{"id":3710,"date":"1967-12-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1967-12-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1967-vol-48-no-12-something-about-retirement\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:11:50","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:11:50","slug":"december-1967-vol-48-no-12-something-about-retirement","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1967-vol-48-no-12-something-about-retirement\/","title":{"rendered":"December 1967 &#8211; VOL. 48, No. 12 &#8211; Something about Retirement"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">We Canadians are surviving to older                     ages: we must make this survival worth while, and particularly                     our survival after retirement.<\/p>\n<p> We may have hammered out many fine achievements in our working                     years, but it is not winning isolated battles that counts                     so much as how we manage the entire campaign.<\/p>\n<p>To retire is merely to stop doing one thing and start doing                     something else. It is like moving from kindergarten to public                     school, from high school or university to career, from bachelorhood                     to marriage. It marks the end of a stage in life, but it is                     a commencement, too.<\/p>\n<p>The experiments and rebellions of youth are over: now we                     have some ground to stand on and we need only &#8211; as Archimedes                     demanded when he threatened to move the earth &#8211; a fulcrum                     and a lever. The fulcrum can be our accumulated wisdom, and                     the lever is our will to apply it.<\/p>\n<p>Society is not doing a good job if it provides for retired                     persons only physical needs while ignoring their emotional                     and psychological needs. Reaching retirement age does not                     mean that men and women can be turned out to pasture, provided                     with food, clothing, and a roof over their heads.<\/p>\n<p>Advancing age has been written about in textbooks, analysed                     in test tubes, debated by educationists, and charted by psychologists.                     It would almost seem that retirement could be taken like a                     doctor&#8217;s prescription; a simple following of the instructions.                     But it is not so. Every person is an individual, with his                     own sense of the values and of the fitness of things. Every                     person has to assess his own possibilities, set his own goal,                     and prepare himself to reach it.<\/p>\n<p>That is the subject of this <em>Letter<\/em>. Needful things                     such as budgeting have been frequent topics in previous <em>Letters<\/em>,                     and there are many sources of special information: banks,                     social agencies, community organizations, and veterans&#8217; associations.<\/p>\n<h3>You start with advantages<\/h3>\n<p>Do not plan your retirement in the spirit of being deprived                     of something, but in the spirit of having something fresh                     added to your life. You are not starting out from nothing,                     but from the point at which you have assimilated the lessons                     of half a century. Those years are a crown to wear, not a                     burden to be carried.<\/p>\n<p>By retirement time you have lost some of the fears and insecurities                     which plagued your youth, and you have achieved perspective.<\/p>\n<p>Maturity is a stage of life that has special significance.                     It is the time for you to put into effect a wisdom about life                     that is unattainable at any preceding age. The man who pushed                     through the Canadian Pacific Railway to completion said: &#8220;No                     man comes to the subconscious co-ordination of details necessary                     to control a vast system until he is sixty.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Some doors have been closed by the decline of your physical                     strength, by the loss of momentum, by the departure of friends,                     but new doors have been opened by your maturity. You have                     had a lifetime&#8217;s quota of disappointments and burned fingers,                     and they have added up to the prudence by which you know how                     to distinguish the character of troubles and for choice to                     take the lesser evils. Your judgment is keen, and you take                     a coherent view of life.<\/p>\n<h3>Choosing a path<\/h3>\n<p>Whatever other privileges a retired person surrenders, he                     retains the right to be useful and the right to dignity.<\/p>\n<p>All people are not attuned to the same sources of satisfaction.                     Everyone must discover his own powers and limitations, and                     seek his satisfactions within these bounds, being prudent                     always in his prayer lest it be answered.<\/p>\n<p>Use discrimination. You show poor judgment if you seize                     upon the first post-retirement enterprise that offers itself.                     It is said: &#8220;Second thoughts are best.&#8221; Perhaps the third                     or fourth may be better. Recall that when Socrates saw various                     articles spread out for sale he exclaimed: &#8220;How much there                     is in the world that I do not want!