Today,though,we’re living much longer. In 1965,Australians could expect to reach 71,now it’s 83,averaged for men and women. Living to 100 is no longer outlandish. “Retire”,and you are not so much crawling to the finish line as embarking on a whole new chapter.
Prudy Gourguechon,an American psychiatrist and psychoanalyst,wants to get rid of the word altogether. “As long as we keep using the word retirement or any derivative such as ‘the new retirement’,that whiff of withdrawal,of closure,of endings will linger,” she once wrote. Instead,she tells us from the US,she proposes “starting older,which is about starting a new and previously poorly defined phase of life,rather than focusing on what you are leaving”.
“I just don’t think ‘retirement’ is useful,psychologically,” she says. “It doesn’t orient you towards what is really happening in your life,which is that things are changing in very significant ways but you are still,on average,healthy,creative and productive,or can be.”
Certainly,the definition of retirement – from the Frencha la retraite,meaning withdrawn,remote,secluded,retiring,out of the way – is well past its use-by date. The current generation of retirees – the Baby Boomers,the youngest of whom turn 60 this year – is far from “retiring”. They’re busy volunteering,child-minding,consulting,trekking,cruising,driving Ubers,organising events,running charities,populating stadiums for Pink and U2 concerts (Bono,note,is 63) and keen to stay involved. “Purpose” is their buzzword.
‘There is nowhere to hide from your fears and uncertainties when your brain is no longer engaged with spreadsheets,annual leave and lost socks. What is the purpose of a “full life”?’
Jennifer Ebdon
“There are myriad activities to explore,causes to support and new skills to learn,so my ‘do-list’ grows daily,” says Jennifer Ebdon,who loves her seasonal job helping passengers on and off cruise ships at Melbourne’s Station Pier. Still,she has pondered some aspects of retirement since leaving work two years ago at the age of 66.
“The yawning chasm of endless time terrified me,and I knew I would need some structure or I would be eating breakfast at dinner time and living in activewear,” she says. “There is nowhere to hide from your fears and uncertainties when your brain is no longer engaged with spreadsheets,annual leave and lost socks. What is the purpose of a ‘full life’? Is pleasing yourself a worthy goal? What is the end game? Why keep gaining skills if you are only going to take them to the grave? What is your value to society now that you are no longer a wage slave?”
Therese Goodacre,a nurse,is 62 and looking towards retirement in the next few years. She has always valued providing an essential service,she tells us. “For me,retirement means a bunch of empty space and potential loss of work-forged networks. I don’t want to fill my retirement hours with meaningless pastimes.” For now,she is volunteering at a nursing home to build her skills for post-career. “When I am no longer working,it is important to me that I continue to ‘contribute’. So I am in training to be useful,hopefully.”

Jennifer Ebdon works in helping passengers on and off cruise ships at Melbourne’s Station Pier:“My to-do list grows daily.”Credit:Paul Jeffers
Is it true that retiring is bad for your health?
We’ve all heard about some poor sod who went downhill after they retired,and we’ve concluded that somehow the act of retirement,not just getting older,was to blame. This area has been widely studied,and the evidence is contradictory.
In 2014,the University of South Australia’s Dr Tony Daly published a paper that examinedthe findings of numerous studies into health and ageing. He found some studies that indicated retirees were less likely to report good health – both physical and mental. One study from 2012 on older Americans found that retirement negatively impacted cognitive functioning,with the biggest decrease immediately after retirement.
On the other hand,he found several studies that suggested retirement was good for you,including one from 2013 that relied on the large-scale Australian HILDA survey. Another concluded that it may be the degree of control that people feel they have over the retirement process that affects psychological well-being rather than the process of retirement itself.
As for the superstition that retirement could negatively affect your mortality,Daly noted two studies (one on construction workers and one in Norway) that found no connection between retirement and how soon you’re likely to kick the bucket;in fact,the Norway study suggested early retirement might be good for men’s health. “Despite contradictory findings,” Daly concluded,“the majority of researchers agree that it is not necessarily retirement,per se,that affects health,wellbeing and mortality.”
This seems to be borne out by the findings of a 2016 study into the health and wellbeing of some25,000 Australians aged over 45. Overall,it found retirement was linked with positive lifestyle changes,including physical activity,diet,sedentary behaviour,alcohol use and sleep patterns. Lead researcher Melody Ding at the University of Sydney likens the transition to a new year’s resolution:“A critical window where people mentally feel like,‘OK,now I need to do something different about my health because I’m approaching the next chapter in my life.’ ”
‘The most important thing when you retire is to maintain your fitness. Because if you don’t do that,a lot of things you’d like to do in retirement,you can’t do.’
Michael Stevenson
Health is critical,agrees Michael Stevenson,who eased out of full-time work two decades ago to focus on his loves of amateur motor racing and sailing on Lake Macquarie in northern NSW. Now nearing 77,he can still do 70 push-ups in a single set (and was doing 100 not that long ago).
“The most important thing when you retire is to maintain your fitness,” he says. “Because if you don’t do that,a lot of things you’d like to do in retirement,you can’t do. The amount of exercise you do is probably not the important thing. The important thing is to do it every day,regularly.”
We inevitably lose some mental acuity as we age,particularly in the prefrontal cortex,which controls executive functioning,attention and working memory – and is therefore probably responsible for those forgetful “senior moments”. Offsetting this agility loss is what’s called crystalline intelligence,accumulated knowledge that is also useful in real-time problem-solving. Another study,from 2022,suggests this characteristic “shows gains into old age”. As in,as we get older,we get wiser. Who knew?

