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Over 60 and Stuck in a Rut? How to Add Joy, Energy, and Purpose to Your Post-Career Days

By Patty Lowell October 22, 2025 Senior Living

You’ve traded deadlines for downtime, meetings for me-time, and that inbox full of “urgent” emails for a calendar full of… well, white space. You thought closing the door on your 40+-year career would feel glorious – and mostly it does – but sometimes, you find yourself three episodes deep into a true-crime documentary thinking, I really should find something to do!

Welcome to the weird, wonderful world of post-career life. It’s not just about retiring. It’s about reinventing your daily schedule. You’ve spent decades doing, achieving, producing and being at the beck and call of bosses and clients. Now the challenge is different: what to do with all that whitespace on your calendar and how not to lose hours to scrolling or snoozing.

Here’s a playbook for getting into a whole new flow:

Reclaim Your Calendar (and Make It Reflect Who You Are Now)

You may think you don’t need a calendar anymore. After all, it may have been the nemesis of your 50-hour work week. But here’s the secret. A calendar that reflects who you want to be in this new chapter can be the key to creating the life you crave. Scheduling “appointments” for hobbies to explore, activities to try, personal projects to accomplish and more will help create momentum – something previously generated by deadlines, meetings, and appointments.

Try these fun hacks that combine structure with adventure:

Theme One Day a Week

A Theme Day may sound silly, but dedicating time every week to one topic can be surprisingly effective. Try “Make Something Monday” to expand your repertoire of recipes. “Friends on Fridays” could be a standing lunch date where your rotate through different friend groups. And what about designating one morning a week where you skip the workout in favor of tutoring young readers at a local elementary school?

Make Time for Fun

Schedule joy with the same commitment you planned your work life. Block time for learning a new language, trying your hand at a painting class, or an hour sampling sweet and savory at the farmer’s market. For more ideas on adding fun, purpose, connection and more, sign up for Spark 60, a weekly, minute of magic and midlife inspiration.

Add One “Stretch” Thing Each Week

Plan to do something just outside your comfort zone – a solo dinner at a new restaurant you’ve been meaning to try, learning how to create and post fun videos to share with friends, or signing up for a group travel excursion.

Think of your calendar as your new creative canvas. You’re not managing time anymore – you’re designing a life.

Ditch the Endless To-Do List

Somewhere between your color-coded planner and the notes app on your phone, your to-do list has grown into a small novel. I’ve even found myself adding things I’ve already done (“sweep patio… check”) just so that I can pat myself on the back for being “productive.”

Here’s the thing: you’re not supposed to finish life. You’re supposed to live it.

So instead of “organize linen closet” and “sort through family photos,” try making two lists:

The Ta-Da List

Things you actually enjoy doing.

  • Take a long walk.
  • Call my sister.
  • Learn how to use the air fryer.

The Maybe List

A short, realistic list of 2–3 things that would genuinely improve your life if you did them.

  • Schedule dentist.
  • Finish that book.
  • Update travel bucket list.

When you focus less on getting things done and more on feeling good about what you are doing, life feels like a win because it is.

Move Your Body, Change Your Mood

No need to join CrossFit or train for a marathon. Unless you want to, in which case, I’ll applaud from the sidelines. But if you’re feeling sluggish, physical movement is the quickest and best reset button.

Try sneaking in activity like balancing on one foot while brushing your teeth, ending your day with a stroll through your neighborhood. It’s a great way to connect with neighbors who are just getting home from work. Or do like me and pull out your yoga mat and knock out a few stretches while watching your favorite show. I find that I sleep better when my muscles are relaxed.

Redefine “Productive”

You spent decades measuring productivity in meetings, projects, and performance reviews. Now it’s time to change the metric.

Productive might mean you spent an hour journaling, experimenting with watercolor paints, or finally reading a stack of magazines that keep tumbling off of your nightstand. It might mean you made a killer soup, checked in with a sick friend, or learned how to make a reel for your travel photos.