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Be positive in your choice. Don&#8217;t be against things so much                     as you are for things. To travel through retirement years                     you write your own passport and put visas on it for the special                     things you wish to experience: they might as well be pleasant                     things.<\/p>\n<p>Some people will settle for describing their desire in one                     word: &#8220;pleasure&#8221;. But pleasure, when it is a man&#8217;s chief purpose,                     disappoints itself. There is nothing so dreary as pleasure                     pursued. The Greek philosophers brushed it aside as unworthy                     of serious consideration.<\/p>\n<p>Even if you can afford it, you should not rely on loafing.                     Life does not have to be easy to be wonderful. In fact, a                     certain amount of asceticism is indicated. This does not mean                     self-depriving, but keeping away from tyrannical trifles,                     avoiding a giddy whirl.<\/p>\n<p>It is likely that your choice of what to do will include                     something involving work. The life role given Adam in the                     Garden of Eden was not that he should work until retirement                     age, but &#8220;till thou return unto the ground.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There is no greater cause of melancholy than idleness, which                     Lord Chesterfield described as &#8220;the refuge of weak minds and                     the holiday of fools.&#8221; Work is a means of personal fulfilment,                     whereas an inactive mind and body make life drearisome. Through                     work you bind yourself to reality, you participate in life,                     and work makes rest meaningful.<\/p>\n<p>Dynamic retirement should be your aim. This is not to be                     a dead stop, but a change of direction. You will wish to get                     up every morning with the feeling that you have something                     to do, not in exchange for the means of livelihood, but for                     your physical health and mental welfare and your happiness.<\/p>\n<h3>Make a plan<\/h3>\n<p>Much that is disappointing in retirement is caused by the                     fact that people who want to be up and doing do not know what                     they ought to be doing. This is the result of coming smack                     up against retirement without making plans.<\/p>\n<p>Fortunate people are in the position to &#8220;let down&#8221; gradually                     in keeping with their waning physical strength. While they                     are shedding everyday tasks they are making plans which will                     keep them off the wildgoose track.<\/p>\n<p>Others, who must work right up to the day before the valedictory                     presentation, should be planning also, studying projects suitable                     to their hopes and consistent with their temperaments. Everyone                     can have a list of things he might like to do, and in his                     spare time try them out. All through his active working life                     he has concentrated upon a narrow path: it is time to recall                     the many branch alleys that tempted him to detour: now comes                     his chance to consider exploring them.<\/p>\n<p>This preparation for retirement is not a frivolous occupation.                     The University of Manchester provides a special course for                     persons who are about to retire. Those who attend it realize                     that a man cannot just suddenly develop outside interests                     that will have real attraction for him.<\/p>\n<p>What you get out of retirement depends upon the investment                     you make in it ahead of the dead-line. Planning may not make                     a poor man rich, or a seventy-year-old man feel like thirty-five,                     but it will improve his bargaining position with Fate.<\/p>\n<p>Drawing a plan for ideal retirement is not, of course, equivalent                     to the realization of it. One has to harness ideas to action,                     to make some effort to put fabric into the dream shadows.                     Besides blue-printing, there is engineering to be done.<\/p>\n<h3>Seek variety<\/h3>\n<p>Get as many interests into your life as possible; touch                     life at a number of points.<\/p>\n<p>The more alternatives you have, the greater field you have                     from which to choose, and if you lose one you can fall back                     upon another. You will be surprised by the fluency with ideas                     you develop by merely listing possibilities and thinking about                     them.<\/p>\n<p>One precept applies to whatever activity you choose&#8221; keep                     it simple. Do not let your interests accumulate so that you                     have to run a night shift to keep up with them, or labour                     under a burden that is pointless or irksome.<\/p>\n<p>Be adventuresome. Try something new every once in a while;                     an innovation. You cannot bear up under the tedium of indefinite                     repetition. You are a bundle of possibilities that can be                     realized only through exploring hitherto unknown territory.                     You do not have to climb Everest or scrape the bottom of an                     ocean or split the atom to experience adventure: only to climb                     above the plateau you reached at forty or fifty years of age.