Manage Your Life

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Will you work when you're eighty?

Getty Images

Getty Images

I spend every Sunday visiting my 94-year old grandmother. She is unusually healthy and independent for her age. But what strikes me most about her is that she is lacking in purpose. Little things take on big importance because not very much happens from day to day. And she is always looking back at the period in her life when she felt useful and productive. When she could do things and go places. This experience, coupled with the fact that I really enjoy my work, makes me think I will likely work until I can no longer work.

The interesting thing is that my grandmother doesn’t even understand what I do -- a common issue for people who age and lose connection to the workforce. In fact, we had a running debate on whether “blog” was a real word since it wasn’t in her dictionary. Finally, she saw a reference on CNN to Larry King’s blog and then an article in her Readers Digest about blogs, and she conceded that I was not making up this work I claimed to do. Since my grandmother has never been on the Internet, I can understand why blogs don’t seem real. And thought it’s easy for me to say I’ll commit to staying current on the ways people work, I do wonder how hard that will be once yet to be envisioned tools are created by those generations younger than I.

All this made me pleased to discover the blog, “Staying Vertical: Dispatches from the Old Old on Work and Happiness,” relating to a book in progress by Ashton Applewhite (hat tip to Deborah Siegel for turning me on to Applewhite’s work.) Applewhite says she is looking at both paid and volunteer work done by the very old, and she says it hasn’t been at all difficult to find octogenarians at work.

The inspiration for Applewhite's project came from her in-laws, Ruth and Bill Stein, a couple in their mid-eighties who work as entrepreneurs in book sales, a career they both started in their mid-fifties. (Listen to the recorded interview of the Steins for a quick dose of inspiration).

Applewhite is exploring fascinating questions like “Will your job do you in or keep you going?” (Sounds like work can keep us going, but only if it’s the right kind of work. Enagaging but not relentlessly boring or too physically taxing.)

What are your thoughts about working into old age?
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From the Community…

Comments 61-64 of 64
  • Janiece's Avatar
    Posted by Janiece Fri Sep 25, 2009 7:42am PDT

    I retired at the age of 60so I could move to the state where my oldest daughter lives. I found myself by myself with nothing to do. I wish I had waited another 5 or 10 years. But, I do have a good retirement check so I wouldn't want to take a job someone else might really need. However I know how hard it is to find good child care when you are a single mom so I would like to help some single mom with inexpenise daycare in my future just so I can stay busy.

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  • Errol's Avatar
    Posted by Errol Fri Sep 25, 2009 8:34pm PDT

    After 30 years of working I retired from my full time job about five years ago. However I continued working at a part time job that paid three times less than I earned at the full time job from which I retired. The part time job has turned into a full time job and I ask myself why work for three times less an hour if money was the answer to why I am still working. The answer eludes me and I continue to work even though I am eligible for social security. With the high costs of Health Care Insurance to supplement Medicare, cost of housing, real estate taxes, federal income taxes, State taxes, and the general cost of living, it appears that one will just have to keep working if one wants to continue living.

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  • bruce's Avatar
    Posted by bruce Fri Oct 2, 2009 11:10am PDT

    I took one for the team and voluntarily retired at 62. Place had absolutely no work. I left after 44+ years at the same place. the adjustment to basically 10 extra hours a day of free time is tough. Have thought about applying for part time work but in the long run it may mess up my current COBRA health benefits. Look that one up youngsters.If you are under 30 get in a 401K and save as much as you can.

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  • Terry's Avatar
    Posted by Terry Sun Oct 4, 2009 8:16pm PDT

    I think it is important to keep moving as long as possible. This wiil include volunteer work and or part time work. It won't be moving as fast as we used to, but its still important to keep moving as much and as long as you can.

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