender to God and absolute trust in Him. According to Westgate (1996), it is the spiritual dimension which is an innate component of human functioning that acts to integrate the other components, and relationship with God forms the foundation of their psychological well-being (Mackenzie et al. , 2000).
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