{"id":3947,"date":"1972-03-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1972-03-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1972-vol-53-no-3-retirement-what-then\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:42:31","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:42:31","slug":"march-1972-vol-53-no-3-retirement-what-then","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1972-vol-53-no-3-retirement-what-then\/","title":{"rendered":"March 1972 &#8211; VOL. 53, No. 3 &#8211; Retirement: What Then?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The time to answer &#8220;What Then?&#8221; is before                     the day of retirement comes. That may not be due until one                     reaches sixty or sixty-five, but at forty a person should                     be learning about it and developing the expertise to cope                     with it and accumulating the necessities to make it comfortable.<\/p>\n<p> When a child arrives at the age to go to school, when the                     youth enters high school or university, when the man or woman                     takes a first job and gets married: these are not thought                     of as age tombstones, but as events in the stream of life;                     as changes in status. In the same way, retirement is to be                     looked upon as the beginning of a new life experience.<\/p>\n<p>Every person who retires is a special case, and he needs                     to give himself personal attention. No formula will fit everyone,                     but everyone can benefit by applying the experiences of others                     to his own case. It is sad to see those who reach retirement                     facing difficulties which they might have avoided by forethought                     and planning.<\/p>\n<h3>A fresh outlook<\/h3>\n<p>It is disappointing when one depends upon the reputation                     and memories of the past to sustain him in the present. One                     need not copy youthful ways or act in a skittish manner in                     order to keep a fresh outlook on life. The fire of youth may                     be tempered with the gravity of age, but the circumspection                     of age may be enlivened with the vivacity of youth.<\/p>\n<p>The greatest dividends in terms of retirement success and                     enjoyment are gained by those who start planning early in                     life, so that the transfer from their first to their second                     career is made without anxiety. As one of the youthful discussion                     group in Cicero&#8217;s &#8220;Essay on Old Age&#8221; remarks: &#8220;Although we                     are at present far distant from old age, we have reason to                     expect &#8211; at least to hope &#8211; that it is a period                     we shall live to attain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The man is depriving himself of much enjoyment and satisfaction                     who reaches the day of retirement with no programme in his                     mind except to do a little fishing or take a month&#8217;s motor                     trip. It is unwise to trust that chance will turn up some                     occupation that is worth while. Just as a corporation sets                     objectives for production and profits for years ahead, so                     objectives for desirable retirement should be made and reviewed.<\/p>\n<p>Planning this second life can be done more intelligently                     than planning the first, because a man is smarter now. The                     clever thing is to make a list of the things you might like                     to do when you leave your present job, and then, in your spare                     time, try them out. It isn&#8217;t enough to think that you might                     enjoy working with tools: get some and try them out. Don&#8217;t                     just dream of having a market garden: go for a two week vacation                     in one and spend your time digging, spraying, hoeing and harvesting.<\/p>\n<p>That is planning intelligently. In its simplest form intelligence                     is the ability to think rationally and to weigh situations.                     This is usually called &#8220;common sense&#8221;. It is also the ability                     to plan actions after constructive thinking. It shows itself                     in the satisfactory way we adapt ourselves to circumstances                     and make the best use of them.<\/p>\n<p>Putting a plan down in black and white, making a resource                     list of aptitudes, skills, interests and physical assets,                     enables a man to assess the degree to which his plan will                     enable him to achieve a suitable balance among his various                     needs and wishes, and to fill his life adequately.<\/p>\n<h3>Filling the time<\/h3>\n<p>Do not approach retirement with the idea in mind that you                     are going to play games you are not used to and do not particularly                     like in order to fill the time and escape boredom. Some people,                     after a life of heavy or tedious work have a natural desire                     to rest, and providing they can find some quiet interest to                     keep their minds alive this may be the wise thing for them                     to do.<\/p>\n<p>Dr. A. W. Kelly, Managing Editor of the Canadian Medical                     Association Journal, put it this way: &#8220;Relief from the pressures                     of immediate responsibilities is the first and most agreeable                     sensation experienced. But this will not persist for more                     than a few months unless one becomes immersed in a new and                     relatively challenging occupation which keeps one&#8217;s talents                     at comfortable stretch.