Tuesday, 26 November 2013

RETIREMENT SPEECH

RETIREMENT  SPEECH
Someone once said that the best audience is one that is intelligent,well-educated and ... a little drunk! If that is the case - then I have definitely got an amazing audience here tonight.
Lord Reading offered the following advice on presenting a speech: "Always be shorter than anyone dared to hope!" and tonight Ladies and Gentlemen, you may be very hopeful.
I hope that we will meet again, when we least expect it.
Retirement! I can't quite believe that it is happening to me.
You always seem to think of retirement as something way ahead of you; something that is still a long way off. Well, it has a way of sneaking up on you. And here I am ... poised on the brink of my own retirement.
And may you always continue to listen to your heart - because in the end - some of the most beautiful things that you'll ever experience will be seen and heard through your heart.
Thank you one and all.

RETIREMENT WISHES

A friend is someone who knows the song in your heart, and can sing it back, when you have forgotten the words...  We will miss your friendship and positive disposition  - we'll keep your song in our hearts!
A retired husband is often a wife's full time job.
Heaven - that's my retirement plan!
I always arrive late at the office...But I make up for it by leaving early.
When you stop lying about your age and start lying around the house...
You know you're retired!
As I stand here tonight, I look out over all the faces of my colleagues and I consider how blessed I am to be able count so many of you as friends. I have indeed been incredibly fortunate to have been surrounded by so many friends, mentors, role models, respected business people, leaders and pioneers - all of you special in your respective and unique ways.

RETIREMENT WISHES

Where is the good in goodbye? 
Missing someone gets easier every day because even though it's one day further from the last time you saw each other, it's one day closer to the next time you will.  ~Author Unknown

The trouble with retirement is that you never get a day off
When a man retires, his wife gets twice the husband but only half the income.  ~ A retired husband is often a wife's full-time job. 

RETIREMENT WISHES

Retired is being twice tired, I've thought First tired of working, Then tired of not.


I've been attending lots of seminars in my retirement.  They're called naps.  ~

Retirement:  It's nice to get out of the rat race, but you have to learn to get along with less cheese.  

RETIREMENT WISHES


I'm retired - goodbye tension, hello pension!  ~Author Unknown

Retirement: World's longest coffee break.  ~Author Unknown

Retirement has been a discovery of beauty for me.  I never had the time before to notice the beauty of my grandkids, my wife, the tree outside my very own front door.  And, the beauty of time itself. 
Life begins at retirement.  ~Author Unknown 

RETIREMENT WISHES


The challenge of retirement is how to spend time without spending money. 
Retirement is wonderful. It's doing nothing without worrying about getting caught at it. 
There are some who start their retirement long before they stop working.  ~Robert Half
Rest is not idleness, and to lie sometimes on the grass under trees on a summer's day, listening to the murmur of the water, or watching the clouds float across the sky, is by no means a waste of time. 

RETIREMENT WISHES

When you retire, think and act as if you were still working; when you're still working, think and act a bit as if you were already retired.  ~Author Unknown

The question isn't at what age I want to retire, it's at what income. 

Retirement means no pressure, no stress, no heartache... unless you play golf. 

I'm not just retiring from the company, I'm also retiring from my stress, my commute, my alarm clock, and my iron.
The trouble with retirement is that you never get a day off.  When a man retires and time is no longer a matter of urgent importance, his colleagues generally present him with a watch. 

When a man retires, his wife gets twice the husband but only half the income.  ~Chi Chi Rodriguez

RETIREMENT WISHES


A retired husband is often a wife's full-time job.  ~Ella Harris

Retired is being twice tired, I've thought First tired of working, Then tired of not.
~Richard Armour

I've been attending lots of seminars in my retirement.  They're called naps. 

Retirement:  It's nice to get out of the rat race, but you have to learn to get along with less cheese.

I'm retired - goodbye tension, hello pension!  Retirement: World's longest coffee break. 
Retirement has been a discovery of beauty for me.  I never had the time before to notice the beauty of my grandkids, my wife, the tree outside my very own front door.  And, the beauty of time itself.  ~Hartman Jule

RETIREMENT WISHES


O, blest retirement! friend to life's decline - How blest is he who crowns, in shades like these,
A youth of labor with an age of ease! ~Oliver Goldsmith

Middle age is when work is a lot less fun and fun is a lot more work.  ~Author Unknown

RETIREMENT WISHES


Life begins at retirement. 
The challenge of retirement is how to spend time without spending money.  ~Author Unknown

If people concentrated on the really important things in life, there'd be a shortage of fishing poles.  ~Doug Larson

Retirement is wonderful. It's doing nothing without worrying about getting caught at it.  ~Gene Perret

RETIREMENT WISHES

There are some who start their retirement long before they stop working.  ~Robert Half
Rest is not idleness, and to lie sometimes on the grass under trees on a summer's day, listening to the murmur of the water, or watching the clouds float across the sky, is by no means a waste of time.  ~J. Lubbock

RETIREMENT WISHES

When you retire, think and act as if you were still working; when you're still working, think and act a bit as if you were already retired.  ~Author Unknown

The question isn't at what age I want to retire, it's at what income.  ~George Foreman

RETIREMENT WISHES

Retirement means no pressure, no stress, no heartache... unless you play golf.  ~Gene Perret

I'm not just retiring from the company, I'm also retiring from my stress, my commute, my alarm clock, and my iron.  ~Hartman Jule

RETIREMENT WISHES

Golf is played by twenty million mature American men whose wives think they are out having fun.  ~Jim Bishop

Don't play too much golf.  Two rounds a day are plenty.  ~Harry Vardon

The best time to start thinking about your retirement is before the boss does.  ~Author Unknown

Don't simply retire from something; have something to retire to.  ~Harry Emerson Fosdick

I'm now as free as the breeze - with roughly the same income.  ~Gene Perret

RETIREMENT WISHES

Half our life is spent trying to find something to do with the time we have rushed through life trying to save.  ~Will Rogers, Autobiography, 1949

When you retire, you switch bosses - from the one who hired you to the one who married you.  ~Gene Perret

When men reach their sixties and retire, they go to pieces.  Women go right on cooking.  ~Gail Sheehy

RETIREMENT WISHES

There's never enough time to do all the nothing you want. 
Retire from work, but not from life. 
Retirement kills more people than hard work ever did.  ~Malcolm Forbes

There are days in retirement that are the waking equivalent of a dreamless sleep, if you know what I mean.  ~Robert Brault,
www.robertbrault.com

Retirement:  That's when you return from work one day and say, "Hi, Honey, I'm home - forever."  ~Gene Perret

RETIREMENT WISHES

Farewell speech: Goodbye to you all...

