Social Sharing
But it’s a well-intentioned nosiness for the Toronto senior who, like any devoted grandmother, just wants to know what her grandchildren are up to.
Kronenberg regularly logs onto her computer and goes to Facebook to find out about their comings and goings, and in doing so, has become one of an increasing number of Canadian seniors turning to computers and social media to stay connected with the world around them.
The New Retirement: Seniors in Canada
This week, CBC News launches a series on life for people 60 years and older. Canadians are living longer than ever before, a fact that is radically changing the meaning of retirement. Many people see it as a time of reinvention, a time to try new things.
All week long, CBC News will be publishing stories on seniors who are doing remarkable things in the so-called twilight years Uruguay kaunis tyttö.
“I want to check up on my grandchildren … I want to see what they’re doing, their girlfriends, their boyfriends, what nonsense they’re up to,” says Kronenberg, a resident at Forest Hill Retirement Living in north Toronto.
Figures from Statistics Canada show that the number of Canadians 75 years of age and older who are online grew from five per cent in 2000 to 27 per cent in 2012.
A report last year by seniors’ services provider Revera Inc. in partnership with Leger Marketing found that more than half of online seniors older than 75 belong to a social networking site such as Facebook, and more than one-third of them go to those sites daily. Continue reading