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Your Third Third

Podkast av Steve Gershik

engelsk

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Les mer Your Third Third

Your Third Third is the essential guide for people aged 50 and above, pivoting the conversation from anti-aging to "pro-living" with purpose and intention. Host Steve Gershik invites listeners to redefine the years 60-90 as the era of integration, meaning-making, and intentional legacy, not decline.

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12 Episoder

episode Your Six Needs cover

Your Six Needs

Why do we keep doing things we know aren't good for us? In this episode of Your Third Third, Steve looks at six underlying human needs that quietly drive more of our behavior than we realize: Significance, Certainty, Adventure, Love, Expansion, and Return.  Steve explores what happens when the structures that used to give us meaning, stability, connection, and growth begin to change or disappear. This episode is about more than motivation. It’s about the hidden needs underneath our habits, reactions, and stuck patterns. Why some people create drama to feel important. Why attention gets mistaken for connection. Why retirement can feel flat even when life looks fine on paper. Why the behavior you’re trying to change may actually be solving a real problem, badly. If you’ve ever looked back at something you said or did and thought, Why on earth did I do that? this episode gives you a more useful question to ask. Instead of: What’s wrong with me? Try: What need am I trying to meet right now? That shift can change a lot. If this episode resonates, subscribe to Your Third Third, share it with someone who’s navigating this stage of life, and check out Steve’s weekly writing on Substack., https://substack.com/@yourthirdthird

17. april 2026 - 22 min
episode Open the Box cover

Open the Box

This episode is about the difference between reinvention and integration, and why that distinction matters more than most people realize when they're standing at the edge of the third third. The cultural script says you leave fifty years of experience at the door and start fresh. I think that's the wrong frame entirely, and the research backs me up. People who navigate this transition well don't erase their past. They reorganize it. They carry forward what matters, put down what's been draining them, and build something with more intention than what came before. We also talk about what George Vaillant's decades-long Harvard Grant Study found about the connection between how you showed up in your working years and how you thrive afterward. And a Swiss study of nearly 800 people that found something genuinely reassuring: identity doesn't shrink when you retire. It expands. The Identity Inventory is this week's exercise: three columns, three hard questions, one piece of actual paper. Research referenced in this episode: George Vaillant, Triumphs of Experience: The Men of the Harvard Grant Study (Harvard University Press, 2012). This is the longest longitudinal study of human development ever undertaken, following over 200 men from their undergraduate years into their nineties. "Change and Persistence of Personal Identities After the Transition to Retirement," International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2010. A study of 792 Swiss people aged 58 to 70 found that professional identity remained important even after retirement, and that retired respondents rated more domains of self-description as important than those who hadn't yet retired. In other words, identity diversity was higher after retirement, not lower. Keep the conversation going: New essays every week at Your Third Third on Substack [https://yourthirdthird.substack.com/]. If this episode was useful, subscribing wherever you listen is the best way to help more people in their Third Third find us.

