Opinion
An Open Letter To Retirees
It can be quite heart-warming for a retiree to be remembered and visited by those he had mentored in the past. Such gesture of gratitude becomes even more valued in an environment where “men’s evil manners live in brass, their virtues we write in water”. Let the principle of mentorship not die away in the public service, for there will always be a few grateful youths who can appreciate those who built them up in the past. It was a pleasure that out of many students one had taught since 1981, eleven of them are professors in various universities, and remembered their mentor.
The plight of retirees usually range from ailing health to financial strains. After the age of sixty-five, virility and agility obviously begin to diminish, calling for rest and reduced activity. Delay in payment of gratuity and pensions worsen the conditions of some retirees, sometimes to the extent of loss of self-esteem. There are some whose problems are loneliness, boredom and how to spend leisure hours effectively, some retire with a troubled conscience and inner conflicts arising from many factors.
Expectedly, many senior citizens devote their old age in religious activities wherein they find some solace and means to banish loneliness and boredom. Surely, self-less goals and activities add meaning and value to the life of individuals. In old age the human spirit longs for increased activity not devoted primarily to economic gains as goal. Therefore, retirement should not mean the end of activity or self-exertion. However, it would be wrong to live under physical or psychological strain in old age, especially striving after mundane goals.
Life has a way of educating everybody irrespective of the abundance or absence of formal education. One lesson which senior citizens learn is that the younger and older generations rarely look in the same direction. In old age, values and lines of striving often change, inclining towards higher goals rather than pig-headed adventure into pursuit of wealth and fame. A part of the strain which retirees can have is an inability to make the right adjustment of striving towards higher values and ideals.
Retirement should be regarded as sabbatical leave, characterized by a transition from formal working life into a phase of inner exploration of the issues of life. It is not movement of the hands of the clock that brings change but increase in the radiation of the soul of an individual, especially an increase in the recognition of the meaning and purpose of human existence. The greatest failure any senior citizen can have is to miss the vital transitional task.
Such transitional task has nothing to do with successes in neither material human strivings nor the abundance of wealth and fame. Neither has it to do with any illusion of salvation via dogmatic orthodoxies or cult practices. It is after retirement from a hectic working life that an individual would have the most opportune time to embark upon a voyage of discovery of what life is all about. One quick conclusion which a serious-minded retiree can arrive at is that everyone is being forced to make a quick turn-around before the night comes. Those who fail to see this necessity would continue to grub around with the madding crowd.
While financial difficulties may be the most common strain of a larger majority of Nigerians, we must not lose sight of the fact that what we experience and encounter in life are symbolic messages that need to be decoded. It is possible that the younger generations may see things differently and carry on heedlessly, there is a strong need for caution in everything that we do or pursue.
Elders are meant to see farer and perceive issues from a deeper perspective and this places a responsibility on them to guide the younger generations aright. The deeper meaning of what we call corruption is that any nation which allows integrity to be choked out of existence is a nation in danger. While some of current experiences of retirees serve atonement purposes, they also provide opportunities for inner transformation. Those who sit on retirees’ benefits thus causing them agonies will also have a day of reckoning. Regular exercises are helpful for retirees.
Dr. Amirize is a retired lecturer at the Rivers State University, Port Harcourt.
Bright Amirize
Opinion
Man and Lessons from the Lion
Opinion
Marked-Up Textbooks:A Growing Emergency
Opinion
Humanity and Sun Worship

-
Sports4 days ago
CAFCL : Rivers United Arrives DR Congo
-
Sports4 days ago
FIFA rankings: S’Eagles drop Position, remain sixth in Africa
-
Sports4 days ago
NPFL club name Iorfa new GM
-
Sports4 days ago
NNL abolishes playoffs for NPFL promotion
-
Sports4 days ago
NSF: Early preparations begin for 2026 National Sports Festival
-
Sports4 days ago
Kwara Hopeful To Host Confed Cup in Ilorin
-
Sports4 days ago
RSG Award Renovation Work At Yakubu Gowon Stadium
-
Politics4 days ago
Rivers Assembly Resumes Sitting After Six-Month Suspension