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THOUGHTS
FROM THE PORCH

Retirement And Spiritual
Rejuvenation

My book is a collection of fifteen essays, focusing on retirement as an opportunity to gain awareness of the inner dynamic -emotions, thought patterns and behavioral habits—that govern our lives. Spiritual lives awakens as we recognize, examine, and transform these forces.

about ME

Jeremiah Conway

Jeremiah Conaway retired as a Professor of Philosophy in 2019 after teaching for 41 years at the University of Southern Maine. He holds a Ph.D. from Yale University and a B.A. from Fordham University. His previous book, The Alchemy of Teaching: The Transformation of Lives (Sentient Publications, 2013), explores the impact of education on both teachers and students. For the past twelve years, he has been a practicing Buddhist and currently serves on the Board of Directors at the Tibetan Buddhist Center in Portland, Maine. His background in philosophy and his Buddhist practice form the foundation of his work. Beyond academia and writing, he enjoys Irish set-dancing, playing his old accordion, and exploring the backroads of Maine and Portugal, his wife’s native country.

about the book

THOUGHTS FROM THE PORCH

Retirement And Spiritual
Rejuvenation

My book is a collection of fifteen essays, focusing on retirement as an opportunity to gain awareness of the inner dynamic -emotions, thought patterns and behavioral habits, that govern our lives. Spiritual lives awakens as we recognize, examine, and transform these forces. The essays examine the issues that retirement poses: the difference between solitude and loneliness; the search for purpose in the face of physical weakening; the need for and pleasures of community; learning to deal with loss and grief; the special role of the elderly vis a vis the young. My work is not a “how to” manual. It doesn’t presume to give advice, nor it is c sociological study of the aged. It speaks from no professorial podium, but from the porch, an ordinary place, in and of the everyday. It aims to provoke thinking by examining my experience, its conundrums. gaffs, and moments of insight, as well as my life long association with thinkers and poets and their occupation with the inner lives of human beings.