For much of our lives, we are taught to “become.” We learn to build identities, establish careers, form beliefs, raise families, achieve, contribute, and make our place in the world. We spend years constructing the outer architecture of our lives: our roles, titles, achievements, convictions, and responsibilities. We become overly defined by what we produce or by what we influence externally. Yet, there can come a time when we begin to ask deeper questions about who we truly are beyond titles, achievements, productivity, and expectations. Titles fade. Influence shifts. The very structures that once affirmed our contribution might no longer stand.
Within each of us lies a deeper self, untouched by success or failure, a self that existed before labels, recognition, and achievements. If early life is often about building, later life can be about discovering that what we spent years constructing was never our deepest truth, our most essential calling.
Aging should loosen our attachment to identities we once believed essential. Later life often asks for less accumulation and more release; less certainty and more trust; less striving and more presence. It can help us move beyond separation, not because distinctions disappear, but because life reveals itself as more interconnected and mysterious than our old categories allow.
The experiences we most dread and resist may become the very places where wisdom quietly enters. Suffering can become a teacher. Loss strips away illusion. Failure humbles the ego. Grief rearranges priorities.
Those who can consciously move into later life often become gentler, more spacious, and less defensive. The ego loosens its grip. Judgment gives way to understanding. Separation gives way to connection. The God once imagined as distant becomes something more intimate: the sacred as a presence within life itself, within beauty, suffering, and ordinary moments.
Perhaps the invitation of aging is not to become less certain, but more open-hearted. Not climbing higher, but coming home.
What is “relevance” in these later years? This question probably has the most urgency for those for whom formal recognition and titles have reassured, or at least suggested, that their contribution has been valued. It can surface with retirement, after children leave home, through changing health, or in those moments when the phone rings less often, and the world seems to move on, no longer needing what we once readily offered.
Perhaps much of our unease stems from how deeply our culture intertwines our worth with productivity. We admire busyness. We celebrate achievement. We reward visibility.
For me, this question surfaced when I decided to launch Our Common Heart. I look at the website, my resume, and my achievements, and I can’t help but notice the consistent use of the word “was.” So much in the past. Is it time for me to let go totally? Acknowledge that my race has been run?
Perhaps the later seasons of life invite us to shift: from asking, “How can I remain important?” to asking, with an open heart, “How can I continue to serve?” Not necessarily through grand gestures, but through a quiet generosity of spirit, through encouragement, deep listening, genuine hospitality, and countless quiet acts of care.
The world needs not only innovators and tireless achievers. It needs elders. Not merely older people, but true elders, individuals who have been softened by life’s experiences rather than hardened, who carry wisdom instead of rigid certainty, and whose quiet authority arises not from titles but from a deep, undeniable authenticity.
Perspective, born of experience; patience, a quiet strength; compassion, an open heart. The ability to sit with uncertainty and to accept the unknown. The willingness to encourage rather than compete, to uplift others. The capacity to see patterns, to reassure with a gentle hand, to simply accompany others through grief, disappointment, or profound change. These things rarely appear on résumés, yet they may be among the most vital contributions a human life can ever offer.
Remaining relevant is never truly about clinging to old roles. It is, instead, about gracefully allowing our contribution to evolve. Rivers remain rivers even as their course shifts and bends. Trees continue to offer comforting shade long after they’ve ceased growing taller.
The profound invitation of aging is not to mourn what has been lost, but to discover rich, new ways of offering the very best of ourselves to the world.
(You might enjoy the story of Michael in ‘To Be is Enough’, a short story shared on this website.)