Buechner has an interesting take on retirement... actually I think it is worth considering no matter what your stage in life. -- drs
Somewhere around the
age of sixty-five, many people decide it's time to stop working and
start just enjoying life. The trouble, of course, is that they're apt to
discover that with nothing much to do except play golf, travel, catch
up on their reading, watch TV, and so on, life isn't all that enjoyable.
They need something to give themselves to the way they once gave
themselves to their jobs. The question is, give themselves to what?
Maybe they could do worse than give themselves to the world that needs
them as much as they need the world.
This may involve things
like volunteer work at the hospital or delivering meals on wheels or
heading the library-fund drive, but the place where giving yourself to
the world starts is simply paying attention to the world — to the people
you've been saying hello to for years without really knowing them, to
the elementary-school kids hanging upside down on the jungle gym, to the
woman taxi driver with the face of a Boston bull and no teeth to speak
of who waits for fares at the bus stop, to the old vets marching down
Main Street on Memorial Day.
If retirees just learn
to keep their eyes open, the chances are they will find themselves more
involved, fulfilled, challenged, and nourished than all the years they
spent with their noses to the grindstone. And enjoying themselves more
too.
- Originally published in Beyond Words
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