• The Good Life: 85 Years of Lessons from Dr. Waldinger
    Feb 17 2026

    Dr. Robert Waldinger, director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development, shares insights from the world's longest study on happiness, tracking over 2,500 people since 1938. The core finding: A good life comes from caring for your body and relationships, as warm connections predict health and longevity better than cholesterol levels at midlife. Privilege doesn't guarantee happiness, as inner-city participants matched Harvard men in well-being.


    Guest Introduction:

    Dr. Waldinger is a Harvard Medical School professor, psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, and Zen master who directs the 85+ year Harvard Study. His TED Talk has over 50 million views, and he co-authored The Good Life with Marc Schulz, distilling study lessons on connection. He teaches meditation globally and psychotherapy at Mass General Hospital.


    Connect With Guest:

    • Website: robertwaldinger.com
    • Book: The Good Life: Lessons from the World's Longest Scientific Study of Happiness.
    • TED Talk: "What makes a good life? Lessons from the longest study on happiness".
    • LinkedIn: Robert Waldinger

    What to do next:

    • Click to grab our free guide, 10 Key Issues to Consider as You Explore Your Retirement Transition
    • Please leave a review at Apple Podcasts.
    • Join our Revolutionize Your Retirement group on Facebook.
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    56 Min.
  • Aging, Climate, and Hope—Why This Conversation Matters Now with Rick Moody
    Feb 10 2026

    In this episode of Revolutionize Your Retirement, host Dori Mintzer talks with gerontologist, author, and longtime positive aging pioneer Rick (Harry R.) Moody about his latest book, Climate Change in an Aging Society. Rick describes how he came to link two topics many people avoid, aging and climate, and why he believes older adults have a unique role to play in responding to the “four horsemen of the climate apocalypse”: fire, flood, drought, and heat.

    Rick and Dori discuss how climate realities are already affecting decisions about where and how to live, home insurance, health, and the ability to “age in place.” Drawing on stories from New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, wildfire survivors in Paradise, California, and his own move from Boulder to the Bay Area, Rick underscores that relocation is not a full solution, as almost every region now faces some climate risk. Instead, he argues that the key is to move from paralysis and denial toward action—mitigation and adaptation—rooted in a sense of legacy and intergenerational responsibility.

    The conversation highlights Rick’s core message: “Here, now, you, hope.” He explains why hope is not naïve optimism but “a verb with its sleeves rolled up,” and outlines three powerful roles for individuals at any age: citizen (voting, marching, contacting elected officials), consumer (choices about energy use, travel, food, and purchases), and investor (shifting money away from fossil fuels and toward more sustainable options).

    About the Guest – Rick (Harry R.) Moody, PhD

    Rick (Harry R.) Moody, PhD, is a pioneering gerontologist, educator, and author whose work has helped shape the modern conversations on positive aging, ethics, and the spiritual dimensions of later life. He is the former Vice President for Academic Affairs at AARP, visiting faculty in the Creative Longevity and Wisdom program at Fielding Graduate University, and visiting professor at Tohoku University in Japan.

    Rick previously served as Executive Director of the Brookdale Center on Aging at Hunter College and as Chair of the Board of Elderhostel (now Road Scholar). He has written or co-written numerous influential books and articles, including the widely used gerontology textbook Aging: Concepts and Controversies (now in its 10th edition), Ethics in an Aging Society (the first book on biomedical ethics and aging), and The Five Stages of the Soul, which has been translated into seven languages.

    Key Topics We Cover

    • Why climate change and aging belong in the same conversation, and why the title “Climate Change in an Aging Society” matters.
    • The difference between fear, despair, and what Rick calls real hope (not optimism), including reflections from Václav Havel and David Orr.
    • Mitigation vs. adaptation and what each means for older adults deciding whether and where to move, downsize, or age in place.
    • How dreams can mirror climate anxiety and also point toward personal action and awakening in the second half of life.

