Not Exactly Retired – David Jarmul

The Retirement Wisdom Podcast - Een podcast door Retirement Wisdom - Maandagen

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Volunteering plays a big role in many retirements across many types of volunteer organizations. Today’s guest, David Jarmul, shares his experiences volunteering abroad with his wife with the Peace Corps in his sixties. David’s new book, Not Exactly Retired, tells the inspiring story of a couple who steered off the main highway of the American Dream to reinvent themselves. They left their home to wander around the United States and Nepal and then serve as Peace Corps volunteers in Moldova, in Eastern Europe. Not Exactly Retired is a book for anyone seeking inspiration about how they, too, might pursue adventure, serve others, and embrace the next phase of their lives. This book is a shining example of why volunteering is important – and why it can be a unique way of reinvention in early retirement. We discuss with David: What it was like to walk away from a great job and career to pursue adventure and service. What his sendoff was like at Duke University. His side trip across the US and a return visit to Nepal before his new Peace Corps mission. What it was like to be in the Peace Corps in Moldova in his sixties. What he learned about himself. How the experience affected his relationship with his wife Champa. What the re-entry to the US was like. What’s next for him. How individuals and non-profit organizations can be more strategic about volunteer opportunities. How he’d advise someone looking for a way to be more creative, serve others and pursue a higher purpose. Why drifting in retirement is important to avoid. David joins me from North Carolina. ____________________________ Bio David Jarmul is a writer and world traveler whose blog has been read in more than 100 countries. He was the head of news and communications at Duke University for many years and held senior communications positions at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the National Academy of Sciences. An honors graduate of Brown University and past president of the D.C. Science Writers Association, he has also worked as an editor for an international development organization, a writer for the Voice of America, and a reporter for a business newspaper. His previous books are Headline News, Science Views and Plain Talk: Clear Communication for International Development. David has traveled throughout the world and in all 50 U.S. states. He served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Nepal, where he met his wife, Champa, and with her in Moldova, Eastern Europe. They live in Durham, N.C. Source: https://notexactlyretiredbook.com/ ___________________________ Wise Quotes On Identity and Retirement “I began to redefine my identity. It took me months to change my LinkedIn profile and to let go and stop thinking of myself as the former this or the former that, and to embrace my new role as a Peace Corps volunteer – and also as a blogger. So, that was good. More broadly, I felt like being a Peace Corps volunteer really helped me to be flexible to this. Can I step into a place where the resources are much less than we have in America? In many ways, it’s a simpler life. And to realize that what really matters in life is, is not necessarily what we obsess about here in America.”   On Volunteering Abroad in His Sixties “I was serving in my sixties this time, which many people listening to this might think, ‘Wow, that must be pretty tough.’ But actually I thought it was easier to be a volunteer in my sixties than it was in my twenties. Particularly since I was serving with my wife. I wasn’t lonely. I always had my best friend there. And with the people who ran the community where we were – the mayor and the head of the school and the library and so forth – they were the same age as us.

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