Michael Stevenson in his MX5 at Bathurst:“The most important thing is to maintain your fitness.”Credit:Courtesy Michael Stevenson
How should you prepare for retirement?
OK,yes,a big part of the retirement decision is about the money. Key issues include whether you own your home,how much you expect to need and whether your savings (such as super),the pension or a mix of the two (subject to earnings and asset tests) will suffice. Sprinkle this with a lot of actuarial guesswork regarding your genetic predispositions to cancer and/or heart disease and the statistical likelihood of getting hit by a bus. The government’s MoneySmart site has auseful retirement income calculator.
‘The realisation that no one else will ever put money in your bank account is terrifying!’
Financial adviser Brenton Tong
Bottom line:you need enough,says financial adviser Brenton Tong,managing director of Sydney firm Financial Spectrum,“and everyone’s ‘enough’ is different.” Some people can live on $25,000 a year;others go through $20,000 a month. His broad advice for those young enough is to start planning now:compound interest works miracles if you start saving in your 20s,but we rarely do. Course-correct in middle age if you need to. By your 50s,Tong says,you should be in a position to take fewer risks and still grow your nest egg. He’s evangelical about super,which ultimately delivers a tax-effective income. And he warns:“For most of your adult life,for most people money is deposited into your bank account on a periodic basis – month after month. The realisation that no one else will ever put money in your bank account is terrifying!”
Get used to a life of budgeting. Julia Barclay says she and her husband were careful to seek out free activities when they retired. “I also learnt to say no to expensive suggestions,” she says. “It may be necessary to become more frugal. Make a list of the large predictable annual expenses such as house insurance,cars,rates,health insurance. It can be quite a shock to see how much is needed.”

Jeff Broderick:“Be active. Golf,tennis,run,walk,Pilates. Whatever. Do it with other people.”Credit:Darrian Traynor
Having enough money,however,is just one of the three main reasons why people actually end up retiring,says Joanne Earl,who has tracked ABS data in this field for a decade. The other two factors generally come unheralded:redundancy or health issues. (Caring duties can come into play,too.) In other words,plenty of people are suddenly retired without realising it’s happened. “I’m saying to people,now that you know this,can you be better prepared?” says Earl,whose team has developed someuseful online resources for those eyeing retirement.
‘One guy I spoke with said he’s going to go fishing six days a week. You’d soon get tired of that.’
Michael Stevenson
“You need to be both financially ready and psychologically ready,” says Michael Stevenson. “The second is the harder of the two to come to grips with. One guy I spoke with said he’s going to go fishing six days a week. You’d soon get tired of that.”
“Luck and some good management” have helped Terry Kelleher and his wife,Julie,escape some pitfalls,so far. “Most people think they can retire in the home they have lived in for the previous 10 to 50 years,” he says. “Also,they assume a retirement plan of some kind can be delayed while they sit back and relax for a few months. That never happens,and months become years,and it’s too late. Then either the husband or the wife develops an illness,say cancer.” He was once a driver for community transport in the NSW Southern Highlands. “The repeated message I heard when picking up clients:‘We left it too late to move’,and in most cases,they were right.”
Before you retire,think about what your social network will look like when you no longer have work colleagues,says Julia Barclay. “If possible,plan ahead,well ahead,a year or more,to develop new friendships,new hobbies. Suddenly,the weekly contact with large numbers of people will disappear.”
Judith Venables,however,doesn’t think you need a specific plan. “My view is that planning effectively relies on knowing what will happen in the future,which is something no one knows. We gather information until we’re ready to make our gut decision based on the information we have chosen to prioritise. So if we feel like doing it and it has a reasonable chance of success – go for it and deal with whatever comes next.”

