# Cocota's Story: Life Lessons in Aging, Resilience, and End‐of‐Life Agency From a Brazilian Matriarch

**Authors:** Thiago J. Avelino‐Silva, Niousha Moini

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/jgs.19566 · Journal of the American Geriatrics Society · 2025-06-03

## TL;DR

The paper explores how resilience, shaped over a lifetime, helps older adults like Brazilian matriarch Cocota adapt to aging and end-of-life challenges.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a multidomain view of resilience, emphasizing its role in fostering autonomy and purpose in aging through a real-life case study.

## Key findings

- Resilience is not static but emerges through lifelong experiences and social ties.
- Cocota's story shows how physiological and psychosocial resilience interact to support recovery and autonomy in late life.
- Her end-of-life agency highlights resilience as a final expression of self-determination.

## Abstract

Resilience is increasingly recognized as a central factor in how older adults adapt to life's inevitable changes, yet many clinicians remain unfamiliar with its practical applications in late life. Drawing on the true story of Cocota, a Brazilian matriarch who lived to be 100, this special article illustrates how resilience is neither a static trait nor limited to mere survival. Instead, it emerges over decades, shaped by early adversities and sustained through purposeful roles, strong social ties, and an enduring sense of autonomy. Although psychological, social, and spiritual resources are crucial, physiological resilience also plays an essential role, reflecting adaptive responses at organ, cellular, and molecular levels that help older adults recover from acute health stressors. In Cocota's case, a hip fracture in her 80s did not lead to permanent disability; rather, she reclaimed her daily routines, demonstrating the interplay between physical robustness and unwavering determination. Equally telling was her decision to “stop eating and drinking” near life's end, exemplifying resilience as a final expression of agency. We further explore how her experiences align with deeper forms of well‐being, marked by purpose and prosocial behavior, and practical wisdom, including emotional regulation and sound moral judgment. By examining her life journey, clinicians and community partners can better appreciate how resilience spans physical, cognitive, psychosocial, and spiritual domains, ultimately guiding more integrated strategies to support older adults. The lessons learned have direct relevance for clinical interventions, community programs, and public health initiatives aimed at fostering autonomy and meaningful engagement in later life.

Resilience, cultivated across physical, cognitive, psychosocial, and spiritual domains, shapes how older adults navigate late‐life challenges yet remains unfamiliar to many clinicians. Drawing on the 100‐year journey of Brazilian matriarch Cocota, this article demonstrates how lifelong adaptations, from overcoming early hardships to achieving self‐determination at life's end, provide actionable cues for fostering autonomy and purpose in aging (Adapted from Abadir et al. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2023;71:2381–2392).

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hip fracture (MESH:D006620)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12318448/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12318448