I recently realized that I have been retired for almost 20 years. I retired at 60 and am now approaching my 80th year. I plan to be around for at least another few years.
I am not in the minority. In modern society, people are still acting like life wraps up at 60 or 70 yet we're now living well into our 90s and beyond. This disconnect between how we live and how we think about aging is one of the most significant societal misalignments of our time. Retirement, healthcare, employment, and even personal identity are still being structured around outdated assumptions rooted in the 20th century. This mental model assumes a brief window between retirement and death, but today, that “retirement phase” can span 25 to 35 years , nearly a third of a person’s life.
If society
fails to adjust to this new reality, retirees may face isolation, inadequate
income, and identity crises. Businesses might lose valuable workers
prematurely. Health care systems may be strained by avoidable chronic
illnesses. Pension systems may become unsustainable. And workers in their 40s
and 50s , who are likely to live to 90+ ,
may be preparing for a retirement based
on faulty timelines and expectations.
We need a
new narrative: one that views aging not as a decline but as an evolving stage
of life with value, productivity, creativity, and continued contribution. Thus,
my writing to help people think about a new narrative. Over the next two weeks
I will be exploring the idea that many of us are planning for a life that no longer
exits. Have fun with me as I explore rethinking life after 60 in fourteen
posts.
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