OT: Poll: Would you want to live to be 100 years old?

Would you want to live to be 100 years old?

  • Yes

    Votes: 39 60.9%
  • Hell no

    Votes: 25 39.1%

  • Total voters
    64
  • Poll closed .

LionJim

Heisman
Oct 12, 2021
14,722
20,508
113
My brother-in-law takes very good care of himself, and remains very active at 73. Not long ago I said to him, you’re going to live to be 100, you know that. His face fell.

Me: Hell no, for a myriad of reasons. I’m 69 this year.

Apologies to Mr. Potter.
 
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WillyMO

Sophomore
Oct 28, 2021
111
159
43
Negative. Adult diapers, bed pans, sponge baths (ok, that'd be ok) but your quality life is so poor at that point. I just visited my parents, in their 80s, and they can barely get around. My dad fell out of bed a few weeks ago and had to call my brother in law to help him up.

I just turned 50 and take very good care of myself and even I have chronic back pain. I can only imagine how bad it'd feel at 100. 😅

I'll take 85. That'll give me great grand-babies.
 

baltimorened

All-Conference
May 29, 2001
4,960
3,618
113
My brother-in-law takes very good care of himself, and remains very active at 73. Not long ago I said to him, you’re going to live to be 100, you know that. His face fell.

Me: Hell no, for a myriad of reasons. I’m 69 this year.

Apologies to Mr. Potter.
I'd venture that if you're 65 or so, you'd say no...if you're 85 and still going strong then strong yes
 

TheBigUglies

All-Conference
Oct 26, 2021
1,361
2,186
113
It depends on the quality of life. If a I am still banging super models then yes. If I am wearing a diaper and pissing on myself then no.
Yeah, I am on the fence about this. My mom is 95 and still very active and mobile(up and down flights of steps, doing wash, gardening, making cookies, going to shows, etc). If I have my mom's genes and I am able to still take care of myself then yes and the only reason would be to see my kids raise their families and being able to do things with them like take their families on nice trips. I would like to have my better half with me as well as it would be difficult living to that age without her. If I live to that old that means all my siblings would be in the 108+ plus range. So yeah, I am still on the fence. I just don't want my age and condition to become a burden on anyone so I try to keep myself active as much as possible as I get older. Lifting weights to keep the bones strong.
 

LionsAndBears

All-Conference
Dec 7, 2009
2,207
3,985
113
If I'm healthy, absolutely! As a person that will retire with a Pension, I will enjoy a lifetime of financial security. I plan on taking that and turning it into financial security for my kids, grandkids, etc. So, the longer that I live, the more I can put aside for them.
 

Ghost of OM

Junior
Oct 30, 2021
189
322
63
My mom turned 100 last fall. She lived alone (and drove) until 95 when she fell in her home and had a head injury. Hasn’t been the same since. She’s now in a very nice memory care unit but, as nice as it is, it sucks. All her friends and siblings are dead, all she does is sit and watch the birds outside her window day after day. She still knows my wife and I and our son but she is miserable. I know if she had a choice, she’d flip her off switch in a blink. Almost sadly she is still in pretty good physical condition. I can see her living for a good while yet. So, having watched her, I voted a strong “hell no”.
 

northwoods

All-Conference
Jun 25, 2001
645
1,563
93
I'd venture that if you're 65 or so, you'd say no...if you're 85 and still going strong then strong yes
You may have nailed it. At age 65 I probably would have said no, but at age 83, and in good health both mentally and physically (my wife may differ on the mentally), I said yes. So much depends (pun unintended) on things in the future that you can't be certain about. I still have a lot in life that I look forward to and think that is important as we get older.
 

Nittering Nabob

All-Conference
Sep 17, 2024
2,831
2,643
113
If I happen to outlive wife #5, I’m not really interested in another marriage.

My preference is to be found dead last accompanied by two female Gen Z’ers 😎
 
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AvalonJohn

Redshirt
Oct 14, 2004
34
29
18
Negative. Adult diapers, bed pans, sponge baths (ok, that'd be ok) but your quality life is so poor at that point. I just visited my parents, in their 80s, and they can barely get around. My dad fell out of bed a few weeks ago and had to call my brother in law to help him up.

I just turned 50 and take very good care of myself and even I have chronic back pain. I can only imagine how bad it'd feel at 100. 😅

I'll take 85. That'll give me great grand-babies.
Yup, already told the kids to keep me going if I'm in good health to 85. After, that any problems healthy or not, pull the plug. I think once you get to 60 anything can happen regardless of health, sometimes sh)t happens which you really have no control over or can prevent.
 
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rudedude

Heisman
Sep 28, 2002
8,362
16,472
113
Having your health and mobility and, this is a huge one, independence, appears to be a key to longevity. However, when you see some centarians celebrating their birthdays in a nursing home, well, good for them but that, at least to me, does not smack of a good time. My father lived until 94 but the last few years of his life were a living hell of being wheelchair bound due to bilateral leg amputations above the knee due to atherosclerosis. He was a proud WWII vet and became more withdrawn from social life. My father was one who wanted to live as long as he could but he genuinely suffered during his final years and, having an aunt currently in a nursing home (she just turned 86), it is heart breaking to see her every week and witness the slow decline from the person she once was. My MIL is still trucking at 88, she has remained fairly healthy, but I know that could change quickly. Once you hit 80, your body starts to wear out faster. For those out there in your 80’s and are still trucking, I salute you, but I sincerely hope you experience your final days in an environment where you are satisfied with your life. I say all of this because I am fast approaching 70 and looking ahead, I want to be around for my soon to be born grandson, as well as for my wife’s retirement. Getting my knees replaced was the best decision I could make because mobility will now improve (second one upcoming on May). So hang in there and bless all those folks out there still participating in their daily lives at an advanced age.
 

