Back then, the future was a promise— not a calendar invite with a reminder set for “colonoscopy prep.” Not a
April 9, 2026
April 9, 2026
Back then, the future was a promise— not a calendar invite with a reminder set for “colonoscopy prep.” Not a
April 8, 2026
I wish I were making this up, but a new study (Chip, you geek…where do you find all these studies?)
April 7, 2026
I read a piece recently that stopped me in my tracks. It basically said: the people who feel most lost
April 6, 2026
Thank God for my guest faculty member, Dr. Caryn Lerman. From Survive to Thrive, which started last night at our
April 3, 2026
Tornstam coined the term “gerotranscendence” to describe a natural evolution of aging—not decline, but expansion. Not narrowing, but deepening. In
April 2, 2026
I saw a new study showing 70% of adults reject midlife stereotypes—and I thought, “Only 70%?” Because from where I
April 1, 2026
A New York Times story about MEA two days ago explores a growing trend: older adults reimagining retirement not as
March 30, 2026
The barriers to entry are low. The barriers to endurance? Sky high. Every era of entrepreneurship has its storms, but
March 27, 2026
As you read this, I’m on a flight to Charleston, South Carolina to participate in a four-hour program with bestselling
March 26, 2026
In our recent MEA “What Now?” workshop co-led with Edward Sullivan, he introduced the idea that life is less about
March 25, 2026
It says, “What you already know doesn’t matter anymore.” That experience is a liability. That the people who’ve been around
March 23, 2026
Doing 65 is a calendar. Being 65 is a consciousness. Doing 65 asks, What’s next? Being 65 asks, What matters?
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