Ok, this may be a little Pollyanna of me (hint: re: my age), but I think disillusionment and burnout among many older workers contributes to the stereotype of the younger person having more useful knowledge and enthusiasm. I think this happens because many people don't feel they have the option (financially) to hold out for a "good" job, and eventually the many "bad" jobs wear them down. <br><br>My experience is that the older I get, the more employers expect me to have strengths other than technical ones, i.e. good judgement, personal maturity, ability to scope a project, assess alternative approaches, etc. These are the skills I <i>have</i> to market in interviews, as no one's ever been impressed with my technical depth! I also play up my ability to adapt to new situations based on having so many different experiences to relate to. <br><br>Employers seem to be suspect of the person with "20 years experience", who's actually only had "1 year of experience, 20 times". They know the younger ones have energy and hours to devote, and want to make sure the older ones have something extra worth trading for that. Of course, some employers that I would judge unwise are just looking for cheap labor. But they're not any fun to work for, so I'm glad if they screen me out, helping me to avoid burning out while working for them. Sometimes I go longer between jobs than I'd choose, but it's worth the wait.<br><br>I work for a terrific employer right now, but this project is ending shortly so I'm actively looking for something new. I'm reminding myself every day to keep alive the vision of the next "great" job, where the expectation is a fair day's labor for a fair wage, and I get to feel creative and appreciated <g>. That's what helps me from burning out and coming across as tired and bored at interviews.<br><br>BTW, if you're worried only about ageism, cheer up - it probably means you're <i>not</i> being discriminated against because of sexism or racism too!