COVID more or less forced me into retirement by Nov '21, though I confess that I was fortunate to be able to so at age 64, and then live lean until I hit SS FRA in April '24, 66.5 years old. Theoretically I was sufficiently fit to work right up to now, but tragically both my brothers died in early '22, & I was GRATEFUL that I could be fully present for at least my younger bro's last few months.
Retirement's a bigger topic than this forum can manage, BUT I remind myself daily how I was (and am) LUCKY in all sorts of ways to have been able to arrive at this "far shore" after decades of mostly benign employment grind. I've been comparatively healthy (though not unscathed), but even so, I REALLY appreciate how many seniors who are even ABLE to stagger across the age 62 SS eligible age just plain HAVE to retire. What is downplayed I think is just how difficult-to-impossible it is for even a reasonably fit & alert senior to find suitable employment at 60+, or the high-stress difficulty transitioning into new employment as a senior worker imposes.
Mercifully I'm a native urbanite living in a small state, and had a reasonably short commute even as workplaces shifted over decades. Even so, and especially given our VERY mercurial weather, I'm EXTREMELY grateful that commuting daily to & from a workplace is now behind me. Risking life & limb going & coming on a glazed highway in January is something I'll NEVER miss! I cannot imagine enduring DC or LA traffic daily, much less London, or even nearby Chicago or Minneapolis.