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Meet the people who found unusual ways to avoid full retirement

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Age-related job market limits pushed these professionals to re-think their careers. From corporate offices to donkey sanctuaries and wedding ceremonies‚ they found unique paths to stay active

Andrew Middleton faced a harsh reality at 57: high-level jobs werent available anymore. Research shows almost 50% of hiring managers think 57 is too old – despite workers vast experience

Around eight years ago he started “Im Not Done Yet“ (a network with 100-plus members aged 50-70) which helps people move into soft-retirement. The groups members found interesting paths:

  • Tea tasting experts
  • Movie background actors
  • Wedding officiants
  • Animal sanctuary owners
  • Vacation rental managers

Middleton now 65 traded his corporate salary for different work: consulting mentoring and even appearing in films. “There were no more big jobs for me – people didnt want older directors“ he says

Youʼre used to having someone to organise you and arrange your diary and suddenly its all up to you

Middleton describes the transition

For Tracey Stevens (ex-charity CEO) the change came after a bike accident. She moved to south-east France; now runs a donkey sanctuary – a big switch from managing hundreds of workers. “I get to be out with nature; I can see the seasons changing in front of my eyes“ she explains

Jane Stewart picked a mix of roles: parish clerk school board member and weekend wedding registrar. Her income dropped to one-third but she got something better – freedom. Studies show one-third of over-50s now work part-time while home-based work doubled since covid

The future might be tough: by 2040 almost 3-million retirees wont have enough savings. But these soft-retirees show theres another way – keeping both income and purpose while doing what they love

Victoria Blair

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