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>During his working years a man spent a large part of every                     day thinking about his job, executing it with professional                     competency, and being pleased when it turned out well. It                     has become a habit of body and mind. Unproductive leisure                     will not take its place. An empty spoon will not satisfy a                     man&#8217;s need for something substantial.<\/p>\n<p>Satisfying work does not have to be associated with wages.                     It may consist in the cultivation of special tastes. Some                     people have developed artistic, literary or scholarly interests                     which make the leisure of retirement valuable. Perhaps there                     is a book you wish to write: a novel or an autobiography or                     a fragment of nature study or a textbook on your trade or                     profession, or an anthology of the wise or witty sayings you                     have come across in your reading. Macchiavelli, forced into                     retirement, had time to write the works that have given him                     immortality.<\/p>\n<h3>Social contribution<\/h3>\n<p>As we leave the arena of our active wage-earning life we                     have a deep desire to pass on our knowledge, experience and                     wisdom to others. We feel, as Tennyson wrote: &#8220;Some work of                     noble note may yet be done, not unbecoming men.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The fulfilment of this desire brings profound personal satisfaction                     and the feeling that life has been worth living. It provides                     a man not only with something to do but with the satisfaction                     of using his talent to make a contribution to the world after                     completing his normal work career. Every retired person has                     developed skills and has accumulated knowledge which could                     add greatly to the welfare of the community. Now is his opportunity                     to enrich in some way the culture of his society, so that                     other generations will receive a heritage that is richer because                     he lived.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;It is the great reward of losing youth,&#8221; said Bertrand                     Russell, &#8220;that one finds oneself able to be of use.&#8221; If material                     circumstances permit, a retired person may, for the first                     time in his life, have the satisfaction of spending freely                     large amounts of time in helping others, a service that can                     be more valuable than money contributions.<\/p>\n<p>There are opportunities everywhere &#8211; in Canada&#8217;s small                     villages and in her big cities &#8211; for the retired person                     to concern himself in community development in a positive                     way: to rejuvenate community living so as to make it a favourable                     environment for people of all ages. This is a particularly                     inspiring and acceptable challenge.<\/p>\n<p>To promote community youth activities along educational,                     recreational and creative lines is to use one&#8217;s own creative                     faculties and to maintain a bridge between youth and age.<\/p>\n<p>An outstanding evidence of the satisfaction that is found                     in helping others is given by the Canadian Executive Service                     Overseas (the CESO). This is a non-profit organization operated                     since 1967 by a group of Canadian business leaders with the                     support of the Canadian Government through its Canadian International                     Development Agency.<\/p>\n<p>Ordinarily, foreign aid flows from government to government:                     CESO gives direct assistance to individual industries which                     have problems and need the know-how and talent of qualified                     people.<\/p>\n<p>Requests come to CESO for technical and management assistance                     from organizations in either the private or public sectors                     of developing nations. These provide the opportunity for retired                     Canadians who have technical, professional or executive skills                     to make meaningful voluntary contributions to the welfare                     of their fellow men. They serve abroad with no salary. CESO                     pays the air fare of the man and his wife to the country involved,                     and the client organization pays the normal living expense                     of the couple while they are away. The maximum time of an                     assignment is six months.<\/p>\n<p>Those wishing to volunteer their services should write to                     CESO, Suite 420, 1010 St. Catherine St. W., Montreal 110.<\/p>\n<h3>Skills, hobbies and crafts<\/h3>\n<p>Everyone has qualities and abilities that can be exploited                     with relish after retirement. For example: the executive talent                     that once served a company may now serve a community with                     usefulness; the skill with figures that solved financial problems                     can seize upon the study of mathematics and astronomy, or                     it may be applied to keeping books for a church or a club                     or for small firms; the mechanical know-how acquired in a                     garage or factory will pay off in the leisurely, craftsmanlike                     making of repairs and gadgets in a basement workshop.