The trouble with retirement is that you never get a day off. -- Anonymous

RETIREMENT WISHES

Retirement takes all the meaning out of weekends.
Imagine the look on his wife’s face. And what does he have to look forward to? Happiness? Joy? Relief? The end of a working life! Perpetual unemployment! Deterioration! Stagnation! Decay!
Luckily, most of you people - especially homemakers-don’t have that problem. You never retire. But for all career men and women, my advice is: Avoid retirement as you would poison ivy in a nudist camp.
By “retirement” I mean the sudden stoppage of work, going from the dynamic career to the doldrums, from vigour to vegetation.

RETIREMENT WISHES

If you are seriously thinking about quitting your job, and have no ready replacement for it, permit me to offer you several practical suggestions: One, don’t quit! Two, keep busy! And three, don’t look back!
First of all, don’t quit! Maggie Kuhn, the founder of the Grey Panthers organisation, once said: “Ours is a throwaway society, and we do it with people as well as machines.”
Unfortunately, sometimes we do it ourselves, when we quit work prematurely. How of ten have you heard about men and women having heart attacks, shortly after retiring? Why? Because not infrequently, the retirement itself is more distressful than the work it was supposed to replace.
If I had my say, every pension check would carry a warning: “This retirement may be hazardous to your health.”

RETIREMENT WISHES

My second point is a corollary to the first: keep busy! You’ve got to keep working, one way or another. You’ve got to have a goal in life in order to survive.

RETIREMENT WISHES

There are a number of options available: employment, leisure, volunteerism...take your pick.
Another way to keep busy is by what I call “purposeful leisure.” Too often people think of leisure as the absence of work. Nonsense! It’s productive labour. Do you realise how much green fees and golf cart fees, for example, contribute to the gross national product? Billions! You golfers out there, men and women, tell your spouses that when you get up at four o’clock in the morning.

RETIREMENT WISHES

The best way to keep busy, of course, is by volunteer service. There must be a hundred thousand organisations out there that could use your help right now. They won’t discriminate against you because of your grey hair-or the lack of it, you grey panthers and bald eagles.
If you run out of ideas, try coordinating Speechcraft and Youth Leadership, the finest programs ever invented, for the training of the young - of all ages, and I might add, for the rejuvenation of jaded Toastmasters.

RETIREMENT WISHES

Retirement? Never!
It’s never too late to learn-to grow-to create, to do all the wonderful things we had no time for in our youth. This is what the last third of life is about.
It’s a time of discovery, when we really begin to see, perhaps for the first time, the providence of God, the love of family, friends and neighbours-even Toastmasters-and sometimes we even catch a glimpse of our own potential...still...to do great deeds.
Life, my friends, is not a candle flickering in the breeze. It’s a torch to light new flames.

RETIREMENT WISHES

Funny Retirement Advice - Retirement? Never!

There is a commercial on Television these days which shows a gentleman, apparently just returned from his office retirement party, walking through the front door and saying to his wife: “Honey, I’m home ... forever!”

Imagine the look on his wife’s face. And what does he have to look forward to? Happiness? Joy? Relief? The end of a working life! Perpetual unemployment! Deterioration! Stagnation! Decay!

RETIREMENT WISHES

Luckily, most of you people - especially homemakers-don’t have that problem. You never retire. But for all career men and women, my advice is: Avoid retirement
By “retirement” I mean the sudden stoppage of work, going from the dynamic career to the doldrums, from vigour to vegetation.

RETIREMENT WISHES

Unfortunately, sometimes we do it ourselves, when we quit work prematurely. How of ten have you heard about men and women having heart attacks, shortly after retiring? Why? Because not infrequently, the retirement itself is more distressful than the work it was supposed to replace.

RETIREMENT WISHES


If I had my say, every pension check would carry a warning: “This retirement may be hazardous to your health.”

My second point is a corollary to the first: keep busy! You’ve got to keep working, one way or another. You’ve got to have a goal in life in order to survive.

RETIREMENT WISHES

There are a number of options available: employment, leisure, volunteerism...take your pick.
Another way to keep busy is by what I call “purposeful leisure.” Too often people think of leisure as the absence of work. Nonsense! It’s productive labour. Do you realise how much green fees and golf cart fees, for example, contribute to the gross national product? Billions! You golfers out there, men and women, tell your spouses that when you get up at four o’clock in the morning.

RETIREMENT WISHES


The best way to keep busy, of course, is by volunteer service. There must be a hundred thousand organisations out there that could use your help right now. They won’t discriminate against you because of your grey hair-or the lack of it, you grey panthers and bald eagles.
What it all adds up to is this: we can’t quit. We can’t retire from life. It’s too precious. We’ve got to keep working, whether for money, fun or glory. And above all we mustn’t look back.

RETIREMENT WISHES


Retirement? Never!
It’s never too late to learn-to grow-to create, to do all the wonderful things we had no time for in our youth. This is what the last third of life is about.

RETIREMENT WISHES


It’s a time of discovery, when we really begin to see, perhaps for the first time, the providence of God, the love of family, friends and neighbours-even Toastmasters-and sometimes we even catch a glimpse of our own potential...still...to do great deeds.

Life, my friends, is not a candle flickering in the breeze. It’s a torch to light new flames.