WEP6to12

Sophomore
Dec 2, 2025
45
109
33
My brother-in-law takes very good care of himself, and remains very active at 73. Not long ago I said to him, you’re going to live to be 100, you know that. His face fell.

Me: Hell no, for a myriad of reasons. I’m 69 this year.

Apologies to Mr. Potter.
This question is so appropriate this week….I was in Pittsburgh for business. I end up in the ER for the day and overnight in the hospital. BP over 200. I will be 72 next month. In reasonably good health (on statins for 30+ years, need to loose some weight, golf, gym, and walk regularly). BP was making me dizzy, could hardly stand up. Started thinking the what if stuff when I was being tested….brain scan, echo cardiagram, and every blood analysis known to the medicine world. Finally was released so my wife could bring me back to Harrisburg. I think I got a taste of diminished quality of life. What if I have limited mobility? What if I can’t drive? So, I’ll take a good 5 to 8 years and then I am ready when the good Lord says my time is up.
 
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PSU Mike

All-American
Jul 28, 2001
4,124
7,233
113
I’d like to take this thing quite a bit further at 61. Had a son late in life, and that’s reason #1. Other than that I’m so fiscally conservative that I’ll probably retire as he finishes HS, and I think I can keep my legs functioning to do another 15 years of good fly fishing in retirement. Of course, some cancer could already be setting up shop unknown to any of us and render all of it irrelevant.
 

Bison13

All-American
May 26, 2013
3,338
5,484
113
I’d like to take this thing quite a bit further at 61. Had a son late in life, and that’s reason #1. Other than that I’m so fiscally conservative that I’ll probably retire as he finishes HS, and I think I can keep my legs functioning to do another 15 years of good fly fishing in retirement. Of course, some cancer could already be setting up shop unknown to any of us and render all of it irrelevant.
same, didnt have kids until 40 so want to be able to see their kids for at least a dozen years and to help them out as much as possible. But I also dont want them to have to take care of me like my dad had to do for my dementia ridden grandmother. Probably have to get out of MD if I do want to get to 100
 

razpsu

Heisman
Jan 13, 2004
14,024
14,030
113
My father, is 95 and is still helping asme with their work, plays golf 2-3 times a week, and can see better than me. His hearing not the greatest. So yes let’s live to 100. Still get retirement stuff from psu.
 
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Marshall2323

All-Conference
Aug 7, 2024
3,668
4,434
113
As I approach 76, I have one thought to share. Unless one is currently 99, it is unlikely that one has the proper perspective to answer. I can recall many times that I felt frustration with my own father or father in law, as they aged. Now that I'm "there" I understand their decisions. It's called perspective. What you see often depends on where you stand and where you've been.
This doesn't just apply to life and aging.......it works on much of the opinions shared here on football related topics.
Using my own situation as an example.......in the past 30 years I've lost parents, in laws (of course), my wife and probably 95% of my friends. The world isn't the one I used to navigate. I think that reaching that milestone not only would require good health but the ability to constantly reinvent one's self. I don't know if I want to work that hard.
 

Erial_Lion

All-Conference
Nov 1, 2021
3,703
4,472
113
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OKLALionsFan

Junior
Dec 17, 2025
142
251
62
This requires the always appropriate "it depends" answer. Obviously health is the first and most important qualifier. Given decent health you think about all the advancements in every aspect of life during our lifetimes. Things in comic books that we fantasized about are now commonplace. If someone had told me when I was in college that in my lifetime I would own a device that would fit in my pocket that would be a television, movie theatre, radio, record player, telephone, encyclopedia, dictionary, and atlas and could do complex calculations faster and more accurately than a slide rule, I would have said no way, impossible! Yet today a cell phone is as common as a set of car keys. What we will learn in the next 25-30 years in medicine, space exploration, travel, and general quality of life we can't possibly imagine. It might be fun to watch.
 
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JakkL

Senior
Sep 19, 2001
373
464
43
My mom turned 100 last fall. She lived alone (and drove) until 95 when she fell in her home and had a head injury. Hasn’t been the same since. She’s now in a very nice memory care unit but, as nice as it is, it sucks. All her friends and siblings are dead, all she does is sit and watch the birds outside her window day after day. She still knows my wife and I and our son but she is miserable. I know if she had a choice, she’d flip her off switch in a blink. Almost sadly she is still in pretty good physical condition. I can see her living for a good while yet. So, having watched her, I voted a strong “hell no”.
Similar for me. I'm 61. Mom is approaching 96 and in memory care. Her issue is short term memory. She still remembers most of life. It's so disheartening to hear her ask the same question multiple times in 5 minutes. I do not want any part of that life.
 

slwlion

Freshman
Oct 14, 2021
52
75
17
My brother-in-law takes very good care of himself, and remains very active at 73. Not long ago I said to him, you’re going to live to be 100, you know that. His face fell.

Me: Hell no, for a myriad of reasons. I’m 69 this year.

Apologies to Mr. Potter.
Only 14 more years for me.
 
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slwlion

Freshman
Oct 14, 2021
52
75
17
Negative. Adult diapers, bed pans, sponge baths (ok, that'd be ok) but your quality life is so poor at that point. I just visited my parents, in their 80s, and they can barely get around. My dad fell out of bed a few weeks ago and had to call my brother in law to help him up.

I just turned 50 and take very good care of myself and even I have chronic back pain. I can only imagine how bad it'd feel at 100. 😅

I'll take 85. That'll give me great grand-babies.
85's a piece of cake. lol