    Connect with Rick Moody

    • Mind-Body Website: https://cmbm.org/governance/
    • Books:
    • Five Stages of the Soul
    • Aging

    What to do next:

    • Click to grab our free guide, 10 Key Issues to Consider as You Explore Your Retirement Transition
    • Please leave a review at Apple Podcasts.
    • Join our Revolutionize Your Retirement group on Facebook.
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    58 Min.
  • Longevity Literacy, Purpose, and the New Map of Life with Helen Hirsh Spence
    Jan 27 2026

    In this episode of Revolutionize Your Retirement, host Dori Mintzer talks with Helen Hirsh Spence, founder of Top 60 Over 60, about reframing aging in the 21st century and confronting both external and internalized ageism. Helen shares her own story of becoming a social entrepreneur in her late 60s after a 35-year leadership career in education, and how subtle experiences of invisibility and lowered expectations led her to recognize ageism in herself and in the culture around her.

    The conversation dives into what ageism looks and sounds like, everyday comments, workplace nudges to retire, birthday-card humor, and “senior moment” jokes, and why these messages quietly erode confidence, opportunity, and health. Helen introduces the idea of “longevity literacy” and a “longevity mindset,” noting that we now live 20–30 years longer than previous generations and need a new life map beyond the old “learn–earn–retire” model. She and Dori discuss how people in their 50s, 60s, 70s, and beyond can pivot, re-skill, and design non-linear lives that include multiple purposes and periodic reinvention.

    Helen also talks about her work with individuals and organizations: helping older adults surface purpose, strengths, and an “entrepreneurial mindset,” and helping employers become age-ready by recognizing the value of older workers’ experience and institutional knowledge. She emphasizes the importance of self-awareness, stepping out of one’s comfort zone, building multi-generational connections, and cultivating supportive networks that challenge limiting beliefs about aging.

    About the Guest – Helen Hirsh Spence

    Helen Hirsh Spence is a trailblazing advocate for longevity literacy and a leading voice in the fight against ageism. She is the founder of Top 60 Over 60, a niche consultancy and thought-leadership platform that challenges outdated stereotypes about aging and showcases the value of older adults in today’s workforce and society.

    Before launching her social enterprise in her late 60s, Helen spent more than 35 years as a senior leader in public and private education, including roles as a language teacher, secondary school principal, founding executive of the Ontario Principals’ Council, and head of an all-girls school in Ottawa. A lifelong learner and traveler, she has done volunteer advisory work in Honduras, Bolivia, the Canadian Arctic, India, and Bhutan, and even climbed Kilimanjaro at 58.

    Key Topics We Cover

    • Longevity literacy and the new map of life: living 20–30 years longer and outgrowing the learn–earn–retire model.
    • Longevity mindset: reframing expectations, health span, and the opportunities of extra decades.
    • Purpose in later life: self-awareness, revisiting values, multiple evolving purposes, and getting out of your comfort zone.
    • The entrepreneurial mindset (for business or life): creativity, spotting opportunity, re-skilling, and embracing change.

    Connect with Helen Hirsh Spence

    • Website & Resources: Top 60 Over 60 – articles, talks, media, and program information.
    • LinkedIn: Age Sense - Fresh perspectives & insights on shifting demographics, longevity & age inclusivity, reflections

    What to do next:

    • Click to grab our free guide, 10 Key Issues to Consider as You Explore Your Retirement Transition
    • Please leave a review at Apple Podcasts.
    • Join our Revolutionize Your Retirement group on Facebook.
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    1 Std. und 1 Min.
  • When the Shadow Speaks: Listening to the Inner Voice That Hijacks Your Life with Connie Zweig, PhD
    Jan 20 2026

    In this conversation, host Dori Mintzer welcomes Dr. Connie Zweig back to explore how “shadow work” can become a powerful inner practice in midlife and beyond. They discuss what the “shadow” actually is, how it forms in childhood, and the many ways it shows up in later life through self‑sabotage, repeating relationship patterns, addictions, moods, and projections onto partners, adult children, and political or religious “enemies.”

