Declare Your Independence and Choose a Better Way to Age
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,501 legacy views
Legacy rating: 3/5 from 1 archived votes
There are plenty of references and role models for a better way to age.
Harland Sanders, best remembered for starting Kentucky Fried Chicken, now KFC, was 65 years old when he began his business. The story is that, when he looked at his Social Security check of $105 a month, he realized he did not want to try to live on it alone. Until he was fatally stricken with leukemia in 1980 at the age of 90, the Colonel traveled 250,000 miles a year visiting the KFC restaurants around the world.
On July 24, 1987, Hulda Crooks became the oldest person to climb Mt. Fuji in Japan. She was 91 years old at the time. Upon doing so, she exclaimed, "You always feel good when you make a goal."
Ray Kroc, a mixer salesman, met the McDonalds brothers and began his fast food empire when he was well into mid-life. He noted later, "I was 52 years old. I had diabetes and incipient arthritis. I had lost my gall bladder and most of my thyroid gland in earlier campaigns, but I was convinced that the best was ahead of me." Even with his health challenges, he remained active in his business and lived to be 82 and today, there are some 24,500 McDonald's restaurants in 115 countries.
Buckminster Fuller, bankrupt at 32 years of age, went on to receive international recognition for his geodesic dome as he approached 60. And in 1970 he received the Gold Medal award from the American Institute of Architects at age 75. "Bucky" is rumored to have said, "A man doesn't even get good until he's 80!"
Aside from the financial side of the retirement equation, and perhaps more important, is the issue of losing our sense of purpose for living. While our work is certainly not all that defines who we are, it is essential for us to feel that we are making some contribution to society. Feeling as though we are "in the game" and not just sitting on the sidelines, watching life go by.
This became painfully apparent to me while visiting my mother in Melbou
e, Florida one Christmas season. I happened to be in a Wal-mart store completing some last minute shopping. As I was about to get in line to pay for my purchase, I noticed an older couple moving in the same direction and motioned for the man to go ahead of me. He looked and said, "No, you go ahead. I'm retired. I have nothing better to do." I vowed, then and there, to never let my life be reduced to a situation where standing in line in a store was the highpoint of my day.
Article author
About the Author
Further reading
Further Reading
Website
The Baron Series
The Baron Series is ranked as the #1 Business Motivational Speaker Website by Ranking.com. The website offers resources, workshops, coaching, and consulting services for executives, entrepreneurs, salespersons and investors.
Related piece
Article
11 Rules for Selling to a Skeptic
Let’s face it: the greatest accomplishment for a member of the sales community is closing a deal with a skeptic. Many who are proficient at this art agree that it is far more gratifying to convince someone who initially felt your product was not necessary that it indeed is, than to complete what the industry terms an
Related piece
Article
How to Motivate Under-Performing Personnel
It is no secret that the performance of personnel is the largest contributing factor to the long-term success of any organization. Managers may give direction, but in the end, it is the company’s staff that determines how well it executes. It is the staff that must respond to the threat of competition and the shiftin
Related piece
Article
How Can Small Businesses Survive A Recession
There are clear signs that the U.S. economy is going into a recession. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down substantially from its 2007 highs and commercial and investment banks or writing off billions in sub-prime loan losses. In addition, the U.S. Federal Reserve Board has already cut ...
Related piece