<\/p>\n<h3>Having a hobby<\/h3>\n<p>Wage-earning life consisted mostly in doing what others                     around you were doing. Now is your chance to develop original                     ideas and to do different things.<\/p>\n<p>When you come to choose a hobby there are a few guidelines                     that will help. Dr. Wendell White, of the University of Minnesota,                     gave a couple of hints in <em>The Psychology of Making Life                     Interesting<\/em>, published in 1939: &#8220;To be enjoyed, a hobby                     must be chosen not because of its prestige or popularity,                     but because one likes it.&#8221; He went on to warn against starting                     a hobby which will peter out soon. Its possibilities for development                     should be unlimited.<\/p>\n<p>A third rule is: pursue preferably something in which you                     already have some skill or knowledge. A group studied the                     retirement pattern of men who had succeeded in developing                     hobbies. In every instance, the group found, the hobby interest                     had appeared earlier in life, and had been pushed aside for                     many busy years, but was in some way related to the skills                     the men had developed.<\/p>\n<p>There are hundreds of hobbies, some of them merely acquisitive                     but most of them in some way creative. If you don&#8217;t think                     you have any buried yearnings and hidden gifts, sit down with                     a piece of paper and jot down what comes into your head. Then                     discriminate.<\/p>\n<p>Carpentry? Have you the muscle to hammer and saw, the judgment                     to use power tools, the patience to measure and to true things                     up? Modelling in clay? Have you skill of eye and deftness                     of hand? Iron work; leather work; painting landscapes; knitting;                     cutting and polishing semiprecious stones? Apply similar tests                     to all these.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps you have neglected reading while you were immersed                     in daily work and family up-bringing.<\/p>\n<p>Reading is not a passive experience, except when you are                     reading trash. It should be, and it is, one of the most vigorous                     modes of living. Lifted on the shoulders of genius, we catch                     a glimpse of undivined worlds which are within reach of the                     human spirit.<\/p>\n<p>Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote winningly: &#8220;I care not how                     humble your bookshelf may be, nor how lowly the room which                     it adorns. Close the door of that room behind you, shut off                     with it all the cares of the outer world, plunge back into                     the soothing company of the great dead, and then you are through                     the magic portal into that fair land whither worry and vexation                     can follow you no more.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Writing has many points in its favour as a hobby. Everyone                     has some topic of interest to him. It is a convenient hobby,                     because it can be carried on anywhere without bulky apparatus.                     It is a worthwhile hobby, because it can contribute something                     to human knowledge and wisdom. No person has yet exhausted                     all possible experiences or thoughts, or said all the best                     things.<\/p>\n<p>Your writing may take an autobiographical turn, you may                     build an anthology of thoughts that have inspired or amused                     you, you may write a collection of meditations, or you may                     write poems. Whatever form it may take &#8211; writing letters                     to members of your family and friends or preparing a book                     for the press &#8211; writing gives you the feeling of belonging                     completely to yourself.<\/p>\n<p>Your interest may lie rather in the field of social contribution.                     Can you do something toward solving the problems of people?                     Opportunity may be brushing you with her wings, enticing you                     to perform the finest actions of your life.<\/p>\n<p>No association of people ever seems to have enough hands                     to do all the things that need to be done. The church may                     be in want of repairs and maintenance work, or you may be                     able to take some of the pastoral load such as visits to &#8220;shut-ins&#8221;;                     there may be openings in community health and welfare agencies;                     young people may welcome someone who will teach them woodworking,                     music, astronomy, business practices, or a hundred other things                     in some of which you are skilled.<\/p>\n<h3>Keep learning<\/h3>\n<p>That you have skills does not mean that you stop learning.                     You must keep alive your spirit of inquiry. A healthy active                     mind, like a healthy body, is more interesting to live with                     than a sick and static one. To keep on learning is the very                     breath of mental life.<\/p>\n<p>Some people say offhandedly: &#8220;You can&#8217;t teach an old dog                     new tricks.&#8221; The reason probably is that the dog doesn&#8217;t want                     to learn. The current flowering of adult education in Canada                     shows that people in their later years who want to learn,                     and are not ashamed to learn, have no trouble in learning.