Saturday, August 27, 2016

Success at any age

Tim Meyer
Steve Duncan
Amy Perry


copy from
https://www.senioradvisor.com/blog/2016/08/success-at-every-age-people-who-made-it-big-after-50/?utm_source=InsightsNewsletter&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=InsightsNewsletterAug

Success at Every Age: People Who Made it Big Success at Every Age: People who made it big after 50after 50

Do you still wonder what you want to be when you grow up? You’re in good company, because plenty of people hit their stride or start a second career at midlife and later. Duncan Hines, Judge Judy, and Julia Child are just some of the well-known people who made names for themselves late in life. The cake-mix brand namesake, television judge, and world-renowned chef had very different careers with one thing in common: They all earned major success after the age of 50.

Duncan Hines got into the food business in his 70s

The cake mixes that bear his name were a third career for the late Duncan Hines, who started licensing his name to baked goods and mixes in the 1950s, when he was in his early 70s. He had already made a wildly successful second career, writing restaurant and hotel guides for American road-trippers. His work as an author and critic, which made him famous enough to warrant the cake-mix business, began when Hines was 55 years old. It grew from his extensive travels during his first career as a traveling salesman for a printing business.
The lesson: Your next career can be sweeter than your last.

Judge Judy’s courtroom show debuted when she was 53

The road to the longest-running courtroom show on TV wasn’t always an easy one. Biography.com notes that when Judith Blum (now Judy Scheindlin) started law school in the early 60s, she was the only woman in her class. A dull early career, time out of the workforce to care for her children, and a divorce all could have knocked her off track. Her career change to prosecution and later, family court judge, paved the way to TV fame, as her reputation for fair but blunt justice grew. She retired from the bench in 1996 at age 53 and that same year launched “Judge Judy.” She’s appeared in more than 5400 episodes, and her contract runs through 2020. In 2013, she was the highest-paid star on television, earning $47 million per year.
The lesson: Hard work, determination, and a good reputation can really pay off.

Julia Child brought French home cooking to America in her 50s

Is there any foodie or serious home cook in the US who isn’t familiar with Julia Child? After a wartime stint with the Office of Strategic Services and her marriage to co-worker Paul Child, Julia found herself in Paris with time on her hands and a desire to learn to cook like the French. As her culinary skills grew, so did her eagerness to share her knowledge with American cooks. In her late 40s, she and her friends published Mastering the Art of French Cooking, and she was 50 when her PBS show, The French Chef, debuted. Child, who died in 2004 at age 91, continued writing and television careers well into her 80s.
The lesson: Find something you love and keep at it.
Want more inspiring senior role models? Read about a senior ballerina, yoga teacher, and race car driver on our blog.

Casey Kelly-Barton is an Austin-based freelance writer whose childhood was made awesome by her grandmothers, great-grandmother, great-aunts and -uncles, and their friends.

Live Every Decade as If It's Your Last

Remember:
"Live every day as if it's the last?"

Kind of hard, but useful, especially for younger people who tend not to focus too much, because of course most of them have not days but DECADES to go.

But what about those of us who have already lived decades?
We have a pretty good idea (having seen it with our parents and older friends) what a "last day" is like. And anyway, what we still want to do is going to take more than a day, however fulfilling that day might be.

How about we try a different motto:
Live this decade as if it's the last.

This has a couple advantages.

First,  not to be a Debbie Downer, but it could be true. If you're a Boomer, heck, if you're over 50, this could well be your last decade.

It PROBABLY won't, but let's just accept the reality. I had (of course) four grandparents. One died at 52 (people had hard lives back then). One died at 67, one at 66. (The meanest, Grandma Todd, lived into her 80s. That says something or other!) It's hard to look at the age on my Facebook profile and realize... I'm as old as my grandparents were when I was growing up. (And let me just confess-- I'm not half as mature as they were.