Each person experiences growing older differently.
Some live with joint pain, chronic illnesses, and limited income. While others seem to grow healthier, continue to work, and find time for hobbies and to travel.If you'd ask the second group, those who appear to thrive, "How does one continue to enjoy life to the fullest with fewer complaints and issues," I bet you'd discover they don't let any challenge interfere.
Related: How to Deal With Loneliness In a group of over 6,000 people, 55 and over, on Facebook, I see it firsthand. There are stories of loneliness, physical pain, emotional hardships, and the flip side of adversity, like traveling the world, retiring to another country, finding a more challenging job, while others go back to school for a second or third degree. It's fun to read the stories and observe how some move out of tough circumstances.The differences are clear. Those who thrive are active, resourceful, and curious.
Growing older isn't a road block, but instead a new phase of advancement and here's what they do differently:
Play games or solve crossword puzzles, and tackle brain exercises Volunteer and make a difference Learn a new hobby or skill Travel and meet people of different cultures Grow a vegetable or flower garden Work part-time to get out of the house Make friends to build a support team Attend classes at the library, senior center or community college Help a neighbor next door Take cooking classesIn other words, they have a purpose and live like a young child hungry to discover, "what's next." Retirement for them isn't a dead-end or a destination. Instead, it's a period in life that can provoke inspiration, an enlivened journey, and enjoying a life that matters.When people live beyond society's expectations, they find new friends, rare opportunities, new love and adventure. More than likely, they will also become more creative and healthy, I speculate.