His name is Sam.
He just turned 95 years old this month. He still lives in the house he built, a house that took 25 years to finish, built for a wife who never got to see it completed. She died of cancer at 67. He has lived there alone for a quarter century.
When I first showed up at his door three years ago, he was quiet. I was just another volunteer on a meal delivery route. Fourteen stops, one hour, in and out.
But I kept coming back every Thursday.
I always had a big smile. I always asked how his week was. I always waited long enough to hear the answer.
One afternoon, he invited me in for tea.
That was the afternoon I sat in the house he built, listening to a man describe a life so full it barely seemed possible.
Seven languages. Learning to play piano at 95. Still learning Italian. Still clearing his own acreage by hand.
I drove home that day thinking about what I had just witnessed.
Not the productivity. Not the achievements.
The aliveness of him.
I started volunteering because I needed something to do with my time.
I am not going to dress that up.
Retirement had given me freedom and taken away structure in the same breath, and I was looking for places to put myself.
What I did not expect was Sam.
Or the dozen other people on that route who, in their own quiet ways, showed me something I had not been looking for.
Sometimes it is just showing up at someone's door with a meal and a genuine question about their week.
And being changed by the answer.
There is something that happens when you give your time to another person without an agenda.
Something shifts.
You stop being the centre of your own story for a while.
For men in this chapter, post-career, post-title, post the version of ourselves that was defined by output and productivity, that shift matters more than we admit.
The men who seem most grounded in retirement are not always the ones with the perfect hobby, the busiest travel calendar, or the best financial plan.
They are the ones who found somewhere to put their attention that was not themselves.
A place to show up. A reason to leave the house. Someone who was expecting them.
That sounds simple.
It is not easy.
Sam did not set out to teach me anything.
He just let me see what continuing looks like.
A man living in the house he built for a woman he lost. A man still learning, still working, still reaching for something beyond the walls around him.
At 95, he was not trying to reinvent himself.
He was simply still in the game.
And maybe that is what struck me most.
Purpose was not something he had found once and framed on the wall.
It was something he kept renewing.
A language lesson. A cleared patch of land. A cup of tea with someone who kept showing up at the door.
I am not suggesting everyone needs a meal delivery route.
Or a Sam.
I am suggesting that this chapter goes better when there is somewhere outside yourself that needs you.
Not in a burden sense.
In a belonging sense.
The men I have watched struggle most in retirement are not always the ones with the biggest problems. They are often the ones who quietly stopped being needed anywhere.
Stopped being expected. Stopped having a reason to show up that had nothing to do with their own comfort.
I took a break from the route. The men's group was growing and something had to give.
But I still check in on Sam.
Every few weeks, I make a point of it.
Not out of obligation.
Because he matters to me now.
That is what happens when you show up for someone long enough. The transaction disappears, and something else takes its place.
That is what The Post Game is really about.
Not having it all figured out. Not performing some polished version of retirement that looks good from the outside.
Just staying awake to the life that is actually happening.
Paying attention. Showing up. Finding the places where your presence still matters.
Because purpose does not always arrive as a plan.
Sometimes it is a Thursday route. Sometimes it is a cup of tea. Sometimes it is a 95-year-old man reminding you that being alive is still something to practice.
Not the search for one big answer.
Just the commitment to keep showing up for this chapter, one day at a time.