We think people usually retire at 60. Americans don't I don't think they have to retire at 60. There are a lot of people in their 70s and 80s who are still working. I see most of the flight attendants in the US on airplanes are older people. There are laws in the US that do not discriminate against older people in employment.
Many of our seniors like to travel in groups and square dance when they retire. Older people in the United States take pleasure in resting, organizing their yards, and planting flowers and trees after retirement. If the trip is out of the country for a few months or even half a year, there are very few trips to the elderly within ten days.
People in the United States are good friends with their parents after their children are married. If parents are invited to babysit their children, first, they must pay for their parents to care. Second, Americans believe that grandparents tend to spoil their children and are not good for their growth.
Why do so many old people have so many serious illnesses and still travel around?
The questioner asks why so many old people have so many serious illnesses and still travel around the mountains. This only shows that the questioner has a problem with the perception of serious illness. A few days ago, he read an article in the headlines about a 60-something-year-old man in Beijing who had terminal liver cancer. The doctor ruled that he had only three months to live at the most and asked him to be hospitalized for conservative treatment. I'm sure many people are shocked when they learn they have this disease, but not this old man. Because he still had three months to live, he took his wife on a trip around. At that time, her wife was also worried, but she went out with him anyway. For one thing, the wife tried to take care of her husband resting and eating. After three months, the old man did not feel any discomfort. The wife told her husband whether to go back to the hospital for a checkup. The old man said, "Do I look like I am sick? They continued to play and returned to Beijing a year later. Their old partner accompanied the old man to the hospital for checkup, and all the liver cancer lesions were gone. This shows that an optimistic mindset is very favorable to the recovery of the disease! I also encountered an incident. in the early 80's, an employee of my department had a perforated lung, and I personally sent him to the tuberculosis hospital. He was discharged six months later to recuperate at home. A few months later, the district's TB clinic came to the factory for an inspection. All the employees lined up to have their lungs fluoroscoped, and everyone in the factory had a record card, which was recorded every year. At that time, the employee with the perforated lung brought someone else s card wrong. Through fluoroscopy, the employee with the wrong card became a lung. The employee with the perforated lung was very happy and asked to return to work immediately. Six months later, the sick employee went on his own to a relative's U.S. hospital for a checkup, and there was no lung perforation at all, because lung perforation lesions can exist for a long time. The hospital's TB clinic must have been wrong. There was only one employee in our department who had a perforated lung and I accompanied him to the hospital. By taking a picture, his lung perforation lesion was still there, but he was cured of his lung disease, which is a good indication that optimism is good for the treatment of diseases. Its employee with a false lung perforation was scared for more than half a year, which was tragic. He had a son for a few months, he did not have at home afraid to hold him, he also did not I dare not contact with other people, because lung disease is contagious. What's worse is that for more than six months he was taking tons of lung medication every day.