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Alice: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Alice.
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Rob: And I'm Rob. Now, Alice ... how old are you?
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Alice: I'm 21, Rob ... not a day older!
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Rob: Come on, don't be coy about your age, Alice!
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Coy, by the way, means not wanting to give away information about yourself.
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Alice: I'm not being coy, Rob.
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I just... don't feel like telling everyone how old I am.
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Some people think it's rude to ask.
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Rob: I don't mean to be rude of course but ... well, you are being coy.
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I'm asking because today we're talking about age and whether you can be too old for some things.
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What do you think?
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Alice: I'm too old to order off children's menus in restaurants, but I still do it.
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Rob: Anything else?
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Alice: Well, I couldn't pull an all-nighter anymore.
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Rob: OK. That's another way of saying stay up all night to finish something.
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That's what students do to get their work done.
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Alice: I used to be able to do it, and now I couldn't.
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I struggle to stay up on New Year's Eve until midnight.
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But let's move on to today's quiz question.
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What percentage of people aged over 65 surveyed in the UK described themselves as old?
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Is it ... a) 6%? b) 16%? Or c) 60%?
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Rob: Well, I think it's just a) 6%. People don't like to think of themselves as old.
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Alice: Well, we'll find out if you got the answer right or wrong later on in the show.
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First, let's explore the subject of aging more.
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Tell me, Rob, do you think you can be too old to take up a new hobby?
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Rob: I might be, I mean, depends on the hobby of course.
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I went for a run the other day, and it nearly killed me.
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Alice: That just means you're unfit, Rob!
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Let's listen to Ernestine Shepherd who didn't think she was too old to take up an interesting new hobby.
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At the age of 71 she started bodybuilding and is currently listed in the Guinness Book
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of Records as the oldest female bodybuilder in the world.
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Ernestine Shepherd: If ever there were an anti-aging pill, I would call it exercise.
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I enjoy working out with the people who come to the church.
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Sometimes they say, "Oh, this hurts!" But I tell people, "Age is nothing but a number!"
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I am 75 years of age. This morning I awakened at 2.30.
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I have a group of four other people who run with me in the mornings.
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We run about ten miles. Every day.
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Rob: Wow! That was Ernestine Shepherd. What an example to us all!
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Alice: Work out, by the way, means taking exercise to make yourself fit.
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I think it's true that if we did more exercise every day, we would all look and feel much better.
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Rob: Ernestine is all for exercise but I'm afraid I'd take some anti-aging pill if one existed.
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Alice: If something is advertised as being anti-aging it means it's designed to stop you looking older.
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Rob: And you can find hundreds of products these days that claim to have anti-aging properties.
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Lots of lotions and potions for women in particular!
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Alice: Yes. That's because women feel pressurized to look younger than their age.
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It's an example of ageism and it isn't fair.
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Rob: Ageism means discrimination against people because of their age.
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And sometimes people can be discriminated against in the workplace for being 'too old'.
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Now, do you think you could be too old to take up a new job, Alice?
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Alice: No, I don't get the concept of too old at all.
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My grandparents both still work and they have more enthusiasm and energy than I do.
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They hate being called senior citizens and old-age pensioners
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or by the initials of these words, OAP.
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And they are right: who wants to be defined by their age?
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Rob: You just said: "Don't get this concept".
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And to get something means to understand it.
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So I suppose you stay the same inside ... it's just the outside that changes!
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We have to be young at heart at least.
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And age is no reason for some people to stop working if they are in good health.
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Let's listen to Trisha Cusden who started a new business at 65 supplying beauty products for older women.
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Her age actually inspired her choice of work.
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Trisha Cusden: I've had an idea, I've seen a problem and an opportunity,
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and I've done something about it.
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And created a business which I'm very happy to say is very successful.
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I mean [when] I started it, it was going to be a hobby, you know, something to keep me
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out of trouble, give me something to do.
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Rob: Trisha Cusden there. She started a new hobby and it turned into a successful business enterprise.
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Now, before we finish, I'd just like to put the case for older men.
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My dad, my granddad, Sean Connery, Michael Caine, Harrison Ford ... they're all fantastic
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role models for us younger guys.
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Alice: And a role model is somebody people admire and want to copy.
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Rob: Well, that brings us round to the matter of today's quiz question, Alice.
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Alice: Yes, it does. I asked: What percentage of people aged over 65 surveyed in the UK
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described themselves as old in a survey?
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Is it ... a) 6%, b) 16% or c) 60%?
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Rob: Yep. And I said a) 6%. Was I right?
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Alice: Yes, you were! You were right! Well done!
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More than 2,000 people aged between 65 and 93 were surveyed by UK market research firm YouGov.
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Now here are the words we learned today, Rob.
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Rob: They are:
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coy
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pull an all-nighter
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work out
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anti-aging
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ageism
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senior citizen
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old-age pensioner (or OAP)
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get something
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role model
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Alice: Well, that's the end of today's 6 Minute English.
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Don't forget to join us again soon!
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Both: Bye.