    Connie explains her practical method of identifying “shadow characters” using thoughts, feelings, and body sensations as cues, then naming and dialoguing with these inner figures to discover their valid, often hidden needs. Through vivid examples, the “foodie,” the inner critic, and the controller, she shows how greater awareness can transform blame into responsibility, especially in long‑term relationships and marriage. She and Dori also explore “shadow marriage” vows, how couples and families can consciously honor each other’s shadow characters, and how elders can use shadow work for reconciliation, forgiveness, and a more peaceful final chapter of life.

    The discussion widens to the collective shadow, including how projection fuels polarization, dehumanization, and war, and how leaders like Donald Trump have “weaponized” shadow projection on a mass scale. Connie offers a different vision: inner work as a spiritual and social responsibility, combined with daily contemplative practice, so that each of us contributes less to the darkness and more to the light in this “crazy moment” of history.

    About the Guest – Connie Zweig, PhD

    Connie Zweig, PhD, is a retired Jungian psychotherapist, author, and teacher known as a pioneering guide to the human shadow across the lifespan. She is co‑author of the classic anthology Meeting the Shadow (new expanded edition) and author of Romancing the Shadow, which presents her method of working with “shadow characters” in individuals, couples, families, and communities.

    Her award‑winning book The Inner Work of Age: Shifting from Role to Soul extends shadow work into midlife and later life, reframing aging as a spiritual practice that includes life review, reconciliation, and releasing the victim narrative. In Meeting the Shadow on the Spiritual Path: The Dance of Darkness and Light in Our Search for Awakening, she turns to religious and spiritual communities, illuminating how idealization, projection, and abuse of power create “spiritual shadow” and religious trauma, and how disillusioned seekers can reclaim their own light.

    Key Topics We Cover

    • What the “shadow” is and how it forms in childhood.
    • How shadow material erupts as addiction, procrastination, criticism, and repetitive conflicts.
    • Using shadow work in couples, including “shadow marriage” vows and reducing blame in long‑term relationships.
    • Shadow in families, adult‑child relationships, and the life review process in later life.

    Connect with Connie:

    • Website with events, videos, and resources: ConnieZweig.com
    • Podcast with her husband: Dr. Neil’s Spiritual Awakening to Non‑Duality (all major platforms).

    What to do next:

    • Click to grab our free guide, 10 Key Issues to Consider as You Explore Your Retirement Transition
    • Please leave a review at Apple Podcasts.
    • Join our Revolutionize Your Retirement group on Facebook.
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    1 Std. und 12 Min.
  • Age Against the Machine: Fighting Stereotypes, Building Power Together With Ashton Applewhite
    Jan 13 2026

    Author and activist Ashton Applewhite joins Dori Mintzer to expose how ageism, more than aging itself, undermines health, purpose, and connection across the lifespan. Drawing on her book This Chair Rocks: A Manifesto Against Ageism and her decades of work at the forefront of the anti-ageism movement, Ashton explains how internalized, interpersonal, and structural ageism show up in everyday life and what it takes to challenge them. She also introduces YODA (Youngers and Olders Dismantling Ageism), a new initiative inviting people of different ages to come together, talk about power, and build alliances for a more just, age-inclusive world.


    What We Talk About

    • How Ashton first “woke up” to aging and discovered how wrong most of our assumptions about later life really are.
    • What ageism is, where the term came from, and how it operates alongside racism, sexism, and ableism.
    • Internalized ageism and the everyday language and beliefs that limit both “youngers” and “olders”.
    • Chrono normativity and why life is not a linear timeline with fixed ages for work, family, and retirement.
    • Why the U.S. is highly age-segregated and how mixed-age relationships reduce prejudice and enrich everyone’s lives.
    • The origins of Old School: The Anti-Ageism Clearinghouse and its evolution into the Old School Hub.
    • YODA: what Youngers and Olders Dismantling Ageism is, why it centers conversations about power, and how anyone can try it in their community, workplace, or family.
    • Practical ways to respond to ageist comments, question generational stereotypes, and design more inter-age programs and communities.


    About the Guest: Ashton Applewhite

    Ashton Applewhite is an internationally recognized expert on ageism and the author of This Chair Rocks: A Manifesto Against Ageism. She is the co-founder of Old School, a global hub that curates free, anti-ageism resources and convenes people working to advance age equity around the world.​

    Ashton speaks widely at venues including the United Nations and the TED main stage, and has been a leading voice in making age a recognized dimension of diversity. In 2022, the United Nations named her one of the “Healthy Aging 50,” honoring 50 leaders transforming the world to be a better place to grow older.