RETIREMENT WISHES





RETIREMENT WISHES


RETIREMENT WISHES
[insert number of years] or so have flown by and this will be the last time that I will formally present a speech to all of you at [insert name of company]. It has been a happy time - a time where I gave of my expertise, a time where I imparted skills and some life lessons and aptly also a time where I learned a great deal.
I have learned that [insert name of company] is underpinned by a Board of Governors [adapt to suit the managerial structure of the company] that gives selflessly of their time and expertise. I have been involved in meetings and I value the opportunities that I have been exposed to. I have more empathy for what it takes to to run a company such as [insert name of company] - the strategic and financial planning that is required - while at the same time keeping all the stakeholders happy, maintaining the honor and integrity of our company's vision, while still being open to innovative change. It has been a significant learning curve for me and one which I undoubtedly learned a great deal from.
The past few years have also taught me the value of having a positive and enthusiastic group of co-workers. I have witnessed colleagues giving tirelessly of their time to enhance the image and productivity of [insert name of company]. In my retirement speeches, I want to acknowledge that you have all played your part in making [insert name of company] a happier and more productive place. I have also learned that this is the role that I will strive to emulate in my future.
I also need to acknowledge just how much I have been shaped by my colleagues and friends at [insert name of company]. I have a myriad of experiences, too many to mention, that have impacted on my life in a memorable and meaningful way. What follows barely scratches on on the surface of all that I have learned over the years, but bare with me as I make mention of some of these memories.
I have learned Ladies and Gentlemen,
-that it takes a group of very special people to commit to their jobs on a daily basis - even when the going gets tough - and believe me...we've all experienced that over the years.
-that our buildings and grounds are maintained on a daily basis by a group of smiling and cheerful individuals who choose to be happy.
I have learned,
-that if your computer is broken and you approach it mumbling under your breath with the odd uncensored word and a wet wipe, followed by a sharp kick to the hard drive, it will quite miraculously resume working.
-that the peals of laughter I hear resounding from the staff room reflect the vibrant and happy staff that we are fortunate to have.
-that a cup of coffee before the day starts with friends can make a difference - can give you that much needed perspective.
In retirement speeches, Ladies and Gentlemen, I need to add,
-that I would have been absolutely useless at unraveling the mysteries of [ insert an activity that you find difficult] yet somehow it all becomes clear when [finish off with the activity that someone does easily].
-that it is impossible to keep the copier free of paper jams. Oh, incidentally, the computer-hard-drive-kick approach also works well here!
-and that I really do appreciate the respect that I was always treated with.
Very importantly, I have learned,
-that we are exposed to phenomenal opportunities for growth at [insert name of company] - of that I have no doubt - and I have equally learned that we may only fully appreciate them as we move on as [insert name of company]'s ambassadors in the world.
And then you'll be glad to hear, I have learned,
-that the only thing you should ever lie awake at night worrying about, is not retirement speeches or [insert name of company] - sorry boss- but whether or not [insert name of favorite sports team ] is lying top of the league!
And finally, personally, I have learned that "Happiness is the consequence of personal effort. You fight for it, strive for it and insist upon it - always!".
I am extremely grateful for the role that everyone has played throughout the years - they have been happy years and years that I will always remember fondly.
FREE RETIREMENT PARTY SPEECH
Good evening Ladies, Gentlemen, Friends and Special Guests,
Retirement dinner speeches ... wow ... what an audience!
Someone once said that the best audience is one that is intelligent,well-educated and ... a little drunk! If that is the case - then I have definitely got an amazing audience here tonight.
Lord Reading offered the following advice on presenting a speech: "Always be shorter than anyone dared to hope!" and tonight Ladies and Gentlemen, you may be very hopeful.
Some people come into your life briefly and fleetingly and then they move on just as quickly.
But then there others, others like all my friends and colleagues at [insert name of company].
Not only have you come into my life, but you have stayed a while! Your professional expertise, your friendship, your mentorship and your advice and guidance have left indelible footprints in my life, my memories and my heart.
I suppose that for me, a lot of things will never be the same. The story of my life may not always have had a clear beginning, a definitive middle or even a perfect ending. I don't know all the answers, yet I know that change is inevitable.
I am looking forward to my retirement and the opportunities that are sure to follow, but at the same time, I will always reflect happily on the time I spent at [insert name of company] and the knowledge I gained and the friendships that were forged.
I hope that we will meet again, when we least expect it. May the good wishes so beautifully expressed in the Irish Blessing be ever present in your lives!
May you always have work for your hands to do.
May your pockets always hold a coin or two. May the sun shine bright upon your window pane.
May a rainbow follow each rain. And may the hand of a friend always be near you.
That's it everyone.  I hope that I was shorter than you all dared hope for? Franklin D. Roosevelt said: "Be sincere; be brief; be seated".
Thank you and enjoy the rest of evening.
RETIREMENT WISHES
Retirement! I can't quite believe that it is happening to me.
You always seem to think of retirement as something way ahead of you; something that is still a long way off. Well, it has a way of sneaking up on you. And here I am ... poised on the brink of my own retirement.
Retirement is an amazing opportunity and I have always been excited by the notion of new beginnings. It brings with it the prospect of a fresh start and perhaps a hint of magical anticipation that is hard to ignore and even harder not to be enthusiastic about.
But just as much as my retirement brings with it anticipation for the future; it is also a time to reflect on the past and perhaps a moment that brings with it echoes from the past and our years together.
So many of my memories at [insert name of company] are underpinned by that which may seem invisible and intangible.
I am, and will always be grateful for the invisible, yet ever present support and friendship that I have been fortunate to share with so many colleagues.
Seemingly insignificant moments throughout the years ... coffee break chats; working together to meet an important deadline; implementing a new vision; sharing a birthday cake or celebrating in the news of a christening, a birthday or a wedding - these are the moments that I will miss the most - these are the intangible everyday magical moments that define the special people who make [insert name of company].
May the years ahead be happy ones-
May the company and all of you go from strength to strength-
And may you always continue to listen to your heart - because in the end - some of the most beautiful things that you'll ever experience will be seen and heard through your heart.
Thank you one and all.
WORDS FOR RETIREMENT / Humorous Quotes
Go well...As you move into a future bright with possibility...
A future of challenges to conquer and of dreams to aspire to - our best wishes travel with you!
 Our best wishes go with you…May you have days full of laughter and happiness…
And may you have a lifetime full of love and dreams achieved – we will remember you.
You have left your indelible mark, We will miss your professional expertise and your friendship
And wish you only success and happiness in your future endeavors - may they be all that you hoped for!
A friend is someone who knows the song in your heart, and can sing it back, when you have forgotten the words...  We will miss your friendship and positive disposition  - we'll keep your song in our hearts!
Trust what you know, Have faith where you go; If there's no wind - row.. or go with the flow.
(Ed Parrish 111)
As you move on into the next amazing chapter of your life, Know that you will be missed,
Know that  our very best wishes and thoughts go with you, Come and visit us often -
For this is farewell and not goodbye. Today, we take the opportunity to say
We will miss you as you go on your way, So goodbye to our dear colleague, friend and mentor,
Your future awaits - with you - its inventor. Retirement at sixty-five is ridiculous
When I was sixty-five - I still had pimples. George Burns
Retirement life: seen it all, done it all - Can't remember most of it! Unknown
A retired husband is often a wife's full time job. Ella Harris
Before deciding to retire early...Stay home a week and practice watching daytime television.
Unknown
Retirement means no pressure, no stress, no heartache... Unless you play golf!
Gene Perret
I enjoy waking up and not having to go to work -  So I do it three or four times a day!
Gene Perret
The best time to start thinking about your retirement - Is before your boss does!
Unknown
The money is no better in retirement...
But the hours are!
Unknown
Heaven - that's my retirement plan!
Unknown
I always arrive late at the office...But I make up for it by leaving early.
Charles Lamb
When you stop lying about your age and start lying around the house...
You know you're retired!
Unknown
People ask me what I'd most appreciate getting for my eighty seventh birthday?
I tell them...a paternity suit!
George Burns
The down side of retirement... Is having to drink coffee on your own time.
Unknown
You know you're getting old when you stoop to tie your shoelaces...
And wonder what else you could do while you're down there!
George Burns
Retirement must be wonderful.
I mean, you can suck in your stomach for only so long.
Burt Reynolds
In retirement only money and symptoms are consequential.
Mason Cooley
Robert Half
The secret of longevity... Is to keep breathing!
Sophie Tucker  At my age flowers scare me!
George Burns
At my age...I'm very pleased to be anywhere!
George Burns
FREE SAMPLE RETIREMENT SPEECH
Good Evening Colleagues and Friends,
"I'm very pleased to be here. Let's face it - at my age...I'm very pleased to be anywhere!" George Burns certainly has a way with words! But seriously Ladies and Gentlemen, I am very pleased to be here tonight on the occasion of my retirement dinner - despite my age.
As I stand here tonight, I look out over all the faces of my colleagues and I consider how blessed I am to be able count so many of you as friends. I have indeed been incredibly fortunate to have been surrounded by so many friends, mentors, role models, respected business people, leaders and pioneers - all of you special in your respective and unique ways.
Someone once said, "You only live once - but if you do it correctly - once is more than enough!
Wise words indeed and upon reflection - very true. You do only live once and your career is no exception - and if you do it correctly - one working life is more than enough. Here at [insert name of company] we do it correctly!
I have been exposed to so many opportunities for my vocational, as well as personal growth. Challenges were set before me, but they were underpinned by the support of the group and their belief that it could be done. Advice was freely given, a helping hand extended and yes at times...constructive criticism and suggestions were offered.
May I extend my warmest thanks to everyone for the positive role that you have played in my life and my time at [insert name of company]. May I also extend a special word of thanks to following people: [insert special names and aspects here].
Well, they say that the down side of retirement is having to drink coffee on your own time. I am looking forward to a little more of my own time, but I will surely miss you all during my coffee breaks in the future.
Keep living this one life correctly, stay well and keep smiling.
I will miss you.
FREE SAMPLE RETIREMENT SPEECH
Good evening Ladies, Gentlemen and more importantly ... Friends,
Robert Half once quipped, "There are some who start their retirement long before they stop working." Well, every company is allowed to have one of those guys ... and it was me! So, no respite for the rest you - you are all going to have to work really hard until you retire!
On a more serious note though, I can't believe that I am standing here this evening with my retirement just days away. [Insert name of company] has played an integral role in my life for [insert number of years]. It is a time and experience that I will hold close to me in the future.
I consider it both a privilege and an honor to have been involved with a company such as [insert name of company]. Together, collectively, we have seen amazing things happen - visions have been created, goals were structured and aspirations that started out as ideals, more often than not, become tangible realities.
Our success is a testimony to each and everyone here. We have worked together, argued together, shared our problems and hopes together and established ourselves as a team - not always in agreement, but always together.
Today, I would like to pay tribute to your dedication, your commitment, your innovative approach and your professionalism. I count myself most fortunate. I have come to see you all, not only as business colleagues, but as friends too!
Thank you for the happy memories that I will take with me, thank you for the opportunities that were offered to me and thank you for the friendships forged over the years we spent together.
I am looking forward to the opportunities and challenges that await me in my retirement - I hope that they are many and varied and that they force me out of my comfort zone.
Yet at the same time, as I look back on my time here at [insert name of company], I see a time well spent, a time with few regrets ... a happy time!
Go well ... my thanks to you - one and all.
RETIREMENT GREETINGS
On the day of your retirement we need to affirm -  just how much you will be missed;
just how much you have contributed to our [insert name of company];
and just how much your presence and input ...  will continue to hold a special place in all of our hearts.
My retirement is an opportunity to remember and reflect -
I will remember all the everyday moments  - somehow magical in their own right;
I will reflect upon the champagne and caviar occasions - a celebration of our successful collaboration, 
but most importantly in the years that lie ahead ... I hope to reminisce fondly with friends I have made along the way  as I venture into a new chapter of my life! Goodbye and farewell - words that are never easily spoken.  And today is no exception.  As I stand here today, ambivalence surrounds me - 
Excitement and enthusiasm for the new challenges that await;  A certain apprehension for time that needs to be filled in a new, constructive way;  Nostalgia for happy memories shared;
Gratitude for a wealth of knowledge gained; And the inevitable twinge of sadness that marks the day of my retirement.  I will miss you all!
Retirement wishes are full of conflicting emotions. We express our regret for no more will we call you ...
 our amazing colleague!  Instead however, and even more importantly,
we will always call you friend, mentor and role model to many.
May your retirement years be happy and memorable;just like the legacy that you will leave behind.
Happy Retirement!
Retirement Speech: 18 Speech Topics


