Finding Purpose in Retirement

Illustration of a man pursuing several activities

by James Wallace Harris, 3/11/26

Now that I’ve been retired for over a dozen years, I can begin to generalize about this phase of life. I had a good job, one that gave me satisfaction. I was never a big success, nor ambitious, but I thought my work was useful. I felt I helped people. I spent thirty-five years working at a university, and most of that time in the College of Education.

Because we prepared teachers and counselors, I thought I was indirectly helping the world by supporting faculty, staff, and students with their computers and computer labs. I also programmed the database to track students seeking licensure, and collected statistics for the college, university, state, federal government, and several accreditation agencies. I even helped a campus Kindergarten and Elementary School with their computers. All of that gave me a sense of purpose.

I didn’t think I’d miss work when I retired, and I didn’t for many years. But after a while, I realized that I wasn’t doing anything useful. During my work years, I never worried about having a purpose. Looking back, I realized I did have one, and it was fulfilling. 

At this point, I need to confess. By the time I retired at 62, I was worn out. I just had a stent put in my heart. I had very low vitality. Even more than physically worn out, I was mentally exhausted. I came to the CoE in the 1980s, when the colleges could hire their own computer guys, but just before retirement, the university decided that all computer techs of any kind had to be part of IT. The IT department wanted all programs written in their designated language using their designated framework. Plus, they wanted me to give up my file and database servers.

Mentally, I couldn’t learn a new language. For years, I had been trying to upgrade my Classic .asp programs to ASP.NET. In my late fifties, I couldn’t make the jump from procedural programming to object-oriented programming. Programming and system administration became only a part-time job for me. Programming required long hours of focused programming. However, frequent interruptions from faculty, staff, and students for computer support kept me from programming. The college hired two guys to help me, but they could never keep up. It was actually a good thing that the IT department was taking over.

That frustration of not being able to devote myself to programming and not being able to grasp new programming concepts was a psychological revelation. I knew mentally I couldn’t adapt. When I trained the young woman from IT to take over the programming part of my job, she understood what I was teaching her as fast as I could talk. It was amazing. I realized then I was old. Her young mind worked many times faster than my old brain.

In other words, there was a reason to retire. However, waiting around to die isn’t particularly fulfilling. I thought retirement would give me all the time in the world to pursue several big dream projects. I thought about getting an M.S. in computer science. I wanted to prove I could catch up. I also wanted to write that science fiction novel I always fantasized about writing.

As the years passed, those ambitions faded away. I want to blame aging, but I don’t know if that’s true. I turned my aim to smaller goals. I thought maybe I could learn Python, an easy language, and write short stories. Those things didn’t happen either. I missed having a purpose.

Recently, I’ve discovered something else important about life. In old age, people with children are very different than people without children. Having children also gives people a purpose. Susan and I never had children. Our parents and all our aunts and uncles are long dead. Over half of my cousins are dead. And we seldom see our nieces and nephews. 

Susan and I now depend completely on friends. That’s very rewarding. However, I see friends with children and grandchildren slowly moving away. And that’s understandable. 

Among our retired friends, there’s a distinct difference between those with children and grandchildren and those without. Old folks with descendants have an inherent purpose.

I could volunteer, but I never found that satisfying, the few times I’ve tried. And now, in my mid-seventies, I don’t have the energy.

Ultimately, I found purpose in small pursuits. Doing housework and keeping up the yard keeps me busy, and it’s somewhat fulfilling. Writing blogs gives a sense of purpose. I try to help friends when I can. I’m still a computer guy.

It’s funny, though, but since I turned seventy, whenever I offer to help women friends with things they can’t physically handle, they tell me no. They worry I’m too old and might hurt my back. That reminds me of an old George Carlin routine where he talks about turning 70. He joked that he only had to reach toward something heavy and people would rush over and pick it up for him. I still feel like I can do physical things, but other people see me as being weak. I don’t like that. Several times I’ve been to Ikea or Home Depot and was loading my pickup when young people rushed over to help me. Twice, young women even got out of their cars to offer their help.

It’s tough when everyone expects you to be weak, which might explain why my lady friends stop wanting my help. Maybe getting old makes everyone more fussy about doing things for themselves.

For the first decade of my retirement, my hobbies helped give me purpose. But something is changing. I’m slowly letting my hobbies go. I think it’s because of dwindling energy, but aging might be eroding interest, too.

It’s funny how little things become more important. Susan loves to watch old TV shows while doing needlepoint. I bought a NAS, and I’m ripping DVDs of her favorite shows. It’s given me something to do for a few months, and that has been rewarding. Around me, the world is falling to pieces, but ripping DVDs provides a little bit of purpose. That’s insignificant to the bigger world, but weirdly valid in my diminishing world.

Nowadays, I go from one little project to the next. Currently, that project is setting up a post for Susan’s bird feeder with a video camera. No matter how small the project, they always end up setting me with challenges to overcome. For example, the 4×4 post I bought to fit into an existing 4×4 concrete hole in the backyard is just so slightly too big. The previous post had been planed down some. I don’t have a wood planing machine. I considered buying a hand plane, but my AI recommended a wood rasp, which I’ve ordered. After I’ve planed down the lower 18 inches, I’ve got to put on wood sealer and then paint it. This little project will keep me busy for days.

