Nobody asked for your opinion on aging. And yet here it comes anyway - from your doctor, your kids, your knees, and approximately everyone you've ever met over the age of forty. Slow down. Take it easy. Act your age. Be careful. You're not as young as you used to be. Thanks. Noted. Moving on. Your Age Is Calling. Don't Answer. is the book that fights back. Funny, honest, and research-backed, Eric Gage makes the case that how you approach getting older matters a lot more than the number itself. Not because attitude is magic. Not because positive thinking cures everything. But because the story you tell yourself about aging has real, measurable consequences for how you actually live - and most of us have been handed a pretty terrible story. This isn't a self-help book. There are no morning rituals, no five-step frameworks, no invitations to embrace your journey. What there is: straight talk, solid research, and the occasional reminder that a lot of what passes for wisdom about getting older is really just fear dressed up in sensible shoes. Each chapter stands on its own - read it front to back, flip to whatever's annoying you most, or hand it to someone who really needs it. The book covers the conversations nobody wants to have, the assumptions worth challenging, the things people get spectacularly wrong about aging, and the things they occasionally get right. It is honest about the hard parts. It does not wallow in them. Getting older is complicated. It involves loss. It involves change. It involves watching your body occasionally make decisions you didn't sign off on. But it also involves a kind of freedom that younger people don't have access to yet - the freedom that comes from having less to prove and more to enjoy. That's the part worth fighting for. Eric Gage spent years watching people shrink into their age - not because they had to, but because nobody told them they didn't. As a certified life coach and founder of Silvertouch Solutions, he has worked with older adults and their families long enough to know that the biggest obstacle to aging well usually isn't physical. It's the voice that tells you the best parts are already behind you. They're not. Your Age Is Calling. Don't Answer. You've Got Better Things to Do. is for everyone who isn't ready to hand over the wheel - and who suspects, correctly, that a lot of what they've been told about getting older is worth ignoring. Pick up. Decline. Get on with it.