of the biggest developments in the past years. This easy technique works for both retirement speech outlines on this page. Well, now lets start to collect retirement public speaking speech ideas.
Your Own Free Retirement Speech Topics
Try to be light hearted, personal, sincere and thankful. This speech outline might help you developing retirement writing topics.
1. Immediately catch the attention with a oneliner or joke about the organization or company your have worked for. Say something like this: What will stand out as I look back at the past xx years?
2. Reflect on what has been changed since you start working. Mention your thoughts and ideas about routines, rites and procedures then and now. Present these retirement speech topics with humor.
3. Mention some funny, amusing incidents during your working life. Think about the habits in office, the managers, the business, the world outside.
4. Remember milestones in the history of the organization. Describe what happened. What you thought of it then, and what do we think of it now.
5. Pay attention to the colleagues in your public speaking speech. Tell what you liked about working with them. The practical jokes, the daily things you always talked and laughed about. The career promotion opportunities.
6. Tell what you are going to do now. What are your plans for the future?
7. Tell - if appropriate - about the support of your partner, children or other family members.
8. Thank for the gifts. Thank for the best wishes.
9. Thank the people who organized the party.
10. Promise not to forget them and wish them all the best in return.
A Free Retirement Speech Outline If Someone Else Is Retiring
Try to describe your best memories for the person who is leaving. Use heart felt words.
1. Refer to her or his contributions to the organization.
2. Relect on the working life, jobs and tasks of the retiree.
3. Reflect on the skills, specialties and other talents. This kind of ideas for a retirement speech demands concrete examples.
4. Mention an amusing incident with the retiree playing a principal part. Ask the direct colleagues for detailed information.
5. Refer on the retiree's plans for the future.
6. Don not forget to mention the partner or other family members, like children. Especially if they are present at the ceremony. Thank them for their support.
7. Close your retirement speech by presenting a gift to the retiree. Expound why you have chosen this special present. Link it to your previous writing topics.
8. A toast and best wishes to the person who retires is a perfect end of a retirement speech.
QUOTATIONS

Don't be dismayed at goodbyes.  A farewell is necessary before you can meet again.  And meeting again, after moments or lifetime, is certain for those who are friends.  ~Richard Bach

We only part to meet again.  ~John Gay

Man's feelings are always purest and most glowing in the hour of meeting and of farewell.  ~Jean Paul Richter

Parting is all we know of heaven and all we need to know of hell.  ~Emily Dickinson, "Parting"