<\/p>\n<p>To discover assets of skills and resources that may be expressed                     in activity at the time of retirement is as exciting as coming                     across money put away long ago in some disused trunk and forgotten.<\/p>\n<p>Hobbies assumed at age sixty in preparation for retirement                     are unlikely to be satisfactory or absorbing. To seek for                     something to do on the day after retirement, and then drive                     oneself to do it, defeats the purpose of the doing. A hobby                     is ridden because it is fun. A pastime that was enjoyable                     for a few hours a week can get tiresome as a full-time project.<\/p>\n<p>Some people divide hobbies into three classes: activities,                     crafts and collections. Activities include gardening, painting                     the house, repairing gadgets that go wrong, operating an amateur                     radio station, bird watching and nature photography. Crafts                     are numerous: weaving, knitting, quilt-making, model building,                     arts such as painting, wood-carving, sculpture and photography,                     handwork in leather, metal, wood and clay, and playing a musical                     instrument. Collecting includes stamps, coins, medals, matchbook                     covers and pressed flowers.<\/p>\n<p>A hobby can be made a mind-rouser, not an exercise in cutting                     out paper dolls. One man devised a way to make stamp collecting                     a fascinating pursuit. Instead of merely collecting stamps                     and pasting them in an album, he placed his stamps in a frame                     around a page and wrote in the middle the history of the stamps.                     The research led him into interesting and exciting hunts for                     information.<\/p>\n<p>Many thousands of people enjoy crafts as a hobby or as a                     part-time or full-time profession. There is a basic need within                     everyone to create things with his hands. To make something,                     to discover something, to contribute something: these are                     expressions of the creative spirit.<\/p>\n<p>Travel for the sake of travel is not satisfying to many.                     Some people develop interests, such as art, music or the various                     national cultures, and travel with the purpose of enjoying                     them and learning more about them.<\/p>\n<p>It is well to make travel constructive by going to places                     that have interesting things to see, and thus to keep your                     mind alive. For a nature fan there are associations and groups                     in every province that have meetings, movies, field trips                     and summer camps. For the art lover, there is a gallery somewhere                     within reach, with a display of paintings and sculpture and                     perhaps lectures and instruction.<\/p>\n<h3>Be positive<\/h3>\n<p>Retirement does not require us to abandon interests and                     activities wholesale, but merely to change the emphasis and                     reassess the values we assign to varied enterprises in our                     daily lives.<\/p>\n<p>Think of retirement positively. It is not loafing or withdrawing,                     but participating in life in a new way. It is being your own                     boss, having work geared to self-satisfaction instead of to                     a pay envelope, doing things you never had enough time for.                     It is learning and exploration and new experiences. It can                     be an exciting adventure of positive living and active contribution.<\/p>\n<p>A person needs something purposeful and constructive. Retirement                     is a chance and a challenge to find pleasure in new vistas,                     to search for and find new levels on which to find expression,                     to look forward. When he was responding to a toast at a gathering                     of distinguished people celebrating his ninety-fifth birthday,                     Sir William Mulock, Chief Justice of Ontario, said: &#8220;The Castle                     of Enchantment is not yet behind me. It is before me still,                     and daily I catch glimpses of its battlements and towers.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>As retirement approaches, test your plans: try them on for                     size and comfort. Anything you decide upon should have been                     sampled at its worst as well as at its best. The village you                     visited in summer and fell in love with may be quite different                     in winter when you have lost the privileged status of &#8220;visitor&#8221;.<\/p>\n<h3>Some problems<\/h3>\n<p>There are worry-saving devices that are useful throughout                     life but are specially needed at retirement age: for example                     a written record of where important papers are to be found.                     Some people make a synopsis of documents such as leases, insurance                     policies, wills, contracts and agreements, and keep this synopsis                     at home while preserving the papers in a bank safe deposit                     box.