Saturday, June 27, 2026

whenever you whisper

Did you know that whenever you whisper, "I'm sorry," a healing begins? Not a dramatic, cinematic healing with swelling music and tears, but something quieter, slow, deliberate mending of a torn seam between two people. A shouted apology often feels like a performance, desperate and demanding immediate forgiveness. But a whisper? A whisper crawls through the small space between chins and ears, carrying only truth. It says, I am small enough to admit I was wrong. It disarms the other person’s armor because there is no threat, no noise, no ego. In that hush, the listener doesn't have to defend; they only have to hear. And hearing is where healing starts. That single, soft breath can turn a grudge into a memory, a wall into a door.

Did you know that whenever you whisper, "Thank you," more is sent? Not more stuff, more kindness, more patience, more unnoticed grace. A loud thank-you is often polite but forgettable, lost in the bustle of a restaurant or the shuffle of an office. But when you lean in and whisper gratitude, into a tired parent’s ear, a colleague’s harried goodbye, a stranger’s hesitant gesture, you create a secret. You tell that person: I see you, specifically you. That whisper becomes a tiny, unrepayable debt. And human nature, curious and generous, seeks to balance the scale. The person who receives a whispered “thank you” will look for someone else to thank quietly. And so the current moves, not in waves, but in ripples. More patience is sent into a waiting room. More understanding is sent across a dinner table. More love circulates in places no one ever thinks to look.

And did you know that whenever you whisper, "I love you," days are added to your life… and a rose blooms? The science is there, if you want it: lowered cortisol, steadier heart rates, longer telomeres. But the truth is older than science. A whispered “I love you” is different from one declared from the rooftops. The rooftop shout is for the world; the whisper is only for one. It enters through the ear and settles behind the ribs, in that hollow where fear and loneliness like to hide. That whisper says, In a universe of noise, I choose your silence. Among seven billion voices, yours is the one I will lean toward. And something in the human body believes it. The cells relax. The breath deepens. Minutes accumulate like coins in a jar you forgot you had. You don't just live longer; you live more, more awake, more tender, more aware of the small, holy fact of another person’s existence.

And the rose? It blooms in the air between you. Not a physical rose, but the idea of one: fragile, fragrant, easily crushed but willing to open anyway. That rose is the moment you remember ten years later on a lonely Tuesday. That rose is the proof that softness survives. Every time you risk a whisper of real love, another unseen petal unfurls somewhere in the world’s dark corners.

So whisper. It costs you nothing but pride. It gains you everything that matters. A whisper fits through the smallest crack in a hardened heart. It asks for no reply. It expects no applause. It simply travels from your truth to theirs, and in that tiny, nearly silent space between, the world changes, not with a bang, but with a breath.

 


Friday, June 26, 2026

About Me

I'm Royce Shook, retired professional, volunteer leader, and lifelong learner who believes the Boomer generation is rewriting what it means to grow older. This blog is my conversation with you about that journey.

I spent my career in education, teaching at both the junior high and university levels. Along the way, I learned something that has stayed with me: people are capable of remarkable change at any age. I've seen students who struggled in Grade One go on to become professors. I've seen people in their 80s discover new passions and purpose. That has shaped how I see the world, and how I see this stage of life.

When I retired, I didn't slow down. I became a member of the Board of Directors of SHARE Family Services, a Workshop Presenter  for Seniors Helping Seniors association, a member of the Advisory Board for the Senior Advocate of BC, and I am now, President of the Wilson Seniors Advisory Association, a registered charity serving seniors in Port Coquitlam since 1993. In that role, I work alongside seniors who are redefining what it means to contribute, lead, and stay connected in their later years.

 I work with the Tri-Cities Seniors Action Society as Chair, and I am on the Transit Police Advisory Association as well as the Tri Cities Food Insecurity committee. I also volunteer with the BC Community Response Network, raising awareness about elder abuse, neglect, and self-neglect. I have seen how isolation can harm, and how connection can heal.


I started this blog in 2010, inspired by my mother, who kept a diary from the day she married my father. When she died at age 56, I was given the chance to open those pages and discover who she really was, what she loved, what she feared, for what she hoped. It was like meeting her for the first time.

I wanted to leave something similar for my children and grandchildren. Not my secrets, necessarily, but my presence. My voice. My particular way of seeing things.

What I didn't expect was that people, complete strangers, would start reading. And writing back. And sharing their own stories.

That changed everything.

Now I write for all of us. For the working Boomer preparing for the next chapter. For the seasoned senior navigating the second act. For anyone who wants to live with purpose, resilience, and connection, long after the work badge has been hung up.

I write about the things that matter:

  • Purpose – What gives meaning when the routines of work fall away?
  • Resilience – How do we face loss, change, and uncertainty with grace?
  • Connection – How do we build relationships across generations and communities?
  • Health and well-being – What does it take to stay active, curious, and engaged?
  • Community – How can seniors lead, mentor, and contribute?

I don't have all the answers. But I've learned a few things, mostly from watching people who show up, keep trying, and refuse to fade quietly into the background.

A Little More About Me

  • Age: I'm in my 80th year, and I'm still learning every day.
  • Family: Married to Colleen for five decades. Two children. A grandson who inspired this blog.
  • Passions: Writing, volunteering, and the occasional bus excursion with fellow seniors.
  • Belief: Every stage of life has something to teach us. The question is whether we're paying attention.

If this blog resonates with you, I'd love to hear from you.

  • Subscribe to get new posts delivered to your inbox.
  • Comment on a pos, share your own story or perspective.
  • Share a post with someone who might need it.

If you're in Port Coquitlam, stop by the Wilson Centre and say hello. I'm usually there, probably in the lounge with a coffee and a conversation.

"We don't stop because we get old. We get old because we stop."

Your Invitation

So here is my invitation to you. Stop worrying about whether people are listening to your advice. They probably are not.

Worry about whether they are watching your life. Because they definitely are.

Be kind when it is easier to be grumpy.
Be patient when it is easier to snap.
Be brave when it is easier to hide.
Show up when it is easier to stay home.

And do not worry about the ones who call you lucky. They are not your audience.

Your audience is the one person who is watching quietly, (your grandchild, your neiibours friend, your youngest child) learning silently, and getting ready to take their own first step because they saw you take yours.

That is why you keep going.

That is why being a senior is not a retreat from leadership.

It is the purest form of it.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

What Role Models Actually Do

Let me clear up a misconception.

Role models are not perfect. They are not saints. They are not people who have it all figured out.

Role models are people who keep trying. Who fall down and get back up. Who admit when they are wrong. Who apologize when they have hurt someone. Who show up even when they do not feel like it.

That is what your grandchildren need to see. Not perfection. Persistence.

They need to see you struggle and keep going. They need to see you fail and try again. They need to see you face hard things with dignity, not because it is easy, but because it is right.

That is how they learn resilience. Not from your sermons. From your scars.

I once knew a man, I will call him Frank, who lost his wife after fifty-seven years of marriage. He was devastated. He stopped coming to the centre. He stopped answering his phone. He stopped living.

And then one day, a volunteer called him. Not to fix him. Just to say, "We miss you. Your chair is empty."

Frank came back. Not all at once. Slowly. Hesitantly. He sat in the back. He did not talk much. But he came.

Over time, he started talking. Then he started helping. Then he started greeting new members at the door. The same door he had been afraid to walk through himself.

Frank never gave a speech about resilience. He never wrote a book about grief. He just showed up. And every person who watched him come back learned something that no lecture could teach.

That is what a role model does. Not teach. Show.