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It’s time we stopped talking about retirement

The number of over-65s working is rising as older people take an active role in the world

Michael Skapinker is an FT contributing editor and author of “Inside the Leaders’ Club: How top companies deal with pressing business issues”When my 34 years on the staff of the Financial Times came to an end, I bristled when people asked about my “retirement”. I have since discovered that others my age also resent the word.

Why? First, because we dislike ageing. Baby Boomers were the generation that was never going to grow old. The music we listened to expressed our horror at the prospect. “Will you still need me, will you still feed me when I’m 64?” the Beatles’ lyrics went. Simon and Garfunkel sang: “Can you imagine us years from today, sharing a park bench quietly? How terribly strange to be 70.” Yet here we are. Those of us born into the population bulge that followed the second world war are now in our sixties and seventies.

A second reason I resisted the R word is that I had no plans to stop working. I had begun preparing for my post-FT life several years earlier, spending evenings and weekends training to become a counsellor, with the hope of helping others deal with their career dilemmas. When the time came to leave full-time journalism, I discovered my bosses were happy for me to continue contributing articles and teaching in the executive education business I had helped set up. So I have settled contentedly into a three-part career of writing, lecturing and counselling.

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斯卡平克

迈克尔•斯卡平克(Michael Skapinker)是英国《金融时报》副主编。他经常为FT撰写关于商业和社会的专栏文章。他出生于南非,在希腊开始了他的新闻职业生涯。1986年,他在伦敦加入了FT,担任过许多不同的职位,包括FT周末版主编、FT特别报道部主编和管理事务主编。

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