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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To ask what age you would say is no longer dying young

368 replies

Whyohwhy88 · 01/01/2026 19:35

Although hard still I feel from 80 onwards it’s expected

OP posts:
scottishgirl69 · 01/01/2026 21:25

Zov · 01/01/2026 20:59

No disrepect, and I'm sure your dad is quite active for his age, but he is still 85 years old. His brain is, his heart and internal organs are, his body is, his eyes and ears are.... He will not be 'fitter than most 60 years olds.' Sorry he just won't be.

I know half a dozen people nearby to me in my village who are 82-87, and they present as quite fit and active. They go for 1 to 1.5 mile walks around the village every other day, go to a hobby group, or do crown green bowling in the village, and do bits of gardening and suchlike, and 3 of them still drive, but no way are they/their health/fitness levels anywhere near as good as mine (I am late 50s/nearly 60...)

My DH is just past 60, and the difference between him (and me) and the people 20-25 years older is very noticeable.

I walk 3-4 miles a day, still work 3 days a week, and think nothing of driving anywhere, anytime, and am strong and fit, and if I fall over/trip, I bounce back up and walk on. Someone of 80+ would need an ambulance if they did that. I don't have hearing aids. Most people I know 80+ absolutely do.... Most have to wear glasses. I don't.

DH is much fitter and stronger than them, he still works 30 hours a week, and he thinks nothing of doing 400-600 mile round trip drives/driving around the mountains in Wales... Or up to Scotland and back... No person I know in their 80s - male or female - will drive that distance. Most of them just pootle up and down to the market town - 10 mile round trip... Occasionally they may go to the nearest big town - 25 mile round trip, but that is rare. They usually go with their adult child who is their 40s or 50s. They will often have one of their adult children take them to hospital appointments too. (Hospital is 40 mile round trip...)

DH and I have both had flu, very bad colds and viruses, food poisoning, and covid over the past few years, and we have bounced back really quickly. Many people 80+ will be hospitalised for weeks... Or will die. (From similar things...)

I'm sure you (and/or someone else) will say your 80+ year old dad or uncle or grandad runs marathons every month, and regularly drives to the South of France and back, and could fall from the top of a flight of stairs/steps and get up and walk off, but in reality, the vast majority will not...

.

Edited

I'm strong and fit too - but age has nothing to do with whether you jump up and bounce back if you trip and fall. I broke my arm when I was 38. You might not always bounce back

Age has nothing to do with eyesight either. I've been wearing glasses since I was 12. My brother since he was 8.

Short sightedness runs in my family

Dillydollydingdong · 01/01/2026 21:25

80

maddiemookins16mum · 01/01/2026 21:26

Anything over 75.

penelopelady · 01/01/2026 21:27

75-80 people who say younger are probably young or have ill health but as a nurse I don’t consider anyone old until 80, I am 56 and got a lot of good years in me I hope. I think my parents both died young at 50 and 65.

Advocodo · 01/01/2026 21:27

I would say 70 is not dying young but feel it’s too soon in my mind. 80 feels about right,

FiveShelties · 01/01/2026 21:29

My view of someone 'dying too soon' seems to be rising as I get older.

IfWhippetsRuledTheWorld · 01/01/2026 21:30

70+ is not unexpected, sad, yes, but definitely not "young"

PurpleCyclamen · 01/01/2026 21:31

It’s all relative. I would say 55.

Blizzardofleaves · 01/01/2026 21:32

Dying young is 40s and under
Dying before you would expect or /hope is anything under 75 for me.

GloriousGiftBag · 01/01/2026 21:40

BruFord · 01/01/2026 20:51

@3luckystars Many 50-year-olds have teenagers or younger children though (I’m 51) so we’d consider that far too young.

Sadly I have a friend with terminal cancer who’s unlikely to make it through this year and her children are far too young to lose their Mum. 😕

DH is soon turning 50 and we have dc still in primary. We are not unusually old parents at the school gates either. I know of women having babies at 42/43 so them dying at 50 would leave v young children. I was only just at uni when my parents turned 50 and would have considered myself too young for them to die then too.

Iamnofool · 01/01/2026 21:40

Given the average age of dying in UK, anyone who dies before age that is dying young. That’s not to say they are a young person.
My husband died at 76. Sooner than expected but his father died at 65, his brother at 52, all heart related. Too young to die, but not young.
My dad died at 85, my mum at 92, so I am expecting to do the same or longer. I and my friends are all 80+, all very active
socially and mentally.
Don’t write everyone off at 70. That’s far too young.

OneWildandWonderfulLife · 01/01/2026 21:41

FiveShelties · 01/01/2026 21:29

My view of someone 'dying too soon' seems to be rising as I get older.

I came on to say exactly this!

As the SPA rises I think anyone who doesn’t get 10 years as a pensioner has died too soon, so before 77.

My DM is in her late 90s she is awesome, still cooks a roast dinner, does her own washing, changes her bed etc, staunch republican, thinks the Labour Party is too right wing, can name most of the cabinet. Tells me what’s happening in the world. I think that if she doesn’t make 100 she will have died too young!

GloriousGiftBag · 01/01/2026 21:44

Most of my older relatives have died in their mid to late 80s, so I feel a bit shocked when I hear of people dying in their early 70s. But some people have physical illnesses and dementia and need care in their 70s and seem much older than my aunt who died after a shirt illness at 91. She was living alone and caring for herself and her pets until the last 3 weeks or so of her life.