<\/p>\n<p>Another way to avoid trouble is by consulting competent                     professional people. The decision to sell one&#8217;s house or other                     property, to purchase expensive equipment, to enter upon a                     lease or a contract that places obligations on either party:                     these are potentially troublesome matters that should be discussed                     with a lawyer.<\/p>\n<p>Retirement is not made up of dreams. There are realities                     to be dealt with, and a leading contender for first place                     is finance.<\/p>\n<p>A pension plan, whether government or company, is not designed                     to provide a life of luxury, but to help provide a sense of                     security. Even those with liberal pensions have to think about                     the financial aspects of retiring.<\/p>\n<p>Most people plan to reduce expenses. Transportation to work,                     parking fees, gasoline, lunches, entertaining: all these are                     reduced. Men and women can save on clothing costs. They can                     save money by doing things for themselves that they did not                     have time for while they were working, such as repairs and                     improvements around the house.<\/p>\n<p>Orderly analysis of the post-retirement financial set-up                     should be made well in advance. The points to consider include:                     how much income will you need to live in comparative comfort?                     what does your company or government pension plan give you?                     have you an annuity programme, one into which you pay now                     and receive periodic payments after retirement? have you any                     maturing insurance policies? what dividends will be yielded                     by investments? if all these do not give prospect of meeting                     your needs, what can you do to supplement them?<\/p>\n<p>Deciding where to live is probably number two priority on                     most lists of things to consider. Some couples look forward                     to a second honeymoon in a new . house newly furnished; others                     decide on a place in the country; others go into an apartment,                     divesting themselves of the work of maintaining and servicing                     a house.<\/p>\n<p>When deciding upon a place to live, do not assume anything:                     find out the facts. List the features that are important to                     you: climate, friends, business opportunities, transportation,                     quietness, church and club associations.<\/p>\n<p>A good way to hedge against disappointment with a move is                     this: take a long vacation in the new location; find out first                     hand about the weather, living costs, chances for making friends,                     church and community associations, and activities, paid or                     voluntary, to employ your time. This plan leaves you the old                     home to go back to if things do not work out.<\/p>\n<p>The need for suitable housing for retired people is bringing                     about action to supply the demand. In addition to apartments                     and houses supplied by private builders, there is a slowly                     growing supply in some cities of public low-rental housing,                     co-operatives, and rental housing sponsored by non-profit                     groups.<\/p>\n<p>The third item on the &#8220;must attend to&#8221; list is health. Even                     if a fine disregard for common sense in physical care has                     marked your pilgrimage so far, retirement is a milestone where                     an attempt should be made to balance the books.<\/p>\n<p>It would be foolish to expect to be without some of the                     infirmities that come with the passing years, and it is folly                     to deny them. One&#8217;s hair turns grey or disappears; one&#8217;s walking                     gait changes; one is inclined to develop round shoulders;                     one has to take care to eat proper food and to get sufficient                     exercise.<\/p>\n<p>Few people today would care to resort to the prescription                     for old age given in a book entitled <em>Old Settlers&#8217; Remedies<\/em>,                     compiled by Marion Robertson for the Historical Society at                     Barrington, Nova Scotia. It says: &#8220;Take tar-water morning                     and evening. Or, decoction of nettles: either of these will                     probably renew their strength for some years.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Everyone, young or old, has limitations within which he                     must live. Even the greatest of athletes cannot flout with                     impunity his own physical limitations without paying the price.<\/p>\n<h3>Family and friends<\/h3>\n<p>A man&#8217;s family should become involved early in his retirement                     planning, not only because of their affectionate interest                     but because the plans he makes concern them. They have a stake                     in the success of his efforts.<\/p>\n<p>There should be agreement between husband and wife on what                     they expect retired life to hold for them, and what they are                     going to do to prepare for it. Give and take, mutual adjustment,                     are as much a part of retirement years as they were of the                     honeymoon months.