You’re not being lazy – you’re living at your own pace. The goal isn’t to stay busy. It’s to stay curious, engaged, and forward-thinking.

Fill Your Days with Meaning

Instead of thinking about how to fill your time, refocus on creating momentum toward something that matters. If you’re drawing a blank on what would add meaning to your next chapter, try sitting down with your childhood self for a journal session focused on rediscovering things that brought you joy before career and family took center stage.

Make a list of all the memories that lit you up and the “someday I’ll try” wishes that have taken a back seat. Then, create a plan for exploring and testing out all the intriguing hobbies, activities and adventures that once seemed like interesting possibilities. With practice and patience, you’ll start to uncover what lights you up and earns a regular spot on your weekly calendar.

Whether you’re downshifting your career or leaving it all together, it’s important to remember that the world doesn’t need you to slow down. It needs you to show up. A smartly crafted schedule encourages time to explore and engage while also allowing for precious downtime to feed your soul and relax into low-pressure lifestyle.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

How have you added joy, adventure, and growth to your post-career years? Is your calendar full with me-time or someday events?

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Leslie

Perfect timing and reminder!

Patty Lowell

Thanks Leslie! I love the idea of filling my calendar with projects and activities that bring me joy.

Nehendry

Honestly, my favorite article! Thank you for helping me with the thought process of what to do with all the white space on my calendar!
I loved having a calendar and post it notes at work and found joy at crossing each item off! Not working has been a blessing, especially in the morning, but the long afternoons have been wasteful.
I’ll try some of your suggestions!

Patty Lowell

Fantastic! I just love having a calendar that is all mine to create. Enjoy your new chapter!

Patty Lowell

Thank you, Nehendry! Best of luck filling your afternoons with purpose and joy!

Belita

This article was just what I needed! I am going to save it and try to print it. I will be having major dental work done the beginning of December. I have a feeling that this article will be extremely useful to me. Thank you!
Belita

Patty Lowell

Hi Belita, Glad you enjoyed the article, and best of luck with your upcoming dental work. Aren’t we lucky to have time and energy to invest in creating a vibrant and fulfilling life!

Jean

Join a dance class, like Zumba Gold, easy and good fun. Also, in UK, we have the Ramblers Association, for a small fee each month (about £4) you can join any group walk anywhere in the country and they have all different levels from very slow to mega.

Patty Lowell

Great idea. Beyond healthy, Zumba is just so FUN!

Jane

I subscribed to à senior group and go out regularly on excursions. The trick is to look after your health from a young age and hope to God that your gènes will follow. My mother was out and about right up to her death at 88. I intend to do the same. Today, à super windy, stormy day, I am just hanging at home…it’s super dangerous out with winds of 120 kms per hour…..I do.know women who have given up “at their age”……the body follows the.mind.

Patty Lowell

Hello Jane! You are so right! Good health is a major contributor to enjoying a vibrant life. It’s never too late to begin taking excellent care of yourself. The benefits are tremendous.

Barbara

77 years young here. I’m not sure where I found this old quote which I keep on the fridge but it is so true: “You don’t stop moving because you get old, you get old because you stop moving”!

Jane

My zumba teacher said that if you decide too late in life to move/dance, you won’t be able to. That makes sense to.me.

Linda

My dad used to say if you don’t move it you lose it.

Shelley

I agree it’s very important to move but disagree if it’s too late in life you won’t be able to. It’s never too late … try some walking, chair yoga, gentle tai chi, Pilates for seniors, weight lifting (my personal trainer has clients in their 80s) swimming …. You won’t do it like a 20 year but you’ll do the version that works for you and your body today

The Author

Patty is the founder of The Brilliant Age, a lifestyle platform for women navigating later life and beyond with curiosity, style, and intention. Through thoughtful essays on reinvention, personal style, relationships, and purposeful living later in life, she encourages women to question outdated rules and design lives that feel vibrant and true. Patty also writes Spark 60, a weekly one-minute dose of inspiration delivered every Wednesday.

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