Why does it take a minute to say hello and forever to say goodbye?  ~Author Unknown

Gone - flitted away,
Taken the stars from the night and the sun From the day! Gone, and a cloud in my heart.
~Alfred Tennyson


Why can't we get all the people together in the world that we really like and then just stay together?  I guess that wouldn't work.  Someone would leave.  Someone always leaves.  Then we would have to say good-bye.  I hate good-byes.  I know what I need.  I need more hellos.  ~Charles M. Schulz

Nothing makes the earth seem so spacious as to have friends at a distance; they make the latitudes and longitudes.  ~Henry David Thoreau

How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard.  ~Carol Sobieski and Thomas Meehan, Annie

Goodbyes are not forever. Goodbyes are not the end. They simply mean I'll miss you
Until we meet again! ~Author Unknown

The world is round and the place which may seem like the end may also be the beginning.  ~Ivy Baker Priest

Absence from whom we love is worse than death, and frustrates hope severer than despair.  ~William Cowper

Excuse me, then! you know my heart;
But dearest friends, alas! must part.
~John Gay

To die and part is a less evil; but to part and live, there, there is the torment.  ~George Lansdowne


May the road rise up to meet you, may the wind be ever at your back.  May the sun shine warm upon your face and the rain fall softly on your fields.  And until we meet again, may God hold you in the hollow of his hand.  ~Irish Blessing

Happy trails to you, until we meet again.
Some trails are happy ones,
Others are blue.
It's the way you ride the trail that counts,
Here's a happy one for you.
~Dale Evans

No distance of place or lapse of time can lessen the friendship of those who are thoroughly persuaded of each other's worth.  ~Robert Southey

Can miles truly separate you from friends.... If you want to be with someone you love, aren't you already there?  ~Richard Bach

Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.  ~Garrison Keillor

What shall I do with all the days and hours
That must be counted ere I see thy face?
How shall I charm the interval that lowers
Between this time and that sweet time of grace?
~Frances Anne Kemble

Not to understand a treasure's worth till time has stole away the slighted good, is cause of half the poverty we feel, and makes the world the wilderness it is.  ~William Cowper

She went her unremembering way, She went and left in me The pang of all the partings gone,
And partings yet to be. ~Francis Thompson

Only in the agony of parting do we look into the depths of love.  ~George Eliot

Love is missing someone whenever you're apart, but somehow feeling warm inside because you're close in heart.  ~Kay Knudsen

The reason it hurts so much to separate is because our souls are connected.  ~Nicholas Sparks, The Notebook

You and I will meet again When we're least expecting it One day in some far off place
I will recognize your face I won't say goodbye my friend For you and I will meet again
~Tom Petty

Farewell! God knows when we shall meet again.  ~William Shakespeare

In the hope to meet Shortly again, and make our absence sweet. ~Ben Jonson

Some people come into our lives and quickly go.  Some stay for a while, leave footprints on our hearts, and we are never, ever the same.  ~Flavia Weedn, Forever, © 
Flavia.com

So sweetly she bade me adieu, I thought that she bade me return. ~William Shenstone

But fate ordains that dearest friends must part.  ~Edward Young

Love reckons hours for months, and days for years; and every little absence is an age.  ~John Dryden


Where is the good in goodbye?  ~Meredith Willson, The Music Man  (Thanks, Thomas)

Distance of time and place generally cure what they seem to aggravate; and taking leave of our friends resembles taking leave of the world, of which it has been said, that it is not death, but dying, which is terrible.  ~Henry Fielding

As the presence of those we love is as a double life, so absence, in its anxious longing and sense of vacancy, is as a foretaste of death.  ~Anna Brownell Jameson

Promise me you'll never forget me because if I thought you would I'd never leave.  ~A.A. Milne

As contraries are known by contraries, so is the delight of presence best known by the torments of absence.  ~Alcibiades

May you always have work for your hands to do. May your pockets hold always a coin or two.
May the sun shine bright on your windowpane. May the rainbow be certain to follow each rain.
May the hand of a friend always be near you? And may God fill your heart with gladness to cheer you.
~Irish Blessing

Good-byes breed a sort of distaste for whomever you say good-bye to; this hurts, you feel, this must not happen again.  ~Elizabeth Bowen

May the sun shine, all day long, everything go right, and nothing wrong. May those you love bring love back to you, and may all the wishes you wish come true!
~Irish Blessing

May you always have walls for the winds, a roof for the rain, tea beside the fire,
laughter to cheer you, those you love near you, and all your heart might desire.
~Irish Blessing

Absence diminishes little passions and increases great ones, as the wind extinguishes candles and fans a fire.  ~Francois Duc de la Rochefoucauld, translated from French

Every parting is a form of death, as every reunion is a type of heaven.  ~Tryon Edwards

Ever has it been that love knows not its own depth until the hour of separation.  ~Kahlil Gibran

Farewell, my sister, fare thee well. The elements be kind to thee, and make Thy spirits all of comfort: fare thee well.~William Shakespeare

A man never knows how to say goodbye; a woman never knows when to say it.  ~Helen Rowland

The return makes one love the farewell.  ~Alfred De Musset

You're searching... For things that don't exist; I mean beginnings.
Ends and beginnings - there are no such things.There are only middles.
~Robert Frost, Mountain Interval, "In the Home Stretch"

Fare thee well! and if for ever,
Still for ever, fare thee well. ~Lord Byron

May you have warm words on a cool evening, a full moon on a dark night, and a smooth road all the way to your door.  ~Irish Toast


If I had a single flower for every time I think about you, I could walk forever in my garden.  ~Attributed to Claudia Ghandi

Ye flowers that drop, forsaken by the spring, Ye birds that, left by summer, cease to sing,
Ye trees that fade, when Autumn heats remove, Say, is not absence death to those who love?
~Alexander Pope

The best things said come last.  People will talk for hours saying nothing much and then linger at the door with words that come with a rush from the heart.  ~Alan Alda

May flowers always line your path and sunshine light your day. May songbirds serenade you every step along the way. May a rainbow run beside you in a sky that's always blue.
And may happiness fill your heart each day your whole life through. ~Irish Blessing

That bitter word, which closed all earthly friendships and finished every feast of love farewell!  ~Robert Pollok

One kind kiss before we part, Drop a tear, and bid adieu; Though we sever, my fond heart
Till we meet shall pant for you. ~Robert Dodsley

The joy of meeting pays the pangs of absence; else who could bear it?  ~Nicholas Rowe

Adieu! I have too grieved a heart to take a tedious leave.  ~William Shakespeare

A sunbeam to warm you, A moonbeam to charm you,A sheltering angel, so nothing can harm you.
~Irish Blessing

Where'er I roam, whatever realms to see, My heart untravelled, fondly turns to thee;
Still to my brother turns, with ceaseless pain, And drags at each remove a lengthening chain.
~Oliver Goldsmith, The Traveller

