Psychology says the real reason being over 60 is so hard isn't aging itself its that modern culture has no framework for dignity without productivity and once you stop producing economic value, you're left to privately work out whether you still matter, in a culture that quietly keeps telling you that you don't - Silicon Canals
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Psychology says the real reason being over 60 is so hard isn't aging itself its that modern culture has no framework for dignity without productivity and once you stop producing economic value, you're left to privately work out whether you still matter, in a culture that quietly keeps telling you that you don't - Silicon Canals
"The moment your work ends, your worth becomes a question. For forty years, my value was obvious. I fixed things. I provided for my family. I built a business. Every day had a scoreboard-jobs completed, problems solved, money earned. Then suddenly, there's no scoreboard."
"We've created a world where existence needs justification. You have to be doing something, achieving something, contributing something. My buddy retired from construction last year. First thing people ask him? 'So what are you doing now?' Not how are you, not what are you enjoying-what are you doing?"
Retirement can bring unexpected challenges, particularly an identity crisis stemming from the loss of purpose. After decades of work, individuals may feel their worth is questioned when they no longer have a defined role. The societal pressure to justify existence through productivity complicates this transition. Many retirees find themselves fabricating activities to respond to inquiries about their post-retirement lives, highlighting the struggle to adapt to a new phase where traditional measures of success no longer apply.
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