<\/p>\n<p>Friendships should be maintained. Men and women are not                     built to function alone. They need contact with other people,                     the feeling that they matter, that they like and are liked.<\/p>\n<p>The test for friendship is similarity of interests. Older                     people can have friendships with younger people, to the great                     profit of both, if they are genuinely interested in younger                     people, their hopes, fears, and activities.<\/p>\n<p>But a person must remain an individual. He does not wish                     to become only a statistic upon his retirement, or an anonymous                     member of a class called &#8220;aged&#8221;. Success in his job and the                     winning of status symbols were enough to tide him over his                     active adult years, but these props to his ego are now removed.                     It is futile to tell him when presenting him with the gold                     watch that he has done his share of the world&#8217;s work and is                     now entitled to rest. He wants sstill to be useful and to                     feel important; he feels the need for a sense of personal                     worth.<\/p>\n<p>These he expects to find in his community, but communities                     differ greatly as to the opportunities they provide and the                     services they give. Public support is gradually increasing,                     not for the nursery school type of service &#8211; which the                     retired person does not want &#8211; but for friendly involvement                     in community life and provision of centres for meetings and                     activities.<\/p>\n<p>Churches, synagogues, and other religious institutions are                     in ideal position to participate in this kind-hearted work                     because of their beliefs, their authority in their communities,                     and their resources of willing workers. A church, a young                     people&#8217;s society, a service club or a recreation club may                     provide facilities, help in planning, suggest projects, assist                     in transportation, and join with groups interested in crafts.<\/p>\n<p>If there is not a centre of activity for retired people,                     one may be started with the co-operation of a church, a school                     board, a service club, or by getting the editor of the local                     newspaper interested.<\/p>\n<h3>Don&#8217;t let go<\/h3>\n<p>The vital thing for a retiring person is not to let go.                     Life consists in movement. In a world that moves as fast as                     ours, no one can keep his balance if he stands still. His                     life must have direction and purpose.<\/p>\n<p>Activity as a primary human need is basic to the retired                     person just as it is to the youth leaving high school. Both                     need activity that will give them a feeling of adequacy, accomplishment,                     and usefulness.<\/p>\n<p>Retirement is a time to take up new and useful occupations                     adapted to one&#8217;s capabilities. A slack existence is the opposite                     of aliveness, and it contributes nothing to our continued                     need for dignity.<\/p>\n<p>By the time they reach retirement age people have coped                     with many other situations requiring adjustment: entering                     and leaving school, the first job, marriage, having and raising                     children, and departure of the children. Retirement is just                     another occasion requiring us to adapt ourselves to a new                     place in the social scheme. Every part of life has its own                     advantages and disadvantages. Each has its qualities and conditions                     to be met and adjusted to.<\/p>\n<p>The way to answer &#8220;What Then?&#8221; with assurance is to start                     now to notice things having to do with retirement and to find                     the answers to problems before they start nagging you.<\/p>\n<p>No one need feel apprehensively sorry for himself as he                     steps out toward his second prime of life. Almost nothing                     can happen to him that can rival the hardships of body or                     mind that somehow he managed to live through in his earlier                     years.<\/p>\n<p>Now, with his developed power of judgment untrammelled by                     the passion that often afflicts youth, he has the opportunity                     to display his dynamic maturity, to continue to live meaningfully,                     and to embrace what can be a most satisfying life.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[52],"class_list":["post-3947","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-52"],"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>March 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 3 - Retirement: What Then? - 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\/march-1972-vol-53-no-3-retirement-what-then\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"March 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 3 - Retirement: What Then? - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The time to answer &#8220;What Then?&#8221; is before the day of retirement comes. 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That may not be due until one reaches sixty or sixty-five, but at forty a person should be learning about it and developing the expertise to cope with it and accumulating the necessities to make it comfortable. 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