If I leave here tomorrow, will you still remember me?  ~Allen Collins and Ronnie Van Zant, "Free Bird," One More From the Road, 1973, performed by Lynyrd Skynyrd

Great is the art of beginning, but greater is the art of ending.  ~Lazurus Long

May brooks and trees and singing hills Join in the chorus too, And every gentle wind that blows
Send happiness to you.
~Irish Blessing

I wanted a perfect ending.  Now I've learned, the hard way, that some poems don't rhyme, and some stories don't have a clear beginning, middle, and end.  Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it, without knowing what's going to happen next.  ~Gilda Radner

Sweet is the memory of distant friends!  Like the mellow rays of the departing sun, it falls tenderly, yet sadly, on the heart.  ~Washington Irving

Farewell! a word that must be, and hath been - A sound which makes us linger; - yet - farewell!
~Lord Byron

Goodbye, goodbye, I hate the word.  Solitude has long since turned brown and withered, sitting bitter in my mouth and heavy in my veins.  ~R.M. Grenon
Missing someone gets easier every day because even though it's one day further from the last time you saw each other, it's one day closer to the next time you will.  ~Author Unknown

Farewell!
For in that word - that fatal word - howe'erWe promise - hope - believe - there breathes despair.
~Lord Byron

Let's not unman each other - part at once; All farewells should be sudden, when forever,
Else they make an eternity of moments,And clog the last sad sands of life with tears.
~Lord Byron

C~Author Unknown

A chord, stronger or weaker, is snapped asunder in every parting, and time's busy fingers are not practiced in re-splicing broken ties.  Meet again you may; will it be in the same way?  With the same sympathies?  With the same sentiments?  Will the souls, hurrying on in diverse paths, unite once more, as if the interval had been a dream?  Rarely, rarely!  ~Edward George Earle Bulwer-Lytton

Never part without loving words to think of during your absence.  It may be that you will not meet again in this life.  ~Jean Paul Richter

Don't cry because it's over.  Smile because it happened.  ~Theodor Seuss Geisel, attributed
The trouble with retirement is that you never get a day off.  ~Abe Lemons

When a man retires and time is no longer a matter of urgent importance, his colleagues generally present him with a watch.  ~R.C. Sherriff

When a man retires, his wife gets twice the husband but only half the income.  ~Chi Chi Rodriguez

A retired husband is often a wife's full-time job.  ~Ella Harris

Retired is being twice tired, I've thought First tired of working, Then tired of not.
~Richard Armour

I've been attending lots of seminars in my retirement.  They're called naps.  ~Merri Brownworth

Retirement:  It's nice to get out of the rat race, but you have to learn to get along with less cheese.  ~Gene Perret

I'm retired - goodbye tension, hello pension!  ~Author Unknown

Retirement: World's longest coffee break.  ~Author Unknown

Retirement has been a discovery of beauty for me.  I never had the time before to notice the beauty of my grandkids, my wife, the tree outside my very own front door.  And, the beauty of time itself.  ~Hartman Jule


O, blest retirement! friend to life's decline - How blest is he who crowns, in shades like these,
A youth of labor with an age of ease! ~Oliver Goldsmith

Middle age is when work is a lot less fun and fun is a lot more work.  ~Author Unknown


Life begins at retirement.  ~Author Unknown

The challenge of retirement is how to spend time without spending money.  ~Author Unknown

If people concentrated on the really important things in life, there'd be a shortage of fishing poles.  ~Doug Larson

Retirement is wonderful. It's doing nothing without worrying about getting caught at it.  ~Gene Perret

There are some who start their retirement long before they stop working.  ~Robert Half
Rest is not idleness, and to lie sometimes on the grass under trees on a summer's day, listening to the murmur of the water, or watching the clouds float across the sky, is by no means a waste of time.  ~J. Lubbock

When you retire, think and act as if you were still working; when you're still working, think and act a bit as if you were already retired.  ~Author Unknown

The question isn't at what age I want to retire, it's at what income.  ~George Foreman

Retirement means no pressure, no stress, no heartache... unless you play golf.  ~Gene Perret

I'm not just retiring from the company, I'm also retiring from my stress, my commute, my alarm clock, and my iron.  ~Hartman Jule

Golf is played by twenty million mature American men whose wives think they are out having fun.  ~Jim Bishop

Don't play too much golf.  Two rounds a day are plenty.  ~Harry Vardon

The best time to start thinking about your retirement is before the boss does.  ~Author Unknown

Don't simply retire from something; have something to retire to.  ~Harry Emerson Fosdick

I'm now as free as the breeze - with roughly the same income.  ~Gene Perret

Half our life is spent trying to find something to do with the time we have rushed through life trying to save.  ~Will Rogers, Autobiography, 1949

When you retire, you switch bosses - from the one who hired you to the one who married you.  ~Gene Perret

When men reach their sixties and retire, they go to pieces.  Women go right on cooking.  ~Gail Sheehy

There's never enough time to do all the nothing you want.  ~Bill Watterson, Calvin and Hobbes

Retirement without the love of letters is a living burial.  ~Seneca

Age is only a number, a cipher for the records.  A man can't retire his experience.  He must use it.  ~Bernard Baruch


A gold watch is the most appropriate gift for retirement, as its recipients have given up so many of their golden hours in a lifetime of service.  ~Harry Mahtar

Don't underestimate the value of Doing Nothing, of just going along, listening to all the things you can't hear, and not bothering.  ~Pooh's Little Instruction Book, inspired by A.A. Milne

Retirement is having nothing to do and someone always keeping you from it.  ~Robert Brault,
www.robertbrault.com

Retire from work, but not from life.  ~M.K. Soni

Sometimes it's important to work for that pot of gold.  But other times it's essential to take time off and to make sure that your most important decision in the day simply consists of choosing which color to slide down on the rainbow.  ~Douglas Pagels, These Are the Gifts I'd Like to Give to You

There must be quite a few things that a hot bath won't cure, but I don't know many of them.  ~Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar

I enjoy waking up and not having to go to work.  So I do it three or four times a day.  ~Gene Perret

In retirement, every day is Boss Day and every day is Employee Appreciation Day.  ~Terri Guillemets

Retirement is like a long vacation in Las Vegas.  The goal is to enjoy it the fullest, but not so fully that you run out of money.  ~Jonathan Clements

I try to treat each evening and weekend as little slices of retirement because no one is guaranteed a lengthy one at the end of their career.  ~Mike Hammar

Retirement at sixty-five is ridiculous.  When I was sixty-five I still had pimples.  ~George Burns

You are only young once, but you can stay immature indefinitely.  ~Ogden Nash

Youth would be an ideal state if it came a little later in life.  ~Herbert Asquith

