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Being Old in 1971 Was Hell - Has Anything Changed?

2026-05-12 News & Politics
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David Hoffman
David Hoffman
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Description

I recorded these interviews in 1971 when I was thirty years old. I was hired to do a film, a documentary to support services for older people. I could not relate to these people when I was young. I thought they were kind of funny. Now I'm the same age as they are, and I understand everything they are saying from a different perspective. See the whole film here. https://youtu.be/ockZUxx86Ck I was carrying a 49 pounds 16mm camera with the soundman by my side. We went to Washington Sq., Park in Greenwich Village near NYU. There were homeless people in that area and in the nearby Lower East Side just as there are today. At that time, there were "mental hospitals" where tens of thousands of people were put/housed who suffered with mental illness and drug addiction etc. During the Reagan administration, these hospitals were closed and the people were put on the streets. So back at that time, many of the people we came across who were homeless were teenagers or people in their early 20s who had become "runaways" – running away from horrible parental situations. I was unprepared when doing my interview with this group of runaways what the gentleman would say when he described driving a car and having an accident where his parents and his wife and his child were killed (there were no seatbelts at that time) while he was essentially uninjured. He asked me what I would do and I could not answer that I would not be in exactly the situation he was in. Some commentators believe that the long haired young man with the scar is the person who the small blonde woman described she slashed with a knife. He was not that person. He was her friend and helping her protect her from the really bad people that preyed on these people not only in New York City but in every major American city then, and I suspect… today as well.

Top Comments (10)

@astroboy7101 2026-05-12

I was born in 1971, and now I'm getting old, too.

281 50 replies
@jbstonesfan 2026-05-17

9 years old then and almost 64. It flew by so fast .

23
@rons8482 2026-05-13

I was 17 when this was made. I will turn 72 this year. These people still seem old to me.

134 13 replies
@HarryFox-o3m 2026-05-14

I was born in 1960 and I'm still trying to figure out what I want to do when I grow up.

155 22 replies
@nestormatos8477 2026-05-12

No matter how you look at it, getting old is no picnic.

191 8 replies
@rosenasser5943 2026-05-13

I don't mind getting old, I just don't want to be there when it happens!

61 3 replies
@jimwebb3672 2026-05-13

I’ll be 74 this summer and I feel pretty good. I have much to be grateful for. Too much to list. To be happy have a sense of gratitude. How many people around the world would love to trade places with us old folks.

99 8 replies
@justme-m3i2s 2026-05-14

When I was young, I had an unrealistic view about old people. It was almost to the point where I would see a cane like a prop like an actor would use to portray someone old. Now that im in my mid 50s, I know that there is pain, anxiety, and depression behind the external facade. That old person you see walking slow and hunched over is fighting the hardest battle in their life, just to be able to function. They are way tougher than young people. I have so much respect for old people now. Like Betty Davis said, "Getting old isn't for sissies."

24
@confucius2616 2026-05-13

Back when smoking indoors was required 😂

164 13 replies
@dank1518 2026-05-13

Everyday is a precious gift that you can use.

18

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