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Thinking of retirement?

So you’re retired – now what are you going to do? As Irish attitudes are changing to ageing, so too are attitudes to retiring. Some people are retiring in their 40s while others continue to work well beyond the traditional 65 cut-off point.

Many of us are being encouraged to achieve balance in our lives between work and home and to stop defining ourselves only by what we do as a job. Retirement used to be a command to stop; now it is an invitation to change. Here are some areas may be useful to you:

Stay involved; get connected; think creatively.

What's New

Playing flute at Bealtaine 2010 launchThe dust is settled and the numbers are crunched. Bealtaine 2010 was our biggest  festival ever! We estimate over 101,000 people took part this year.

Read more about our findings.

 Lawn Toss inchicoreGo for Life trains 17 new  Physical Activity Leaders as Dublin becomes EU Capital of Sport.

 Read more about the workshops.

Minister Aine BradyÁine Brady TD, Minister of State with responsibility for Older People, acknowledges the role and contribution of older people to society.

Hear what else she had to say about the work of Age & Opportunity

Ann Healy from the Southside Partnership talks about running Ageing with ConfidenceThe Southside Partnership have run a number of Ageing with Confidence programmes.

Listen to what Ann Healy says about her experience of taking part.

Visible Lives is a research project exploring the lives, experiences and needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people in Ireland who are aged 55 and over.

Read more about Visible Lives.

A major independent evaluation of Bealtaine has been conducted by the Irish Centre for Social Gerontology (ICSG), National University of Ireland, Galway.

Read more on the Bealtaine evaluation.

For more news, follow this link.