<\/p>\n<p>The psychologist C. Judson Herrick wrote in his book <em>The                     Thinking Machine<\/em>: &#8220;Intelligently directed learning in                     some people does not attain its maximum efficiency until middle                     life.&#8221; Education is a continuous growth of the mind and a                     continuous illumination of the art of living.<\/p>\n<p>Up to now you may have been skimming the surface of many                     things which interested you, without time to dig deeper. Here                     is the opportunity to do more. Instead of reading the newspapers                     and watching television passively you can probe for the causes                     and meanings of things.<\/p>\n<p>An hour&#8217;s research in a public library will answer many                     questions about any topic of interest, and will lead you into                     asking a dozen more questions seeking answers. A thousand                     things will become clear which were formerly enveloped in                     obscurity.<\/p>\n<p>Research of any subject is fascinating. The twilight zone                     between what we know and the vast range of what we do not                     know presents us with unlimited frontiers. Simple questions                     like &#8220;How does it work? What caused this? If I do this, then                     what happens?&#8221; lead to rich treasures. &#8220;The wise man&#8221;, said                     Andr\u00e9 Gide, the Nobel Prize-winning French novelist,                     &#8220;is he who constantly wonders afresh&nbsp;&#8230; for him the                     world is always being born again.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This leads us into consideration of philosophy, which may                     be the crowning pleasure of life. It helps you to understand                     the principles you live by. As the Stoic philosophers viewed                     it: &#8220;Philosophy as a way of life makes men free. It is the                     last ditch stand of liberty in a world of servitude.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Philosophy is opposed to those blights of modern society:                     dogmatism, closed-mindedness, smugness, intolerance, inability                     to see the other side. It takes a man out of the private world                     in which he is likely to drowse away his retirement into the                     common world of all mankind in which, fully awake, he knows                     and feels that he is living.<\/p>\n<p>Thinking philosophically does not mean taking life apart,                     as some critics do art, and arguing about its brush-strokes.                     It does not mean becoming a follower of any one school of                     philosophy. It accepts the best from all, as was done by Dr.                     Will Durant in <em>The Story of Philosophy<\/em>, a good book                     for the beginner because it opens up many inviting doors.<\/p>\n<h3>Making use of talent<\/h3>\n<p>Canada should be making full use of the vast reservoir of                     thought and talent and skill represented by its two million                     people who are over 60 years of age.<\/p>\n<p>All through their active vocational life they have been                     using knowledge borrowed from their predecessors and their                     colleagues. Now, upon retirement, they are in position to                     repay the obligation by passing it along, with interest, to                     others.<\/p>\n<p>Knowledge gained in school and university has to go through                     the refining fire of experience, where it is transformed into                     the practical wisdom which retired people have.<\/p>\n<p>We could organize groups of senior consultants, all of whom                     would be kept intellectually alive by confronting problems                     concerning which they would be expected to offer counsel.<\/p>\n<p>Some groups might form the teaching staff of postgraduate                     schools for certain professional people. This has been done                     successfully in California, where retired professors from                     law schools conduct classes for both students and practising                     lawyers.<\/p>\n<p>Retired men from the sciences, technology, finance and industry                     might conduct seminars which would be attended by younger                     men who now carry the load of instruction in schools, laboratories                     and business. Their problems would be treated in clinical                     fashion by those who had become seasoned by long observation                     and practice.<\/p>\n<p>People who are skilled in arts, crafts and world political                     affairs could instruct adult education groups, bringing to                     the task an air of authority combined with a feeling of understanding.<\/p>\n<p>All these, and a thousand other, paths beckon to the retired                     person, so there is no need to resent retirement and to grow                     crankily old. You do not wish to start the second part of                     your life journey in the spirit of the words attributed to                     the man who was one time King in Jerusalem. His retrospection                     of vast achievements was the melancholy refrain: &#8220;Vanity of                     vanities&nbsp;&#8230; all is vanity.