Retirement is the ugliest word in the language.  ~Ernest Hemingway

Golf is a day spent in a round of strenuous idleness.  ~William Wordsworth

First you forget names; then you forget faces; then you forget to zip up your fly; and then you forget to unzip your fly.  ~Branch Rickey

In my retirement I go for a short swim at least once or twice every day.  It's either that or buy a new golf ball.  ~Gene Perret

Sometimes it's hard to tell if retirement is a reward for a lifetime of hard work or a punishment.  ~Terri Guillemets


The reason the pro tells you to keep your head down is so you can't see him laughing.  ~Phyllis Diller

If you drink, don't drive.  Don't even putt.  ~Dean Martin

If you are going to throw a club, it is important to throw it ahead of you, down the fairway, so you don't have to waste energy going back to pick it up.  ~Tommy Bolt

Retirement kills more people than hard work ever did.  ~Malcolm Forbes

There are days in retirement that are the waking equivalent of a dreamless sleep, if you know what I mean.  ~Robert Brault,
www.robertbrault.com

Retirement:  That's when you return from work one day and say, "Hi, Honey, I'm home - forever."  ~Gene Perret

Farewell speech: Goodbye to you all...

The detailed free farewell speech notes below include going away speech advice for both people who are glad to escape and people who are sad to leave:

Describe what you got out of the workplace.
What did you learn, what opportunities did you have, what did you like best about working there, who did you enjoy working with, who helped you the most.
Mention some special people, these may be the people you worked the most with – the ‘team’.
Even if you are leaving because you are sick of the place, there must be something positive to say about your time there.
For example, the company has an impressive safety record, or that it was refreshing to work with creative people.
Don’t pretend that you are sad to be leaving if you obviously aren't (but avoid mentioning it), because people won't respect you if you are openly dishonest.
There is always a time and a place to air your grievances – in private with the boss, or an HR exit interview.
Remember the farewell is the last time to represent yourself well.
Say what you will take away from your experiences there.
Basically what are the most positive things you will remember about your time there in the workplace.

Mention why you are leaving and how you feel.
Your reason for leaving can be negative if it has nothing to do with the workplace.
If it really is due to the fact that you can’t stand working there, describe this in terms of a positive with the next place you are working.
For example, your next job provides more opportunities in your chosen direction, the job is more ‘autonomous’ etc.

If you truly can’t think of anything that is not badmouthing the company, then don’t mention why you are leaving work, just mention what you will be doing in your time off after your last day.
For example, you can’t wait to go fishing on the weekend, or you are looking forward to seeing the new decor at your local recruitment centre.

General descriptions of how you might feel are:

  • excited about the future / opportunities
  • hopeful about new beginnings
  • curious about new directions
  • sad to leave behind great people
  • missing working there.
Pick whichever is most appropriate for you.
Say what you wish for the company and the people left behind.
Your hopes for their future. This may include affirming positive things about them and what you know they can achieve.

Wish everyone the best for the future and thank them for the farewell and for your experiences there.
Parting words for a gracious farewell speech.

Retirement sayings and wishes

When it is your turn to say something special about someone who is retiring, your retirement wishes may be funny, heartfelt or both.
Retirements are about endings and beginnings and whatever you say about a retiree should be heartfelt and descriptive of the retiree's contributions in the workplace.
Below are some quotes to help you plan your retirement roast or a toast. For other ideas, see retirement speeches, military retirements, teacher retirements, and when you are the retiree.
Quotations
The best time to start thinking about your retirement is before your boss does. --Anonymous
When a man retires and time is no longer a matter of urgent importance, his colleagues generally present him with a watch.  -- R.C. Sherriff
There's one thing I've always wanted to do before I quit: RETIRE. -- Groucho Marx
The trouble with retirement is that you never get a day off. -- Anonymous
Retirement takes all the meaning out of weekends. -- Anonymous
Retirement is a time when you never get around to doing all those things you intended to do when you were still working. -- Anonymous
If people concentrated on the really important things in life, there'd be a shortage of fishing poles.
-- Doug Larson
When one door closes, another one opens but we often look so long and regretfully at the closed door that we fail to see the one that has opened for us. --Alexander Graham Bell
You're over the hill when your back goes out more than you do. .--Anonymous
You're getting old when there's no question in your mind that there's no question in your mind.
--Anonymous
Age doesn't matter unless you're a cheese. --Billie Burke
You don't stop laughing because you grow old; you grow old because you stop laughing.
--Michael Pritchard
You're only young once but you can be immature all of your life. --Charles Scoggins
Old age is an excellent time for outrage. My goal is to say or do at least one outrageous thing every week. --Maggie Kuhn
I used to dread getting older because I thought I would not be able to do all the things I wanted to do, but now that I am older, I find that I don't want to do them.
--Lady Nancy Astor
Retirement toast
Here's to Jack -- a great colleague we're telling goodbye. There's no doubt we'll miss him... we cannot deny. We have valued his work, his wisdom, his smile... And we hope he'll enjoy a relaxing lifestyle.
Senior humor
When asked the secret of his long life, the elderly gentleman smiled knowingly and said he sprinkled a little gunpowder on his oatmeal every morning.
The young man listening decided to follow that practice and every morning, he added a teaspoon of gunpowder to his oatmeal.
He lived to the age of 93. When he died, he left 12 children, 24 grandchildren, 36-great-grandchildren, and a 12-foot hole in the wall of the crematorium.
When I die, I want to go peacefully like my grandfather did. In his sleep. Not yelling and screaming like the passengers in his car. --Jack Handy
God, grant me the senility to forget the people I never liked anyway, the good fortune to run into the ones I do, and the eyesight to see the difference.
Imagine the look on his wife’s face. And what does he have to look forward to? Happiness? Joy? Relief? The end of a working life! Perpetual unemployment! Deterioration! Stagnation! Decay!
Luckily, most of you people - especially homemakers-don’t have that problem. You never retire. But for all career men and women, my advice is: Avoid retirement as you would poison ivy in a nudist camp.
By “retirement” I mean the sudden stoppage of work, going from the dynamic career to the doldrums, from vigour to vegetation.
If you are seriously thinking about quitting your job, and have no ready replacement for it, permit me to offer you several practical suggestions: One, don’t quit! Two, keep busy! And three, don’t look back!
First of all, don’t quit! Maggie Kuhn, the founder of the Grey Panthers organisation, once said: “Ours is a throwaway society, and we do it with people as well as machines.”
Unfortunately, sometimes we do it ourselves, when we quit work prematurely. How of ten have you heard about men and women having heart attacks, shortly after retiring? Why? Because not infrequently, the retirement itself is more distressful than the work it was supposed to replace.
If I had my say, every pension check would carry a warning: “This retirement may be hazardous to your health.”
My second point is a corollary to the first: keep busy! You’ve got to keep working, one way or another. You’ve got to have a goal in life in order to survive.
There are a number of options available: employment, leisure, volunteerism...take your pick.
If you choose employment, why not become a management consultant-like everyone else. All it takes is a title, a phone number and 500 business cards.
If you need a title, be imaginative. I know an auto mechanic who is now a “vehicle maintenance engineer.” He repairs my Toyota - and drives a Mercedes.
If you need a degree, that’s simple for you Toastmasters. All you have to do is complete the Basic Communication and Leadership Manual, and put CTM (Competent Toastmaster) behind your name. For all anyone knows, CTM means “Master of Computer Technology,” and that’s pretty important these days.
Another way to keep busy is by what I call “purposeful leisure.” Too often people think of leisure as the absence of work. Nonsense! It’s productive labour. Do you realise how much green fees and golf cart fees, for example, contribute to the gross national product? Billions! You golfers out there, men and women, tell your spouses that when you get up at four o’clock in the morning.
The best way to keep busy, of course, is by volunteer service. There must be a hundred thousand organisations out there that could use your help right now. They won’t discriminate against you because of your grey hair-or the lack of it, you grey panthers and bald eagles.
If you run out of ideas, try coordinating Speechcraft and Youth Leadership, the finest programs ever invented, for the training of the young - of all ages, and I might add, for the rejuvenation of jaded Toastmasters.
Which brings me to my third point: don’t look back! James M. Barrie, the author of Peter Pan, once wrote: “God gave us memories, so that we could have roses in December.” Roses, not regrets. Nursing homes are filled with people who cling to their regrets like security blankets.
Don’t look back and look down. Life isn’t a vicious circle. It’s a rising spiral, a cornucopia of opportunities. (Grandma Moses, Buckminster Fuller, Col. Sanders, Pablo Casals and our own Cavett Robert and Roy Graham are models of geriatric initiative.)
Pablo Casals at 90, for example, when asked why he practiced eight hours a day, replied: “I think I’m improving.”
Just last week I heard of a Toastmaster who spent his first Social Security check on lessons in hang gliding. That’s the spirit!
What it all adds up to is this: we can’t quit. We can’t retire from life. It’s too precious. We’ve got to keep working, whether for money, fun or glory. And above all we mustn’t look back.
Retirement? Never!
It’s never too late to learn-to grow-to create, to do all the wonderful things we had no time for in our youth. This is what the last third of life is about.
It’s a time of discovery, when we really begin to see, perhaps for the first time, the providence of God, the love of family, friends and neighbours-even Toastmasters-and sometimes we even catch a glimpse of our own potential...still...to do great deeds.
Life, my friends, is not a candle flickering in the breeze. It’s a torch to light new flames.