3. april 2026 - 19 min
episode The Friends You Actually Choose cover

The Friends You Actually Choose

EPISODE 9: THE FRIENDS YOU ACTUALLY CHOOSE Show Notes This episode digs into the science of how friendship works differently after 50. Steve explores what sociologists call "chosen family," the concept of people who aren't connected by blood or law but who become your real support system. He unpacks the finding that we get two major windows in life for building deep friendships, and that the years of active parenting in between (what researchers call the "interregnum") can leave us surrounded by people but starved for real connection. Along the way, Steve gets honest about what it actually feels like to make new friends at 58 (spoiler: it feels a lot like dating), and shares a framework called the "social convoy" that can help you take stock of who's actually in your inner circle and whether those people got there by choice or by coincidence. What's Covered in This Episode The two eras of friendship formation. Research suggests your twenties are a time of expansive social networking, where proximity does most of the work. Your fifties and beyond open a second window, where intentionality replaces geography. The "interregnum" of the parenting years. The decades between those two eras are often packed with social activity that looks like friendship but functions more like logistics. Steve reflects on his own experience raising five kids and the slow realization that most of those connections were situational, not chosen. Socioemotional Selectivity Theory. Developed by Stanford psychologist Laura Carstensen, this theory explains why older adults naturally shift from breadth to depth in their relationships. As your sense of remaining time changes, so do your priorities. You stop optimizing for the size of your network and start caring about its quality. The proximity to passion shift. In your twenties, the question was "who's around?" In your fifties, the question becomes "who shares what I actually care about?" Steve makes the case that shared interest and passion, not forced networking, is how lasting friendships form in this chapter. Making friends in your 50s, in practice. Steve shares a real story about meeting someone at his men's group, wanting to get to know him better, and then agonizing over a dinner invitation text for two weeks. The takeaway: the friendships that matter now require a willingness to feel a little foolish. The social convoy model. Developed by researchers Toni Antonucci and Robert Kahn, this framework asks you to picture three concentric circles around you: the people you can't imagine life without, the people who matter but aren't central, and the people who are familiar but not truly close. Steve explores how the convoy reorganizes in the third third, and why that reorganization is a feature, not a bug. Research and Further Reading Socioemotional Selectivity Theory (SST) Laura Carstensen's foundational theory on how our perception of time shapes social goals. When time feels expansive, we seek breadth. When it feels limited, we seek depth. * Carstensen, L.L. (2021). "Socioemotional Selectivity Theory: The Role of Perceived Endings in Human Motivation." The Gerontologist. Read the paper [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8599276/] * Carstensen, L.L., Isaacowitz, D.M., & Charles, S.T. (1999). "Taking Time Seriously: A Theory of Socioemotional Selectivity." American Psychologist, 54(3), 165–181. PubMed [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10199217/] The Social Convoy Model Toni Antonucci and Robert Kahn's framework for mapping your closest relationships into three concentric circles, and understanding how those circles change across a lifetime. * Antonucci, T.C., Ajrouch, K.J., & Birditt, K.S. (2014). "The Convoy Model: Explaining Socia

20. mars 2026 - 18 min
episode The Staircase of the Mind cover

The Staircase of the Mind

We've all had the moment. Standing in a doorway, phone in hand, no earthly idea why we're there. At 30, that's a punchline. At nearly 60, it feels like something else entirely. This episode starts there and ends somewhere more hopeful than you might expect. Stanford researchers found something surprising: the brain doesn't age in a slow, steady decline. It ages in three distinct jumps, a staircase, not a candle melting. The second step lands right around 60, and if you're anywhere near that territory, it's worth understanding what it means (and, more importantly, what it doesn't). In This Episode Cold open: The kitchen moment, and what happened when Steve Googled "cognitive decline" at 11 p.m. The Staircase: Three periods of sharper biological change, and why the 60-shift is a weather report, not a diagnosis. What it feels like: The lag, the retrieval delay, and why a therapist friend's four-word explanation reframed everything. The hopeful part: Why biological age and calendar age aren't the same thing, and what the people doing better have in common. Three things to do this week: One that makes you feel usefully stupid, one that makes your heart rate object, and one that requires you to actually show up. The real point: What changes in the third third is who's responsible for assigning you novelty, challenge, and connection. Action Step Pick one thing from each category this week. One activity that makes you feel productively clumsy (a language, an instrument, something unfamiliar). Three sessions where you get your heart rate into "I'd answer that question when I'm less near death" territory. And one real conversation where you ask something you've never asked before and listen all the way through. Connect Email Steve: steve@yourthirdthird.com [steve@yourthirdthird.com] Website: yourthirdthird.com

13. mars 2026 - 14 min
episode When Friendships Stop Fitting cover

When Friendships Stop Fitting

Some friendships don't end in a fight. They end in drift. You know, two people who quietly became strangers while still knowing each other's old addresses.  In this episode, Steve Gershik explores one of the softer, more confusing losses of midlife: the friendships that don't explode, they just deflate. And the grief that follows. Steve shares the story of reconnecting with a close friend of nearly thirty years after his divorce and the uncomfortable realization that the connection had gone flat. Not because either person was a villain, but because life had moved them to different chapters.  In this episode: * Why that familiar "flatness" you feel in certain friendships is worth paying attention to * The Fantasy Gap, the distance between the relationship you actually have and the one you keep hoping for * Why "acceptance" isn't the same as approval, and how to stop being the General Manager of Other People's Choices * A four-question framework for honestly evaluating a relationship that's draining your energy * The three real options when a friendship stops fitting: Release, Reduce, or Restructure * Why letting a friendship end its season isn't failure  Listener Homework:  Think of one relationship you keep quietly wishing were different. Ask yourself Steve's four questions. Choose one honest next move.  Also mentioned: Steve's companion Substack article with tools and frameworks for navigating these relationships.  Search Your Third Third on Substack free, one article a week. Your Third Third is for those of us who've done the responsible things, built the life, raised the kids — and then looked up one day and thought: okay. Now what?

6. mars 2026 - 16 min
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