    Connect with Ashton Applewhite

    • Website: This Chair Rocks
    • Book: This Chair Rocks: A Manifesto Against Ageism
    • LinkedIn: Ashton Applewhite

    What to do next:

    • Click to grab our free guide, 10 Key Issues to Consider as You Explore Your Retirement Transition
    • Please leave a review at Apple Podcasts.
    • Join our Revolutionize Your Retirement group on Facebook.
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    1 Std. und 7 Min.
  • What If There Was a Way to Find Joy in Everything? with Steven Petrow
    Jan 6 2026

    Award-winning journalist and author Steven Petrow joins Dori Mintzer to explore how to “make” joy, even in some of life’s darkest seasons. Drawing on his new book, The Joy You Make: Find the Silver Lining Even on Your Darkest Days, Steven distinguishes joy from happiness, shares his personal journey through grief and loss, and offers research-informed, highly practical ways to cultivate joy from the inside out. From gratitude practices and community connections to play, reading, and embracing imperfection, this conversation invites listeners to see joy as an inner resource that can coexist with sorrow and uncertainty.


    What We Talk About

    • How joy differs from happiness, and why joy is more of an enduring inner state than a short-lived “high”
    • Steven’s shift from a “Big Bang” fireworks idea of joy to quieter, everyday forms like serene, spiritual, and shared joy
    • The core “recipe” for joy, including gratitude and connection/community as foundational ingredients
    • Using practices like a 21‑day gratitude journal to retrain attention toward everyday blessings
    • How joy and grief can coexist, and what Steven learned about this through the deaths of his parents and sister
    • Vulnerability, shedding emotional “armor,” and how being more open deepens relationships and joy
    • Creating space to “be” rather than “do,” including the joy of getting lost, the joy of the mundane, and silent retreats
    • Joy in aging, being single, play, and intergenerational relationships in later life


    About the Guest: Steven Petrow

    Steven Petrow is an award-winning journalist and author best known for his essays in The Washington Post and The New York Times on aging, health, and civility, and he is also a regular contributor to NPR and other outlets. His TED Talk, “Three Ways to Practice Civility,” has drawn nearly 2 million views, and he is the former president of NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists.Steven-Petrow.txt​

    He has received numerous awards and grants from organizations including the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Smithsonian Institution, the Ucross Foundation, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and the National Press Foundation, and in 2017 he endowed the Steven Petrow LGBTQ Fellowship at VCCA. Steven is the author of several books, including the bestseller Stupid Things I Won’t Do When I Get Old and his latest, The Joy You Make: Find the Silver Lining Even on Your Darkest Days; he serves as North Carolina’s 2024 Piedmont Laureate and lives in Hillsborough, North Carolina.Steven-Petrow.txt​


    Connect with Steven Petrow

    • Website: stevenpetrow.com
    • Social: Active on LinkedIn

    What to do next:

    • Click to grab our free guide, 10 Key Issues to Consider as You Explore Your Retirement Transition
    • Please leave a review at Apple Podcasts.
    • Join our Revolutionize Your Retirement group on Facebook.
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    1 Std. und 2 Min.
  • Unlock Your Purpose: Grow and Give for Life with Richard Leider
    Dec 16 2025

    In this inspiring conversation, internationally best-selling author, coach, and keynote speaker Richard Leider explores why purpose is fundamental to health, healing, happiness, and longevity, especially in the second half of life. He explains why purpose is something to be unlocked from within rather than found “out there,” and how small, everyday “little p” acts of meaning can ultimately reveal a bigger life purpose. Drawing on decades of work with leaders, research in lifestyle medicine, and stories from clients and his own life, Richard offers simple practices and questions to help listeners grow, give, and make each day count.