Funny Retirement Speech.

Poignant and Funny Retirement Advice - Retirement? Never!

There is a commercial on Television these days which shows a gentleman, apparently just returned from his office retirement party, walking through the front door and saying to his wife: “Honey, I’m home ... forever!”


Imagine the look on his wife’s face. And what does he have to look forward to? Happiness? Joy? Relief? The end of a working life! Perpetual unemployment! Deterioration! Stagnation! Decay!


Luckily, most of you people - especially homemakers-don’t have that problem. You never retire. But for all career men and women, my advice is: Avoid retirement as you would poison ivy in a nudist camp.


By “retirement” I mean the sudden stoppage of work, going from the dynamic career to the doldrums, from vigour to vegetation.


If you are seriously thinking about quitting your job, and have no ready replacement for it, permit me to offer you several practical suggestions: One, don’t quit! Two, keep busy! And three, don’t look back!


First of all, don’t quit! Maggie Kuhn, the founder of the Grey Panthers organisation, once said: “Ours is a throwaway society, and we do it with people as well as machines.”


Unfortunately, sometimes we do it ourselves, when we quit work prematurely. How of ten have you heard about men and women having heart attacks, shortly after retiring? Why? Because not infrequently, the retirement itself is more distressful than the work it was supposed to replace.


If I had my say, every pension check would carry a warning: “This retirement may be hazardous to your health.”


My second point is a corollary to the first: keep busy! You’ve got to keep working, one way or another. You’ve got to have a goal in life in order to survive.


There are a number of options available: employment, leisure, volunteerism...take your pick.


If you choose employment, why not become a management consultant-like everyone else. All it takes is a title, a phone number and 500 business cards.


If you need a title, be imaginative. I know an auto mechanic who is now a “vehicle maintenance engineer.” He repairs my Toyota - and drives a Mercedes.


If you need a degree, that’s simple for you Toastmasters. All you have to do is complete the Basic Communication and Leadership Manual, and put CTM (Competent Toastmaster) behind your name. For all anyone knows, CTM means “Master of Computer Technology,” and that’s pretty important these days.


Another way to keep busy is by what I call “purposeful leisure.” Too often people think of leisure as the absence of work. Nonsense! It’s productive labour. Do you realise how much green fees and golf cart fees, for example, contribute to the gross national product? Billions! You golfers out there, men and women, tell your spouses that when you get up at four o’clock in the morning.


The best way to keep busy, of course, is by volunteer service. There must be a hundred thousand organisations out there that could use your help right now. They won’t discriminate against you because of your grey hair-or the lack of it, you grey panthers and bald eagles.


If you run out of ideas, try coordinating Speechcraft and Youth Leadership, the finest programs ever invented, for the training of the young - of all ages, and I might add, for the rejuvenation of jaded Toastmasters.


Which brings me to my third point: don’t look back! James M. Barrie, the author of Peter Pan, once wrote: “God gave us memories, so that we could have roses in December.” Roses, not regrets. Nursing homes are filled with people who cling to their regrets like security blankets.


Don’t look back and look down. Life isn’t a vicious circle. It’s a rising spiral, a cornucopia of opportunities. (Grandma Moses, Buckminster Fuller, Col. Sanders, Pablo Casals and our own Cavett Robert and Roy Graham are models of geriatric initiative.)


Pablo Casals at 90, for example, when asked why he practiced eight hours a day, replied: “I think I’m improving.”


Just last week I heard of a Toastmaster who spent his first Social Security check on lessons in hang gliding. That’s the spirit!


What it all adds up to is this: we can’t quit. We can’t retire from life. It’s too precious. We’ve got to keep working, whether for money, fun or glory. And above all we mustn’t look back.


Retirement? Never!


It’s never too late to learn-to grow-to create, to do all the wonderful things we had no time for in our youth. This is what the last third of life is about.


It’s a time of discovery, when we really begin to see, perhaps for the first time, the providence of God, the love of family, friends and neighbours-even Toastmasters-and sometimes we even catch a glimpse of our own potential...still...to do great deeds.


Life, my friends, is not a candle flickering in the breeze. It’s a torch to light new flames.