I'm in the same boat (41 years old, 17 years programming), and have asked myself the same questions lately. I'll assume that you, like me, enjoy programming and solving problems. Despite the economy, I'm actually pretty positive about the prospects for "seasoned programmers".
First of all, if you're good at what you do, there will always be a place and an opportunity for you. Will it show up on your doorstep, or your Inbox? Probably not. But good companies will always need talent, regardless of whether it's 25 or 50 years old. The trick is to find these companies (or start one yourself). The problem is, large swaths of the IT job market consist of CRUD programming in OfficeSpace-type cubicle hells. Technology is often a bolted-on afterthought at these companies, and they'll want to fill up the bottoms of their org charts with the cheapest keyboard monkeys they can find. I would argue that shops like this are not viable long-term career options, regardless of what the happy representative from HR says in the Career Development newsletter. Look for smaller software-specific companies; find somebody with a niche requirement that you satisfy. If you've got the technical chops for it, swing for the fences and look at Amazon, Google, or Microsoft. Hit LinkedIn and work your network. What have you got to lose?
Another reason I'm optimistic is that the computer industry is undergoing a sea change right now. New languages are popping up and becoming popular, new technologies are being announced regularly, and the whole way that applications are being designed is changing with Agile development, automated testing, and apps being "moved to the cloud". Lots of software technology is so new that everybody is starting off from Square One. In this case, a 22-year-old pup (who may not have even taken a Data Structures class in college) has no advantage over you, save perhaps in his willingness to work 80 hours a week. And real software companies know that they'd rather get 40 hours of quality code from a good programmer, rather than 80 hours of bad code from a hack. What would you rather have for dinner tonight, a succulent six-ounce tenderloin, or fifty undercooked White Castles?