    What We Talk About

    • Why purpose is not a luxury, but a basic human need tied to well-being and longevity
    • The difference between “big P” purpose and “little p” purpose in everyday life
    • The “napkin test”: gifts + passions + values = purpose/calling
    • How to think about purpose in retirement and the added decades of life many of us now have
    • Practices like the two-minute purpose practice and the “grow and give” daily question
    • The importance of relationships, community, and service in combating isolation and loneliness
    • How curiosity and a growth mindset support purposeful aging
    • Richard’s “incomplete manifesto for purpose” and what he stands for in his work


    About the Guest: Richard Leider

    Richard Leider is an internationally best-selling author, coach, and keynote speaker widely regarded as a pioneer of the global purpose movement. He has written 12 books, including three bestsellers that have sold over a million copies and been translated into 20 languages, and his PBS special, The Power of Purpose, was viewed by millions across the U.S.

    He is the founder of Inventure – The Purpose Company, a firm dedicated to helping individuals live, work, and lead on purpose, and has worked with over 100,000 leaders in more than 100 organizations, including AARP, Ameriprise, Blue Zones, and the U.S. Department of State. Richard is ranked by Forbes as one of the top five most respected coaches, serves as a senior fellow at the University of Minnesota’s Center for Spirituality and Healing, and is a global purpose ambassador for Blue Zones and Blue Spirit Costa Rica. He and his wife, Sally, live in the Minneapolis, Minnesota area, and for over 30 years he has led Inventure Expeditions walking safaris in East Africa, where he founded and serves on the board of the Dorobo Fund for Tanzania.


    Connect with Richard Leider

    • Website: The Purpose Company
    • Books
    • The Napkin Test

    What to do next:

    • Click to grab our free guide, 10 Key Issues to Consider as You Explore Your Retirement Transition
    • Please leave a review at Apple Podcasts.
    • Join our Revolutionize Your Retirement group on Facebook.
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    1 Std. und 9 Min.
  • Making Older Better: The Art and Science of Joyful Aging with Dorian Mintzer and Kerry Burnight
    Dec 2 2025

    In this uplifting, research-rich conversation, Dr. Dori Mintzer talks with gerontologist Dr. Kerry Burnight, author of JoySpan: The Art and Science of Thriving in Life’s Second Half. Together they explore how to move beyond fear and decline-based views of aging and instead cultivate dignity, health, and joy throughout a longer life.

    Dr. Kerry explains “JoySpan” as enduring well-being and contentment, an inside-out joy that can coexist with grief, illness, and real-life challenges, distinct from both lifespan and healthspan. She introduces the JoySpan Matrix of four internal strengths: Grow, Connect, Adapt, and Give, sharing practical, everyday ways listeners can keep learning, build nourishing relationships, enhance coping skills, and create meaning and legacy in later life.

    Through stories from her decades of work in gerontology and powerful research findings on mindset and aging, Dr. Kerry shows how internalized ageism and a “decline aging mindset” can limit both length and quality of life, and what it looks like to replace fear with agency, curiosity, community, and conscious preparation for our future selves. Listeners come away with simple, doable practices, like gratitude, reaching out to others, and starting or joining circles and book groups, to expand their own JoySpan at any age.


    About the guest

    Dr. Kerry Burnight (“Dr. Kerry”) is a gerontologist on a mission to “make older better.” She taught geriatric medicine and gerontology for 18 years at the University of California, Irvine School of Medicine, co‑founded the nation’s first Elder Abuse Forensic Center, and founded TheGerontologist.com.

    Recognized as “America’s gerontologist,” she has been an invited speaker at the White House Elder Justice Summit and the U.S. Department of Justice, and has appeared on CBS News, NBC News, The Doctors, Money Matters, and The Dr. Phil Show. She is a sought‑after keynote speaker and shares research-based strategies for optimizing dignity, health, and joy in longevity through her book JoySpan, her podcast, blog, and active presence online.

    Connect with Kerry:

    LinkedIn

    Website

    JoySpan

    What to do next:

    • Click to grab our free guide, 10 Key Issues to Consider as You Explore Your Retirement Transition
    • Please leave a review at Apple Podcasts.
    • Join our Revolutionize Your Retirement group on Facebook.
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    1 Std. und 12 Min.