AARP Hearing Center
The joy you felt at your retirement party is a fading memory; you've begun to feel restless. Or perhaps you could use some extra money for health insurance or a cruise. You've got company. Forty percent of boomers plan to work part time after leaving their main jobs, according to a recent survey by the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies. Many will use the skills of their former work lives. Others will find an entirely new field.
The trick is to find something that feels more like fun than a workaday grind. To get you started, here are 10 jobs worth going back to work for.
1. Interpreter/translator
Do you speak Spanish? Vietnamese? Turkish? In our multiethnic society, all sorts of institutions need help with languages: courts, social service agencies and customer service centers, to name a few. Typically you'll need to get certified. But with that done, you'll have the freedom of freelancing, taking jobs or turning them down. And a translator's job can be the gateway to meeting fascinating new people and learning about new cultures.
Getting started: Check in with the website of the American Translators Association. Websites such as Upwork and Freelancer.com can also help you find clients.
2. Tax-return preparer
If you have a mind for numbers and computers, consider joining the small armies of tax preparers that firms such as H&R Block and Jackson Hewitt muster for the January-April peak tax season. Typically you'll be doing the straightforward returns.
Getting started: You can build up experience with AARP Foundation Tax-Aide, which trains volunteers to help older people with their taxes. Check the big firms' websites for details of their programs. Many companies will require you to take classes that they offer in the fall.
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