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Live with an air of expectancy, responding generously and                     freshly to every incident of life. Those who seem to give                     and to get the most out of life are those who have, in addition                     to all their other qualities, these two: they do enthusiastically                     whatever they are doing, and they get deep-down joy out of                     very simple things.<\/p>\n<p>Control your worry. To think constructively is not harmful                     worry but normal planning. Samuel Pepys worried so much about                     trifles that he wrote in his diary: &#8220;Was glad of a very bad                     occasion for my being really troubled.&#8221; One way to avoid unnecessary                     worry over trifles, particularly other people&#8217;s trifles, is                     to show polite disinterest.<\/p>\n<p>Take disappointments with fortitude. The Spartans said that                     if the enemy let fly so many arrows that they darkened the                     sun it would be an advantage because they would be fighting                     in the shade.<\/p>\n<h3>Making the adjustment<\/h3>\n<p>What causes perturbation of our minds? Nothing but our opinions                     about things. With poise of heart and mind we can keep events                     from closing in on us. By keeping our minds open we start                     to live every day afresh. Recall the clergyman who burned                     his sermon every Sunday night so that he would have to live                     and preach currently.<\/p>\n<p>Upon retirement, you must be capable of adapting yourself                     intelligently to new conditions. The speed of social change                     puts a premium on flexibility. We need to grasp environmental                     opportunity, whatever form it may take, and follow not the                     line of least resistance but that of greatest opportunity                     and benefit.<\/p>\n<p>If we cannot change the world to suit our ideas, then we                     can change ourselves to fit the new situation as it is. In                     cricket language, if we can&#8217;t make runs we should at least                     keep a straight bat, thus protecting the wicket. Churchill                     said to Lord Moran: &#8220;I am not ambitious any more. I only want                     not to make an ass of myself.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Everything &#8211; fight or flight &#8211; is fitting to its                     occasion. When you pass your sixtieth year you are suited                     to a different environment than when you celebrated your fortieth                     birthday. You need to adjust yourself to your new self, to                     society and to life. Retirement may bring a sense as of a                     ship that has been sailing lop-sided. Now is a chance to shift                     cargo and ballast, and get the ship right on its keel.<\/p>\n<p>Even if you have arrived at retirement without making plans,                     all is not lost. You may not wish to start studying French                     at 80, as Sydney Smith did, or oriental literature at 66,                     as Goethe did, but you can start something, whatever your                     age. The best thing to supply an interest in life is to launch                     out on something new.<\/p>\n<h3>A sting and a twinkle<\/h3>\n<p>There is a sting in leaving a well-grooved path, but there                     should be a twinkle in your eye as you anticipate what you                     are going to find on other paths.<\/p>\n<p>Life, after its <em>presto <\/em>passages, has reached <em>adagio<\/em>.                     The tempo changes, and in the words of the chorus in Shakespeare&#8217;s                     <em>Henry V<\/em>: &#8220;Now sits Expectation in the air.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Gratifications that have been deferred are at hand. In childhood                     we took what was given us; in youth we sought to make something                     of ourselves; in adulthood we were often compelled to take                     what professional purveyors of ideas thought good for us;                     in our maturity we are on our own, independent alike of gifts,                     pressure and propaganda.<\/p>\n<p>Some secrets of the well-rounded retired life are these:                     make the most of what you have; wherever you go, go with your                     whole heart; keep your eye on what&#8217;s coming up, not what&#8217;s                     slipping by; play your role with comeliness; do not let the                     minutes rust away.<\/p>\n<p>Then, may &#8220;Spring come to you, at the farthest,<\/p>\n<p>In the very end of harvest.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[47],"class_list":["post-3710","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-47"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>December 1967 - VOL. 48, No. 12 - Something about Retirement - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1967-vol-48-no-12-something-about-retirement\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"December 1967 - VOL. 48, No. 12 - Something about Retirement - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"We Canadians are surviving to older ages: we must make this survival worth while, and particularly our survival after retirement. 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We may have hammered out many fine achievements in our working years, but it is not winning isolated battles that counts so much as how we manage the entire campaign. 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