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55, Underemployed, and Faking Normal

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55, Underemployed, and Faking Normal

Your Guide to a Better Life

Simon & Schuster,

15 min read
10 take-aways
Text available

What's inside?

Reclaim your dignity with midlife strategies for coping with ageism, underemployment and retirement.


Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Eye Opening
  • Concrete Examples
  • Engaging

Recommendation

Aging advocate Elizabeth White’s part-memoir, part-how-to text evokes regret and hope. You will regret not reading it sooner and you may feel resentful about the economic factors that strand many older adults – 55 and beyond – on a downward fiscal spiral. The upside: You will welcome her lessons on frugal living, meaningful choices and new career paths. Decades from now, you’ll be grateful that your younger self found time to read it.

Summary

The Face of Change

You recognize that 55-year-old face. It’s the well-groomed image of an older woman or man who seems to have his or her life in order. But looking more closely, you see and hear the truth about overdue utility bills, canceled salon appointments and corporate downsizing. The person before you pretends to be in control, but he or she struggles to maintain an accustomed lifestyle due to the lack of a steady job, a retirement account or emergency funds. Imagine a woman with a first-rate education who is underemployed. She suspects that age discrimination led recruiters to reject her job applications. She worries secretly about becoming homeless. Sadly, her story is not unique. The face in front of you may reflect your own fears about aging during an era of great change and uncertainty.

Lessons on Healthy Finances from a Nurse

Don’t despair. Take the story of an older African-American woman who amassed a large estate on an annual salary of $30,000 or less as a private nurse. Her bank account sports a hefty six-figure sum, and her home in Brooklyn is now worth nearly $4 million...

About the Author

Elizabeth White is a frequent guest blogger and conference speaker. Her work has appeared in Barrons, Forbes, The Huffington Post, MarketWatch, Next Avenue, the American Society for Aging newsletter and The Washington Post, and she has appeared on the PBS NewsHour. Her TEDx Talk, now on the main TED stage, has more than 1.5 million views. White is a nonprofit executive and advocate for aging solutions.


Comment on this summary

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  • Avatar
    3 years ago
    Great ideas for retirement with lower income
  • Avatar
    E. A. 4 years ago
    Some might say it is realistic, but i find the outlook suggested by this book is quite grim, especially when the author recommends drastically lowered expectations (in polite terms) as integral part to retirement planning.

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