”They Have Books and
Things That They Lend For Free ….”
(oh come on! If you’re of a “certain” age, you’re already humming
the tune in your head!!”)
(oh come on! If you’re of a “certain” age, you’re already humming
the tune in your head!!”)
Question – do you know where your local
library branch is?
If not, shame on you!Do you have an up-to-date library card?
If not, double shame on you!
(And if you have school-aged children who don’t
have an up-to-date library card either, triple shame on you!!!)
The first question you should be asking
yourself, right after “can I afford to retire”, is “do I know the way to my
local library branch?”
I promise you, it’s not your high school
library anymore!
As soon as you have retired, you should
waste no time in making your local library branch your new best friend!
It may have been so long since you’ve
actually been inside a library, you’ve forgotten just what the library has to
offer, especially for retirees:
a) Computers and internet
access. If you don’t have a home
computer, you can book time on one of the library’s computers. And since you’re probably going to be looking
for a computer at 10 a.m. on a weekday morning, chances are very good that all of the computers are going to be
free! If you have a home computer, but no internet provider, pack up your lap
top and head to the library.
b) Printers. If you have a home computer, but no printer –
down load your files and head to the library.
c) Just bought your first lap top
in anticipation of retiring but aren’t really quite sure how to make the thing
work – betcha there’s a free computer workshop being offered at your local
library. (Most of the computer classes
at the Mississauga library branches are being marketed specifically to and for
seniors!)
d) Speaking of free workshops,
there are tons of them being offered through the Mississauga library
system. And I’m sure the same is true of
the library system in whatever municipality you call home. I haven’t seen a library system yet that
isn’t offering workshops on how to use the library’s resources to trace your
family tree, for example! (A top ten
project for most retirees, it seems!)
e) Drop-in’s and book clubs. Join a library book club and the book will be
provided to you! Drop in on the monthly
knitting club (or scrapbooking or model airplane club). Or ask if
you can start a drop-in for a particular hobby that interests you!
f) Monthly speaker’s series –
cancer, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, arthritis.
Guest speakers from various organizations will undoubtedly being making
the monthly rounds of your library system.
g) And let’s not forget the
primary raisin d’etre for the library system – books! Don’t buy the next bestseller (do you really
have money in your budget to buy hardcover books anyway?) Pick it up at the library. May have to get yourself on the “wait list”,
but you’re not going anywhere, so you’ve got the time to wait! And once you have read the book and have
decided that you can’t live without your very own copy, then you can go out a
buy a copy!
h) And magazines and CD’s! Before you go out and buy a new CD or the
next monthly issue of a favorite magazine, check the library first.
i) DVD’s. Some libraries keep a library of recent
releases, some don’t. Just check before
you buy!
j) Discards. Most libraries cull their collections of
books, magazines, CD’s and DVD’s on a regular basis. Get to know your library staff and find out
when the monthly, bi-monthly, bi-annual or annual cull happens. Can usually pick up a myriad of items for
less than a buck!
k) The bulletin board/brochure
rack. The bulletin board and brochure
rack in my local library branch have become one of my prime sources for
information on the goings-on in my neighbourhood. And I suspect, the smaller your home town,
the larger the library bulletin board.
All of your local sports and arts organizations are bound to have a
flyer in the rack. The bulletin board is
also a prime source of information for notices from your local government –
planning hearings, New Year’s levee, Canada Day Celebrations, etc.
l) The Mississauga Library E-Bookmobile
made a stop in Celebration Square last fall.
I don’t have an e-reader (yet), but if you’ve got an e-reader, check
your library branch for free downloads.
m) Music – I can download x number
of free music selections from the Mississauga Library (I have an IPod sitting
in a plastic case on my bookshelf. No
excuse now for not trying to figure out how to work the thing!)
n)
I can access a 3-D printer at
the Mississauga central library branch
… and I’m sure
there are loads and loads of other services and activities available in your
local library branch that I haven’t even thought of!
So, right after
you submit your notice of retirement to human resources … get out a map or a
GPS or a bloodhound and go and find your local library branch.
(And the same goes
for any Community Centre in your area!
I’ll bet the smaller the city you eventually retire to, the more events
and activities you’ll find offered at both.
And the bulletin boards and brochure racks will be proportionately
larger as well! And no doubt, many of
the activities offered will be free!)