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Aging & Wisdom Quote by Jeanne Calment

"Every age has its happiness and troubles"

About this Quote

Spoken by someone who outlived three centuries of headlines, Jeanne Calment's line is less a greeting-card comfort than a flex of perspective. "Every age has its happiness and troubles" quietly punctures the fantasy that any one era is the promised land. It's a one-sentence antidote to nostalgia and doomscrolling, delivered by a woman whose life spanned bicycles to computers, world wars to consumer booms. When your personal timeline includes both the Belle Epoque and the Cold War, you stop believing in clean before-and-after stories.

The phrasing matters: not "progress" and "decline", but "happiness" and "troubles" in the same breath, as paired constants. Calment isn't weighing eras against each other; she's leveling them. That balance is the subtext. It suggests that our habit of declaring the present uniquely broken is a kind of egotism, and our habit of romanticizing the past is selective editing.

As a celebrity, Calment's authority comes from longevity-as-performance. She became famous not for a body of work but for being a living archive, a human time-lapse. The intent feels conversational, even sly: a small correction to younger people's certainty, a reminder that history doesn't hand out neat moral arcs. The line works because it offers relief without denial: your troubles are real, but they aren't unprecedented; your joys are possible, but they won't arrive with a perfect era attached.

Quote Details

TopicAging
Source
Verified source: Jeanne Calment: From Van Gogh's Time to Ours (Jeanne Calment, 1998)
Text match: 97.14%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
No more than now. Every age has its happiness and troubles. (p. 49 (quote appears in an interview-style Q&A section)). The quote appears as a spoken response by Jeanne Calment in the English-language book presented as conversations/interviews with her. In the Scribd text-rendering, the quote is shown in a Q&A passage about the birth of her daughter Yvonne, immediately followed by the running header/footer text indicating page 49. Multiple independent quote-reference sites (e.g., Wikiquote/AZQuotes) also attribute this line to the same book and specifically to p. 48, suggesting the quote’s pagination may differ by edition/format or that the Scribd rendering shifts page markers. I was not able (from accessible primary scans) to verify an earlier (pre-1998) publication/interview where this exact English wording first appeared; this 1998 book is the earliest primary-source instance I could directly locate and quote.
Other candidates (1)
Annual Review of Gerontology and Geriatrics, Volume 27, 2007 (Leonard W. Poon, Thomas T. Perls, 2007) compilation95.0%
... Jeanne Calment had also eaten the same food, she was able to withstand the poison. One can only speculate to what...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Calment, Jeanne. (2026, March 1). Every age has its happiness and troubles. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/every-age-has-its-happiness-and-troubles-11890/

Chicago Style
Calment, Jeanne. "Every age has its happiness and troubles." FixQuotes. March 1, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/every-age-has-its-happiness-and-troubles-11890/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Every age has its happiness and troubles." FixQuotes, 1 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/every-age-has-its-happiness-and-troubles-11890/. Accessed 4 Mar. 2026.

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Every Age Has Its Happiness and Troubles - Jeanne Calment
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About the Author

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Jeanne Calment (February 21, 1875 - August 4, 1997) was a Celebrity from France.

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