I’m 63 and nobody warned me that the thing I’d grieve most about aging wouldn’t be lost youth or fading looks — it would be the suffocating awareness that I spent decades being loyal to people who were only loyal to what I could do for them

by Tony Moorcroft
March 17, 2026

When I turned sixty, I thought I’d prepared myself for all the usual suspects of aging. The creaky knees, the reading glasses collection, the way my grandkids run circles around me at the park. But sitting here at sixty-three, I’ve discovered something nobody talks about at retirement parties or birthday celebrations.

Last month, I ran into someone I’d worked with for fifteen years. We used to grab lunch together twice a week, share stories about our kids, complain about corporate policies. When I retired three years ago, he promised we’d stay in touch.

That day at the grocery store, he looked right through me until I called his name. The five-minute conversation that followed felt like talking to a stranger who knew my resume but had forgotten my soul.

That encounter crystallized something I’d been feeling but couldn’t name. The hardest part of aging isn’t watching my hair turn gray or needing more time to recover from a long walk. It’s the crushing realization that I poured decades of loyalty into relationships that were transactional all along.

The workplace loyalty trap

I spent over thirty years in human resources at a manufacturing company, helping people navigate their workplace problems. I prided myself on being the guy everyone could count on. Need someone to cover your shift? Call me. Want advice on dealing with a difficult manager? I’m your man. Looking for someone to champion your promotion? I’d go to bat for you.

What I didn’t see then was how one-sided many of these relationships were. I thought I was building friendships. They were building networks. When I cleaned out my desk three years ago, the flood of goodbye emails felt warm and genuine. But once I wasn’t the HR guy who could solve problems or provide references, most of those connections evaporated like morning mist.

The few work relationships that survived my retirement? They’re with people who saw me as more than my job title from the start. We talk about life, not just what I can do for them professionally. That distinction seems obvious now, but it took me six decades to truly understand it.

When helping becomes enabling

There’s a particular sting that comes from realizing you’ve been someone’s solution, not their friend. I think about all the times I picked up extra responsibilities because someone asked nicely, stayed late to help with projects that weren’t mine, or used my connections to open doors for people who forgot my name once they walked through them.

My wife Linda has watched this pattern for our entire thirty-eight years of marriage. She’d gently point out when someone only called when they needed something. “When was the last time they asked how you’re doing without following it up with a favor?” she’d ask. I’d brush it off, convinced that being helpful was the same as being valued.

But helping and enabling are different beasts. When you’re always the giver, you attract takers. They’re not necessarily bad people. They’re just people who’ve learned you’ll always say yes, always show up, always put their needs first. And why wouldn’t they keep taking what’s freely offered?

The friend who changed everything

Three years ago, I lost my closest friend to cancer. We’d known each other since our forties, bonded over fishing trips and bad jokes. During his illness, I watched how he spent his remaining time. He didn’t waste a minute on people who treated him like a convenience. He surrounded himself with those who loved him for who he was, not what he could provide.

His death hit me like a sledgehammer, but it also opened my eyes. Here was someone who understood something I was still learning: time is the only real currency we have, and we’re all spending it on something. The question is whether we’re investing it or just giving it away.

Since then, I’ve started paying attention to reciprocity. Not in a transactional way, like keeping score, but in recognizing whether someone sees me as a person or a resource. Do they celebrate my wins or just show up for my assistance? Do they check in when I’m quiet or only when they need something?

Learning to listen differently

One of the ironies of my life is that I built a career on being a good listener. People would sit in my office for hours, sharing their workplace struggles, their career fears, their interpersonal conflicts. I thought this skill translated everywhere, that being a good listener at work meant I was good at it in general.

But listening at work, where you’re solving problems and mediating disputes, is different from listening in real relationships. At work, people came to me for answers. In real friendships, sometimes people just need to be heard. Sometimes they want to hear about you, too.

I’ve been working on this with Linda. After decades of her pointing out that I’d spend an hour dissecting a coworker’s problem but zone out during conversations about our own life, I’m finally getting it. Being truly present for the people who matter most requires a different kind of attention than being the office problem-solver.

The freedom in letting go

You know what’s liberating about this painful realization? Once you see it, you can’t unsee it. And once you can’t unsee it, you can start making different choices.

These days, I’m selective about where I invest my energy. I still help people, but I notice who reciprocates and who disappears until they need something again. I’ve stopped feeling guilty about not answering every call for assistance.

I’ve learned that “No” is a complete sentence, and that disappointing someone who only values your usefulness isn’t really a loss.

My circle is smaller now, but it’s real. The friends who remain are the ones who call just to chat, who remember my birthday without Facebook reminders, who ask about Linda and genuinely want to know the answer. These are the people who knew me before I could help them professionally and will know me long after I’m useful to anyone.

Closing thoughts

If I could go back and tell my younger self one thing, it would be this: pay attention to who shows up when you have nothing to offer but yourself. Those are your people. Everyone else is just passing through.

I’m sixty-three now, and I’m finally learning to grieve not just the years I spent being loyal to fair-weather friends, but also the energy I could have invested in the relationships that actually mattered. It’s a hard lesson, but maybe that’s why nobody warns you about it. Some truths you have to live through to understand.

So let me ask you this: if you stripped away everything you can do for others, who would still be sitting at your table?

 

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