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The Third Third of Life: Preparing for Your Future by Walter C. Wright Jr.

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Considering retirement can be daunting. How do you know how to best plan for the future? Now there's a helpful guidebook to lead you thoughtfully into the third third of life. In this brief workbook Walter C. Wright provides eight sessions to help those moving toward retirement plan out their next steps. Developed and field-tested at the Max De Pree Center for Leadership, this guide includes material for individuals and groups that will enable 50-somethings (and up) to prepare for the next chapter of life with confidence.

Paperback

First published March 8, 2012

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Walter C. Wright

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Bob.
2,416 reviews721 followers
September 10, 2013
A while back, we hosted a group discussing Half Time, when it was still realistic to think I had a half a life ahead. Now I'm reviewing a book on the "third third of life" at a time when I am at least on the verge of that fraction of life. Needless to say, I read with interest!

The book is actually fashioned as a workbook that can be used personally, or as couples, or in a small group. Each chapter includes a reflection section with questions, followed by a reflection which is a personal narrative by someone in the "third third", and concluding with a reading on the section theme.

The book follows a sequence of beginning by looking back upon our experiences and how we mine them for direction in the third third. It helps us think through transition issues and our fears and hopes in approaching the third third. Then the book begins to look forward thinking about our hopes, our renewed sense of calling, family and place questions, the issue of generativity, and our spirituality and closing with asking the question "what now" and a wonderful narrative about Al Erisman, a retired Boeing exec who has launched a publication on business and ethics, presides over a center for business ethics and integrity at Seattle Pacific, and is active with a host of causes around the world.

One objection I have to the book is that most of the profiles are of very successful people in life--top executives or leaders in organizations and it tends to read as a guide for the rich and privileged. Certainly these people may have great impact in the third third and equally face these issues. More material and models for those in the "middle class" would have been helpful. Nevertheless, the questions and readings are helpful and I hope sometime to find a group to work through a book like this.
135 reviews1 follower
December 8, 2018
This is a very intelligent book about the transition to retirement. It addresses the question of what to do after our work life ends, thru a series of questions and exercises. While it has many religious examples, it also had many sections that I wanted to underline and highlight i.e. "What makes retirement rewarding? The Harvard Study of Adult Development discovered four basic activities: Social networks, play, creativity, and life long learning. "

A great read for anyone planning retirement or already there.
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