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To Be or Not to Be Invisible After 60: The Choice Is Yours

By Paula Usrey June 13, 2024 Mindset

A couple of years ago I realized how easily I could become an ‘invisible’ elder if I allowed that to happen. I was attending a meeting with some of my co-workers. At one point, I started to offer an opinion but was immediately interrupted by a younger female colleague.

At first, I didn’t feel like it was a slight. But when another female colleague began talking over me, I started feeling as though I had become the invisible elder woman in the room.

Did some of my colleagues think I no longer had anything relevant to say because I was at least a decade older than the rest of them?

Having Choices

Fortunately, I knew I had a choice. As a communication professional, I was aware of some nonverbal strategies I could use to make sure that my voice counted in future meetings with my colleagues.

Before intentionally using specific nonverbal strategies, I like to consider how important it is for me to be visible in a given situation.

If I do want my voice counted, then I know I can use my clothing choices to convey strength. I can also establish a sense of presence in most situations. Finally, I can use specific nonverbal signals to open a channel for me to speak.

Deciding When to Be Visible

Sometimes I think it’s a relief that others don’t see me. I can go to meetings without having to comment, I can attend events without much fuss, or I can even shop for a new car without pesky sales people hovering over me.

Other times, I don’t want to be invisible. When I want others to see and hear me I know that it helps if I acknowledge them. Even when I want to buy a sandwich at a deli, simply smiling or saying something like, “How’s your day going?” can make all the difference.

The same is true when going to meetings. While I don’t personally care for small talk, acknowledging others does open up the door to being acknowledged in return.

The next time I attended my work meeting, I did take time to personally connect with people in the room before getting down to business. In that instance, I deliberately chose to become visible.

Letting Your Clothing Do the Talking

We all have the power to manage the impressions we want to convey; one way we can do this is through our clothing and accessory choices. Even our color choices can make a statement.

For instance, in Western culture, dark blue tends to convey trustworthiness. Red can communicate energy. Black can convey power.

At the next work meeting I attended I wore a cobalt blue blouse and bold silver jewelry. As a result, I felt confident, and my clothes made a statement before I even opened my mouth.

Creating Presence

In her 2012 TED Talk, Your Body Language May Shape Who You Are, social psychologist Amy Cuddy shared that using power poses can boost your feelings of confidence and change other people’s perceptions of you as well.

As an example, Cuddy describes how doing power posing before interviews actually changes your hormones and helps you feel more assertive.

Some of these poses, such as raising your hands in victory or doing the Wonder Woman pose – feet astride and hands on your hips – are ones a person can use prior to meetings or situations where confidence is needed.

When I need to give a presentation to an unfamiliar group or want to project confidence in a meeting, I have found that doing power posing a few minutes before these encounters does make a difference.

All of us can use a confidence boost at times. Sometimes when I power pose, I say to myself, “You’ve got this.”

Sending the Right Signals

When I want others to see and hear me, I have to think about my posture during different encounters. If I slump in my chair or try to take up as little space as possible, I am signaling insignificance.

However, if I sit up straight, relax my arms, and allow myself to claim my space, I’m letting others know I am engaged and might have something worthwhile to contribute.

Sitting up straight also makes vocal projection easier. Vocal projection can be difficult for some of us because we were encouraged to be quieter and more ‘ladylike’ when we were growing up. In reality, small, apologetic voices sound uncertain and are easier to discount.

When I attended my next work meeting, I used my eyes to signal that I wanted to talk. I maintained eye contact with others at the table until I finished talking. If anyone had tried to interrupt me, I would have held up my hand like a stop sign. If needed, I would have added a friendly, “Just a minute.”

Planning Matters

I don’t always think about the fact that I can become invisible without thinking about it. The strategies I use help me when I want to be seen and heard.

By using appropriate strategies such as these, anyone can assertively express themselves without coming across as aggressive or self-focused. When participating in meetings, when talking to the doctor, or when simply wanting good customer service, our voices do matter!

Let’s Have a Conversation:

As elder women, I suspect most of us have experienced feeling invisible. Please share a time when you felt invisible. How did you handle it when others tried to discount your presence or voice? Are there times when you have chosen to move among people without being seen? I’d love to hear about your experiences.

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Toni Stritzke

Power poses. That’s interesting. I contributed to a Threads discussion about invisibility just now. I notice, now I’m in my late sixties, younger people walking in twos or threes on the footpath, seem to expect me, walking singly, to give way. This I refuse to do. I put my elbows out and continue straight ahead. I’m not ready to be that invisible.

Diana

People with dogs and in twos and threes have always expected me to give way, no matter my age. It is simply poor upbringing, selfishness and bad manners. BullyNation, that’s the USA!

Lori

Yes. I encounter these situations often. I’m always considerate towards others when I’m out walking, but if I encounter a set of three of four people who are blatantly disregarding the fact that they are taking up the entire sidewalk for no reason other than rudeness, I’ll stand my ground, on my side of the sidewalk, and keep walking, charge right through them if I have to. No one is going to push me, an older woman especially, off the sidewalk into deep snow in the winter or mucky areas in spring.

Bev

I too have encountered rude behaviour on sidewalks, I suppose because I am invisible 🙄 but I charge ahead and am never the first to move over. We are wonder women. Don’t ever forget that!

Jane Parkhurst

Hi all,
I do not want to feel irrelevant. If I am taking the time (precious commodity at my age) to attend an event, or meeting, it is because I am interested in the subject and have an opinion or questions I would like to ask. Hopefully we don’t ever stop learning and caring about the world around us. Have a wonderful day!

Kelly

Oh goodness, when I was working I was totally invisible – even to my direct supervisor, who ignored me. I was retired this March and it was such a relief! I now have time to go to community meetings and events and talk with people who are interested in what I have to say. I’m no longer dealing with lack of self-confidence in a job I was ill-suited for and can instead speak about community issues with confidence to people who respect what I have to say and are willing to engage with me. What a difference it’s made in my quality of life.

Steph

Yes, I have most definitely have experienced feeling invisible and found that it was a very common thing among elder women. I recall a time when I was sitting with two friends at a restaurant and it seemed that they were talking among themselves as if I did not exist. There was music in the background and a song that I love to sing, so, I did. I started singing to it. They stopped talking altogether and listened to me singing and then one of the friends started singing with me and others in the restaurant did as well. Music brings people together! And, also, I have a beautiful shade of amethyst purple in my hair along with tufts of white and gray. It is my “signature” that I have kept going for the last three years. It makes me happy and I always get compliments on it wherever I go! I usually forget that I have purple hair until someone tells me how they love it on me. I have lived gratefully for 71 years now.

Bibi

Love it!

Stella Fosse

Hi Paula! Great article – reminiscent of your wonderful book. And speaking of books, have you read Killers of a Certain Age? Three women assassins in their sixties take the power of invisibility to the max. Cheers!

The Author

In 2004, after becoming a grandmother, Paula Usrey started an encore career as an associate professor of communication. She is also a speaker and workshop facilitator. Her topics include communication and personal life planning. In July 2017, she gave her first TEDx Talk: Your Best Life at Any Age. Please visit her website here http://visionmaps4change.com/

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