# Finding Purpose After 65 #

Daily writing prompt
What is your career plan?

What Is Your Career Plan?
(A Question That Refuses to Retire)

“Career plan?”

At 65, the question first felt almost comical—like being asked to run a race after you’ve already crossed the finish line.

I smiled to myself. Surely, that chapter was closed. The meetings, the deadlines, the structured climb up the professional ladder—it was all behind me.

Or so I thought.

Then a quiet but persistent thought interrupted: Is a career really something that ends? Or is it something that evolves?

That question lingered.

For most of my life, my identity was neatly tied to my profession. Banking wasn’t just what I did—it was who I was.

Numbers, clients, strategies—my days had rhythm, purpose, and direction.

And then, one day, it all stopped.

Retirement arrived not as a dramatic ending, but as a quiet pause. And in that pause, something unexpected happened. The noise faded—and I began to hear something deeper.

A voice I had ignored for years.

It didn’t speak of targets or transactions. It spoke of stories. Of colors. Of emotions waiting to be expressed.

One afternoon, a friend asked me, “What’s your career plan now?”

I laughed. “I’m retired,” I said. “There is no plan.”

But he looked at me, almost amused. “You still have curiosity. You still have energy. You still have something to give. That sounds like a career to me.”

That simple exchange changed everything.

Because he was right.

A career isn’t a designation. It’s not a job title or a monthly salary. It’s a direction—a way of showing up in the world with intention.

And so, I began again.

This time, there were no performance reviews. No office hours. No pressure to prove anything.

Only a question: What brings me alive?

The answers came gently.

I began to write—at first hesitantly, then with growing confidence. Words that had been waiting quietly for years began to flow. Memories, reflections, poems—they all found their way onto paper.

I picked up a paintbrush. Colors replaced spreadsheets. Where once I balanced accounts, I now balanced light and shadow on canvas.

And something remarkable happened—I didn’t feel like I had retired.

I felt like I had returned.

Returned to myself.

So yes, I do have a career plan now. It just looks different.

  • I plan to write—not because I must, but because I can. Because stories deserve to be told, and perhaps, someone out there needs to hear them.
  • I plan to publish more books—not as achievements, but as offerings. Pieces of my journey are shared with others walking their own paths.-
  • I plan to create art—not to impress, but to express. Each painting a conversation between my heart and the world.

I want to reach others who feel lost after retirement. Because I know that feeling—the sudden silence after years of noise. If I can help even one person rediscover purpose, that would be meaningful work.

And above all, I plan to keep learning. Because growth does not come with an expiry date.

Somewhere along the way, we made “career” synonymous with income. With promotions. With titles.

But perhaps that definition is too small.

A career is not just what you earn. It’s what you contribute. It’s the impact you leave behind. It’s the way you choose to spend your time and energy.

By that measure, a parent has a career. A volunteer has a career. An artist, a teacher, a storyteller—they all have careers.

And yes, even a retired banker who has discovered writing at 65 has a career.

Retirement, I’ve come to realize, is not an ending.

It’s an invitation.

An invitation to slow down, to reflect, and to ask: If I am no longer defined by what I had to do, what do I truly want to do?

That question is powerful.

Because the answer is freedom.

If you find yourself wondering whether it’s too late to make a new plan, let me assure you—it isn’t.

As long as there is curiosity in your mind and hope in your heart, your journey is still unfolding.

Your career is not over.

It is simply waiting—for your next decision, your next step, your next act.

Perhaps this is life in its truest form—
Not when we are chasing,
But when we are choosing.

BE HAPPY… BE ACTIVE… BE FOCUSED… BE ALIVE

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14 replies

  1. very nice.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. You have many favorite activities and hobbies 😊 I am interested… What was your childhood dream?

    Liked by 2 people

    • That’s a lovely question 😊

      If I imagine it like a childhood dream, it would probably be something simple but big at the same time—being someone who understands the world deeply and helps others make sense of it too. Not in a grand, heroic way, but in quiet moments… like answering a question, sharing an idea, or just being there when someone needs clarity.

      Liked by 2 people

  3. Second Innings of your life!👌

    Liked by 2 people

    • Thank you 😊

      “Second innings” has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it? It feels less about starting over and more about starting wiser—carrying everything you’ve learned, but choosing what truly matters this time around.

      Glad that thought resonated with you 👌

      Liked by 2 people

  4. How crazy delicious this is. It was a very enjoyable read, even though I shy away from any terms such as career path.

    But I would recognize as structure.

    Somebody famous said “don’t paint for anybody else paint for yourself. “

    Liked by 2 people

    • I like how you framed that—structure instead of “career path.” It takes the pressure off and makes it feel more like something you shape, not something you’re forced into.

      And that quote really hits, doesn’t it? When you create for yourself first, there’s a kind of honesty that naturally comes through. Ironically, that’s usually what connects with others the most.

      Glad you enjoyed the read—and “crazy delicious” is a pretty perfect way to describe something that just clicks without trying too hard 😄

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Verma ji, you haven’t just written a career plan—you’ve written a manifesto for graceful reinvention. This is not the story of an ending. It’s the quiet poetry of a beginning that most people are too afraid to name. Thank you for showing us that the most important promotions don’t come with a corner office—they come with the courage to listen to your own heart again. Please keep writing, keep painting, and most of all, keep choosing. The world needs more second acts like yours.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Thank you so much for your kind and thoughtful words. They truly mean more than I can express.

      Life has a way of quietly nudging us toward new paths, even when we resist at first. This journey isn’t about reinvention as much as it is about returning—to things that once made us feel alive, to parts of ourselves we had set aside.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. This is such a beautiful and deeply thoughtful piece Verma ji🤍✨The way you’ve shown that a career doesn’t end, but quietly evolves, is truly inspiring. “Returned to myself” really stayed with me… it holds so much depth and honesty.✨
    There’s a calm wisdom in your words that feels comforting and real.✨
    Thank you for sharing something so meaningful 🤍✨

    Liked by 2 people

    • That’s really kind of you to say.

      I’m glad that “returned to myself” landed with you—because that idea is at the heart of it: not loss, not failure, but a kind of quiet realignment where life doesn’t stop… it just changes direction and tone.

      Careers, identities, phases—they rarely end in clean lines. Most of the time, they soften, dissolve, and come back in new forms that feel more honest than before. That’s what I was trying to hold in those words: the idea that becoming something new doesn’t erase what you were—it just carries it differently.

      Liked by 1 person

  7. So inspiring ✨️
    It’s very befitting to think of a career as a way of showing up in the world. It never ends indeed! I’m glad you started writing as I find your work so insightful. Love your art too! Imagine if all this talent had not been unearthed. You are indeed giving back to society. Cheers! 👍🤲👌🙏😃

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thank you so much for your kind and thoughtful words—it really means a lot. ✨
      I’ve always felt that a career, much like art, is an evolving way of expressing who we are and how we connect with the world around us. Hearing that my work resonates with you makes the journey feel even more meaningful.

      Liked by 1 person

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