NHC Chair of Excellence in Nursing at MTSU Featured on NPT’s ‘Aging Matters’

Deborah Lee, NHC Chair of Excellence in Nursing at Middle Tennessee State University, will be a featured guest on the next episode of Nashville Public Television’s award-winning “Aging Matters” documentary series.

The episode, titled “Second Acts,” will air at 8 p.m. June 20 on WNPT. The show spotlights stories of four retirement-age Middle Tennesseans who have found their “second acts,” from rollerblading and pickleball to pottery and crocheting.

“These are people who decided to take what they love and are passionate about — what gives them purpose — and do something about it in the second part of life,” Lee said.

NHC Chair of Excellence in Nursing at MTSU Featured on NPT’s ‘Aging Matters’
Photo illustration from ‘Second Acts’: Guests on WNPT’s ‘Aging Matters’ episode on ‘Second Acts,’ are, clockwise from top left, Jackie Schlicher, of Nashville, a former screen/stage actress turned from acting to pottery; former Nashville dancer Andrew Krichels began rollerblading; U.S. Army veteran and retired football coach Alonzo Murray of Murfreesboro discovered the joys of pickleball and plays regularly at Patterson Park Community Center; and Barbara Stanley of Lafayette is founder of Dream Makers, a charitable organization that crochets character beanies and princess wigs for children who have lost their hair during cancer treatment. MTSU’s Deborah Lee, center, is commentator for the episode. (Photos courtesy of WNPT; MTSU headshot of Lee; MTSU photo illustration by Nancy DeGennaro)

Lee and Pam MacArthur from Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville provide commentary between segments that accentuate the importance of positive aging. Lee also participates in a panel discussion on the topic following the “Aging Matters” episode, along with Laura Grissom from Murfreesboro’s St. Clair Street Senior Center.

“I think most people have a stereotype of what older adults do in retirement. Either it’s all terrible and your body and mind fall apart, or you have all this money and tour the world,” Lee said. “The reality is, most of us are in the middle.”

Finding something that gives you purpose is key to surviving — and thriving — in retirement.

“Dr. Lee encourages all of us to recognize that we are aging and that finding and maintaining activities that bring us purpose is especially important during our retirement years,” said “Aging Matters” producer Shawn Anfinson.

Figuring out the path of your second act takes intention and some “soul searching,” Lee said.

“You have to figure out those things that interest you,” Lee said. “The idea behind the ‘Second Act’ is you are evolving and still changing and still growing. That’s the beauty of the second act. We are reframing aging and moving away from focusing on all the bad.”

With a mission to stress the upside of retirement and aging, Lee and Brandon Grubbs, assistant professor and Exercise Science Undergraduate Program coordinator, established the Positive Aging Consortium in 2019.

The group is comprised of representatives from across the university as well as community members whose expertise and research interests are in the area of aging and older adults. The inaugural Positive Aging Conference was held in June 2022 and the next is April 5, 2024.

To learn more about the Positive Aging Consortium, visit www.mtsu.edu/pac/index.php. See more “Aging Matters” episodes and learn about the show at www.wnpt.org/agingmatters/.

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