I am very much a quality not quantity person. I want to be around to support my dc and enjoy life. I don't want to reach a certain age if it means poor quality of life to get there.

SomethingRattling · 01/01/2026 21:46

Chasingsquirrels · 01/01/2026 19:46

Actually, "dying young" and "dying earlier than you'd expect" are really 2 different questions.

The OP was "dying young", but most people (and I) are probably answering "dying earlier than you'd expect".

Good point.
'Dying young' = under 50.
'Dying a fair bit earlier than I'd expect in this area at this time' = under 80

Peridoteage · 01/01/2026 21:46

Mid 70s onward. My dad is 78, was always super fit and energetic. He has just shifted in the last couple of years.... He is still in excellent health for his age but doesn't have the energy he had, the long trips are no longer being planned, he finds the grandchildren increasingly overwhelming, he's struggled to keep up with his more active hobbies. He seems to fall asleep more, his appetite has definitely dropped. There's no going back once it starts.

Dmsandfloatydress · 01/01/2026 21:46

Anything over 70 isn't dying young. Really anything post state pension age. My dad is 73 and if he died tomorrow that wouldn't be shocking or tragic. My granny is 100 and that's far too bloody old! Looks painful and unpleasant. I certainly want to bugger off at least a decade before then.

PolarCrane · 01/01/2026 21:48

<70

Namechangedconfession · 01/01/2026 21:48

isargosaword · 01/01/2026 19:58

Also with the average age to have children climbing, if most people have a baby in their mid 30s then first-time grandparents will be around 70+, if not a bit older, when their grandchild is a new baby- all the more reason for 75 not to seem old enough to go.

My grandparents became great grandparents when they were 75. One passed not long after and it really hurt as it was sudden but the age wasn’t unusual. I think under 50 is young to die and under 70 is too soon.

Blizzardofleaves · 01/01/2026 21:48

GloriousGiftBag · 01/01/2026 21:40

DH is soon turning 50 and we have dc still in primary. We are not unusually old parents at the school gates either. I know of women having babies at 42/43 so them dying at 50 would leave v young children. I was only just at uni when my parents turned 50 and would have considered myself too young for them to die then too.

That is the downside of having children very late. I dont consider 50 years old to be ‘young’ in any sense of the word, but obviously it is young to die, but not dying ‘young’ in my view, just much earlier than you would expect.

ThisTaupeZebra · 01/01/2026 21:54

Interesting thread. I have experienced several family deaths of people between the ages of 72-75. All were described as young to die, and I just couldn't see it.

Many justified the claim that being in your 30s, 40s or 50s and losing a parent was young. But it is actually quite normal.

I have always felt my view on this was very out of whack with the mainstream. And this thread confirms it.

therewasafishinthepercolator · 01/01/2026 21:56

BruFord · 01/01/2026 20:51

@3luckystars Many 50-year-olds have teenagers or younger children though (I’m 51) so we’d consider that far too young.

Sadly I have a friend with terminal cancer who’s unlikely to make it through this year and her children are far too young to lose their Mum. 😕

That is heartbreaking and really is too young. I'm so sorry to hear that.

LOttyered · 01/01/2026 21:57

I would say young 35/40.
I was sad my colleague died mid 50s.
my relative had heart attack at 50.
A lot of relatives living to 90-95 and in some ways its too long as there was a steep decline in early 90s.
i think under 50 now likely wont have seen their kids grow up

ViciousCurrentBun · 01/01/2026 21:58

I have had 3 friends die, one at 41 and the other 2 were 54, DH had a friend from University die who was only 38. These were all far too soon and one of the 54 year olds had her children at 40 and 42.

I think under 70 seems a bit unfair as it seems expected to live longer but it’s not young at all, I write this just a decade from this age.

tachetastic · 01/01/2026 21:59

80+

My sister passed this year at 62 and that definitely felt very young.

My dad passed at 78, which did not feel young but he had had cancer for six years and when he first fell ill when he was 72 that did still feel like he had a lot of life left and had not been retired long enough after all those years of working.

My mum is now 88 and she would be the first to tell you she is ready to be with the love of her life again, be thrown over his shoulder and run upstairs with, as he used to do for a joke when we were kids.

Maybe that's part of the formula. If they were still together, even with him now at 92 (as he would be), maybe they would still feel that life had more to offer, but I know my mum doesn't feel that, no matter how much of a fuss we make and how many grandchildren/great-grandchildren she has.

Manova14 · 01/01/2026 21:59

Iamnofool · 01/01/2026 21:40

Given the average age of dying in UK, anyone who dies before age that is dying young. That’s not to say they are a young person.
My husband died at 76. Sooner than expected but his father died at 65, his brother at 52, all heart related. Too young to die, but not young.
My dad died at 85, my mum at 92, so I am expecting to do the same or longer. I and my friends are all 80+, all very active
socially and mentally.
Don’t write everyone off at 70. That’s far too young.

The average (mean) represents the most frequent age of death. There's a wide range either side where death is still very common.
I would say if someone dies at -1 standard deviation from the mean, that is dying young.
(Sorry, being a stats nerd).

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