That’s where I find purpose now, with little projects. And as I get older, I expect those projects to get ever smaller. I’m reminded of a short story by R. A. Lafferty, called “Nine Hundred Grandmothers.” A human explorer visiting an alien planet discovers an intelligent species that never dies. They just get older and smaller. He tracks down the most ancient ones in a cave, where they line a shelf on the wall, always getting smaller. That’s how I picture myself getting older, pursuing smaller and smaller projects.

JWH

6 thoughts on “Finding Purpose in Retirement”

  1. I too retired at 62 and that was 8 years ago. Work was something I always enjoyed as well. I was involved with innovation and Project Management so always something new whether it was the challenge itself or the opportunity to work with so many different colleges and clients. When I decided to retire I was mentally ready to do so.

    I’ve always had hobbies to keep me busy including stats on current professional golf players and MLB starting pitchers. Weird I know 🙂 My main pursuit has always been genealogy. This takes time,… lots of time for research. I didn’t have that opportunity when working fulltime. Now its full bore ahead.

    Glad you mentioned children and Grandchildren. They keep you busy! After my daughter and son-in-law bought their first house a ‘fixer upper’ I ended up replacing the back deck, built a new fence, retaining wall and a front porch not to mention flooring on the 2nd story and the list goes on. Our son lives in the UK and their 1st house needed upgrades too,…taking down walls building a new kitchen. I was also the chief gardener on our bi-annual visits to see them and our 3 grandchildren! Our daughter and her husband have 3 children who live only 7 minutes away, so sitting and sleep overs are the order each week. At our age this can be exhausting let me tell you!

    Our 2nd son teaches at a private academy in China so visits there are always an adventure.

    My mother is still alive so she gets to see our 6 and my brother’s daughter for a total of 7 Great Grands. This keeps her going and like you say provides some potential purpose and meaning to one’s existence.

    For me and my wife our Grand kids remind us of how life goes on regardless of our need for purpose. It is so neat to see them grow up. So much different than one’s own children when you’re so busy to remember most of the little things.

    I know I’m slowing down a bit, however the young ones keep you hopping plus travel while you can as they say

    Cheers!

  2. Different viewpoint here and from a 79 year old woman.
    I had just a customer service job for 32 years. I was married for 28 and the first 2/3 was good, but not so much the last third before he died. I had no children and I’ve never regretted it. My family, other than an 86 year-old brother who doesn’t live near me, is all gone.

    I’ve been retired for 24 years and on my own for 13 years. I live in my favorite house I’ve ever lived down. My biggest hobby now is gardening and being in Florida and just experiencing a rare freeze and having everything die in the garden, I’m in the process of changing it all around to more hardy plants. So this gives me a lot of purpose.

    I also have some really good friends and I get together with them in different ways but a lot of eating out and enjoying a glass of wine. I enjoy nature, even if it’s just looking at birds on my feeder or lizards that hang out on my lanai. I’m also surrounded by cows like I live out in the country, only I don’t.

    I don’t have the energy I use to, but I’m fortunate to still be healthy and I enjoy just being lazy sometimes and watching some television.
    Other than crazy politics and insane president, life is good for however long it lasts.

    1. Where in Florida? I grew up down there. I lived all over Dade County. I also lived near Hollywood, Florida in a house that I fondly remember.

      I’ve lived in Memphis, Tennessee since 1970, but for some strange reason I still think of Florida is my home. I tried hard to move back there but never made it.

      1. I’m in Central Florida near Lakeland in Orlando, and I was actually born in Tampa, but lived away as an adult when I was retired for a while in Asheville, North Carolina, which I really liked, but what I like most about Florida it is it doesn’t get ice and snow although we did have three days in a row of 24 to 27° as a low and it killed every kind of tropical plant you could imagine.

  3. It’s just astounding how my world is shrinking. I used to go to Cape Town’s waterfront once or twice a month, just to roam around, browse books and CDs, and have a meal somewhere. Now those 30-odd kilometres are just too far for me. Partly it’s the traffic—we seem to have eleven hours of rush hour—but mostly it’s old people concerns. What if my car breaks down? I do belong to the AA, but they’re not much actual use and the wait for assistance is long. Same with all the other places I used to go.

    I never see friends and in fact I don’t have friends any more. Oh, well, except for an old guy of about 77 and the Human Carpet. I have nothing in common with the old guy, but we meet once a month just because we’re still alive, and the other members of our Burnt Out Old White Men coffee club all died off. The Human Carpet is an actual friend, but he lives 220 km away, so I see him only around three or four times a year.

    A great friend I used to meet after work for coffee and war stories lives in New Zealand now. Another friend I almost eloped with is in the US. My sister has been in the UK for the last two years, probably permanently. My 93 year old auntie and her daughter (54) are nearby, but I see little of them.

    So really, my horizon has mostly shrunk to the limits of my own suburb. Almost every day I go out for groceries. Once a week I have brunch at the coffee shop on the block where I live. They’re cheap. So a radius of about 8km/5 miles is about it these days.

    And you know, it’s not a terrible life. I’m reasonably happy most of the time. It’s hellishly hot here, the last few days. Even at 2 a.m. the house hasn’t cooled down yet. And it’s autumn, but much hotter than this last summer ever was.

    So maybe I’ll go out for an ice cream today. How exciting.

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