Charmaine Moldrich is “doing all the things I did in a hurry a bit slower and with joy”.Credit: Rhett Wyman
How do you counter ‘relevance deprivation syndrome’?
In Japan,they are known asnureochibazoku,or “wet fallen leaf”,reportsThe Economist. Friendless and devoid of hobbies,retired workaholic men “follow their wives around like a wet leaf stuck to a shoe”. We might experience it here,less poetically,as a feeling of worthlessness that can descend when the initial thrill of leaving work wears off. Who am I? What’s my purpose now?
Or not. “People said I would be bored,I would have relevance deprivation,but none of that has come to pass,” says Charmaine Moldrich,whose last role was as chief executive of the Outdoor Media Association. She retired in March 2023,so her “euphoria” may yet abate. For now,though,she’s enjoying working in a communal garden she started in her back lane,exercising,eating better,getting healthier,“Doing all the things I did in a hurry a bit slower and with joy – travelling,cooking,cleaning,decluttering,hanging out with friends,countless projects I have had on a list forever,babysitting,being more community spirited,and hopefully,very soon,grandmother duties.”
For others,the solution is to transition via part-time work,volunteering or building a “portfolio career”,with several small income streams but no single big-time commitment. Says Joanne Earl:“You could have two people,both of them working 10 hours a week,and one might describe themselves as retired and the other working part-time. It’s part of the identity that people have for themselves.”
‘I am no longer seen as Theo the school director but rather Theo the bike rider,photographer,cabinet-maker,father,grandfather.’
Theo Van der Veen
It’s about redefining who you see yourself as,says Theo Van der Veen,who retired from a senior education role at 58 and loves mountain bike riding. He was offered consulting work but realised a seismic change had already occurred in his life. “Your use-by date expires virtually on the day that you retire. My advice was about as welcome as ex-prime ministers weighing in on current political issues.” Today,he tells us,“I am no longer seen as Theo the school director but rather Theo the bike rider,photographer,cabinet-maker,father,grandfather.”
Bob Doyle,who retired at 60,took a less demanding job driving a minibus for children with a disability,leaving him with plenty of energy to do other things. He took up cricket again when he was 70. He tells us:“The one piece of advice I have not forgotten is that for the first 12 months or so,you will be on a high,but expect to feel deflated after that if you haven’t got some firm routines in place based on getting to finally do all those things you had to put on hold when working. More than 10 years after ‘retirement’,I’ve had two other jobs and started my own business. I’m now entering a different phase not involving work,but loving the possibilities.”

Bob Doyle picked up cricket at 70. “I’m loving the possibilities.”Credit:Janie Barrett
But a “pre-tirement” gig can be a mixed bag,warns Julia Barclay,“useful but also frustrating,” she says. “Professionally you are neither in an active position,regarded as an equal,nor available to be more spontaneous and enjoy the freedom.” She suggests,if possible,organising part-time work into blocks of full-time work and blocks of “not available”.
Indeed,after Judith Venables quit her career as a social worker,she tried another organisation. Although they were welcoming and the work was interesting,it just cemented what she already knew:“All the bureaucracy,the this and the that,I don’t really need this any more.” Now,she is a wildlife carer for birds,nursing the occasional tawny frogmouth back to health.
“Don’t just sit on your bum and wait for things to happen,” says Lawrie Mann,who enjoys sailing weekly. “Go out and make something happen.”
‘Make new friends. Hey,make new enemies. It gets the blood flowing.’
Jeff Broderick
Alison Muirhead has had a positive experience volunteering as a Brisbane Greeter alongside her husband of 52 years,Ian. She retired from teaching at 56. “First up,” she advises,“pick a partner with the same interests as yourself. In our case,it has included Brisbane’s history,memoir and fiction writing,environmental volunteering and bird watching.” Note that our retired arts administrator warns there’s hot demand for volunteering roles. His advice is to set something up with your work contacts – before you retire. “We’ve got a lot of competition out there volunteering,with all of us Boomers out there and more coming online that are all wanting to do stuff.”
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Meanwhile,Jeff Broderick,who retired from his job in the superannuation industry 10 years ago,keeps his rules of retirement simple:have something to do. “Wake up in the morning and not wonder what I will do today,but what on my long list will I do today? Be active. Golf,tennis,run,walk,Pilates. Whatever. Do it with other people. Make new friends. Hey,make new enemies. It gets the blood flowing.”
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