I’d gotten so used to talking through career plans and options with younger friends that it caught me off-guard when one of them asked me recently. “So what’s next for you?”
It’s easy to fall into a trap when you are in your late 70s and retired. The trap is assuming that whatever you did for a career ended when you collected your last paycheck.
And that you have essentially checked out for good.
The friend who asked me that question is half my age and in the middle of her career, which we’d been discussing over dinner.
But now she had turned the tables.
“I don’t know,” I stumbled. “I guess I’d still like to do something that matters — to write something that matters. Maybe a book.”
After dinner I thought about our exchange. What am I going to do with this time that is in a sense borrowed time? It’s a question that will take some of that time to answer.
HEADLINES:
What Trump’s July 4 Speech Revealed (Atlantic)
Khamenei’s other sons appear at his funeral in Iran as new supreme leader remains in hiding (AP)
The Strait of Hormuz has reopened — why that might be a problem for the oil market: Chart of the Day (Yahoo)
Tennessee national guard troops shoot man dead in Memphis (Guardian)
Supreme Court’s dramatic moves will reshape elections — and give the GOP a midterm boost (WP)
How the Supreme Court has changed on transgender rights since 2020 (CNN)
Trump urged FIFA to review Balogun’s suspension before star was cleared for World Cup (WP)
How the president is putting his imprint on the nation’s capital (AP)
Zelenskyy demands Western support after Russian strikes kill 12 in Kyiv (Politico)
In Strike After Strike, Ukraine Is Bringing the War to Crimea (NYT)
Trump Offered in Conversation With Putin to Help With Ukraine Settlement – Kremlin Aide (Moscow Times)
Naming Police Officers Who Kill in California (Structural Zero)
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s Marriage Plot (New Yorker)
How a young Jefferson’s plea to the king helped ignite America’s fight for independence (WP)
Founding Fathers Smile Down On America From Outer Space (Onion)