Conversation | 03/25/2009 7:30 am
The wOw Conversation: Is There Ever a Right Time to Retire?

Mary Wells, Sheila Nevins, Lesley Stahl and Jane Wagner recently got together to talk about the ifs, the whens and the whys of retirement.
SHEILA: You know what changed my view about retirement? Liz Smith.
JANE: Liz is an inspiration for us all.
SHEILA: Liz Smith gave me the courage to keep going, and to realize that I could do it because there was a role model. It’s very hard to find a role model in my industry who’s working in her 60s. It’s impossible. And just being with Liz and hearing her talk — I suddenly thought, “Fuck them. I’m going to stay until they kick me out.”
MARY: I mean, I think we’re all going to create — until we die.
JANE: All of you seem so turned on by life, still learning, still growing. I don’t see you all ever retiring.
MARY: You may go into another kind of field; you might change what you’re doing to something new.
JANE: Yes, you have the luxury of doing something different, taking a break to regenerate, maybe, but not to retire. Did you think there’d be a time that you would retire?
| Retirement scares me to death. I don’t want to retire. But I work for a company and I know that, one day, they’ll tell me it’s time. |
SHEILA: I thought I’d never grow old!
MARY: I haven’t thought about it at all either.
SHEILA: I woke up one morning and I wasn’t young. I didn’t plan for it.
MARY: It’s a shock, isn’t it? It’s a shock.
SHEILA: Yes, it is a shock.
MARY: What’s most shocking is that you feel exactly as young inside as you always did.
SHEILA: Yes. But a little wiser, don’t you think, Mary?
MARY: I think you are a lot wiser. But you look in a mirror and think, "Who’s that woman?"
SHEILA: I know that feeling.
LESLEY: That’s my mother.
SHEILA: That’s my mother. I think I’ll kill her.
LESLEY: Retirement scares me to death. I don’t want to retire. But I work for a company and I know that, one day, they’ll tell me it’s time. I so like what I do that it scares me. So I put blinders on and try not to think about it.
SHEILA: That’s just what I do. I do the very same thing. I just don’t pay any attention.
MARY: It’s changing — that you’re going to work where you are if you choose to, for years and years. That’s changing.
LESLEY: Well, Mike Wallace certainly did.
SHEILA: The thing is, you don’t want people to feel sorry for you. I once saw Maria Tallchief dance and she couldn’t quite do it. She should have retired because she couldn’t get en pointe.
MARY: But that was physical.
SHEILA: Yes, I guess.
LESLEY: You know, Sheila, you have raised the most important question: How will we know when it’s time and we haven’t spent one day too long?
SHEILA: Lesley, sometimes I tell the same story twice and I see this 25- or 30-year-old looking at me, and I say, “Did I tell you this yesterday?” And then I make a joke of it and I think, “Holy shit. At what point am I going to be doing that?”
MARY: Who cares? The 35-year-old you’re looking at can’t hold a candle to what you’re able to do.
SHEILA: I know, but you can’t help but feel it.
JANE: Sheila, a younger person would have attention deficit disorder and wouldn’t remember you told the story.
SHEILA: Yes, but they’d be taking Adderall, so they’d be OK.























53 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
This message is for all of you but especially for my friend, Ms. Jane. As you all probably know, cats are not concerned with retirement as we are really retired as soon as we’re born. However, when people retire they seem to start doing volunteer work and I know many of them help Animals. That tells me that retiring can be very fulfilling and I thank the people who help us. DtN
I’m constantly torn between two thoughts on retirement. Part of the time embracing the work-like-a-fiend forever theme, and then the other half, taking the Cormac McCarthy approach. It’s a constant internal tug of war for me.
His interview with Oprah was fascinating: (see video below at 1:30 minutes in. He explains his thoughts on the value of this way of living.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSLediYNEVo&feature=related
Retire? Surely, you jest. I am just getting started!
"Planning for retirement" is one of the most oxymoronic phrases in the English language. Plan a vacation. Plan your next party. But you don’t need a plan to fade into the woodwork.
I’m going to retire before the end of the year.
Can I afford to? My house is paid for, I have no debts.
I haven’t saved enough; a trip or another pile of books took prededence over a fat nest egg (& according to my late mum, bailing out my financially irresponsible sister & kid brother took precedence over any plans of mine).
But, as I’ve said before, I have a job that requires me to run (sometimes literally) around outside in all kinds of weather, & deal with angry geese, dive-bombing gulls, lost citizens who aren’t sure how they wandered into a supposedly secure facility, & an occasional suicide jumper from the bridge over part of my work area. I’ve been having trouble with my joints (have had one replaced), & I feel it’s time for me to get out of the way for someone with better knees.
I admit to some apprehension (OMG…how will I afford this?).
I’m going to fix up the house so I can sell & downsize. I’m down to one cat/companion, & when he’s gone to Kitty Heaven, my house will become just a place to sort out pics from the last trip & plan the next journey.
I am planning on refreshing some long-unused skills & learning others so I can support myself if I have to go back to work.
The closer I get to being able to leave work, the more excited I get (& the lower my blood pressure gets…lol).