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Having a positive attitude
Listen as H. Evans Townsend Jr. rattles off his weekly routine and you may experience a feeling of laziness.
At 91, Townsend drives more than an hour from his Wadmalaw Island home to the North Charleston office of MAC Advertising several days a week.
Once there, Townsend, an account executive, spends his days on the phone and at his desk coordinating advertisements that will appear on the companys billboards.
When not at his day job, Townsend spends his time tending to his 15 acres of land and doing housework.
I do all my cooking on Saturday and Sunday, and I do all my own laundry and iron all of my own shirts, Townsend said.
It keeps me busy. When the mind is busy, it has no time to worry about problems.
Townsend, who was honored in 2005 by the Experience Works Prime Time Awards Program, which honors outstanding older workers, has never once considered retiring, despite a number of reasons to take it easy.
He has survived skin cancer, open-heart surgery and the loss of a kidney.
God aint ready for me yet, Townsend said.
Townsend, who attended the College of Charleston and served on the Charleston County Council, said it is his positive attitudea gift from his motherthat has seen him through so many decades.
If anything comes into my mind that isnt good, I throw it in the trash, he said.
With no plans to settle down any time soon, Townsend said he will spend every day he gets doing what he loves.
I hope they find me dead working on my property, he said.
Sharing knowledge in his business
At 84, Ted Albenesius knows he has a lifetimes worth of knowledge to share, and thats what he is determined to do.
Albenesius volunteers his time to SCORE, a counseling program funded by the Small Business Administration to give businesses advice, guidance and suggestions.
What we do is counsel people who want to go into business and become entrepreneurs or people already in business who are having problems with administration, finance or operations, Albenesius said.
Albenesius, a Charleston native who also currently writes columns for the Charleston Regional Business Journal, started his own business dealing in convenience stores, gas stations and oil transport trucks. In 1986, his son took over Cel Oil Products Corp.
Now he gives his time away for free, purely for the enjoyment of it.
I get a great deal of satisfaction out of it, he said. The community has been good to me. Its a payback.
Serving up happiness
At Mount Pleasants Chick-fil-A, Frances West and Norman Weiner have found happiness and satisfaction to rival that of any other career theyve held.
West, who worked for Captain Ds and as a bookkeeper for the Bay County Council on Aging in Florida, is 74 and says her job as a cashier satisfies her love for peoplesomething that hasnt deteriorated with age.
I think Id be much more lonely if I didnt work here, West said, adding that she admires the energy her teenage coworkers possess that often rubs off on her.
Its kind of invigorating, West said.
Weiner, 75, who proudly holds the title of host in the restaurant dining room, spends his days carrying trays for haggard mothers, bringing children ice cream, but only if theyve finished their chicken, and refilling drinks.
These simple tasks, he said, have made a tremendous difference in his health, both mentally and physically.
Prior to working for Chick-fil-A, Weiner was overweight and in bad health. Being on his feet and running small errands in the dining room has contributed to his physical transformation.
The interaction with customers, however, has made an even more tremendous change in this former airline employee and furniture and rare coins salesman.
I love my job. I love working with children. I love giving them toys, and I love taking care of their parents as well, he said. Ive never been so happy.
While both work fewer than 30 hours a week, both are also dedicated to their positions, so much so that they have no plans to leave any time soon.
I dont think I could ever leave Chick-fil-A. I think Ill be around here a long time, or at least until I feel Im not providing a service. Im retired, but I have to do something, Weiner said.
Keeping busy is infectious
At Evas Restaurant, 129 South Main St. in Summerville, owner Eva Hinson sees little significance in the fact that at 91 she still goes to work every day, bakes desserts, cooks vegetables and fraternizes with customers.
I dont see much difference, Hinson said, in a preoccupied tone that suggested shed rather not be the center of attention.
A dark-haired woman, who on a recent afternoon could spare only a few minutes from visiting with customers, Hinson could think of only one example of how her age has changed her day-to-day work.
I dont do as much as I used to because I have an eye disease, Hinson said. But I have people who help me. My grandson takes care of my book work for me.
Although her eyesight may have faded through the years, Hinsons mind and energy show no signs of age.
Shes brighter than I am, said Betty Houck, 70, Hinsons employee. She doesnt miss a trick.
Houck cited a recent occasion where Hinson was able to recall her credit card number off the top of her head.
I look at her and see how good she is, and it makes me not want to sit around either, Houck said.
While the thought of working until the age of 91 is daunting to most, Hinson said it is the very thing that keeps her happy and spry.
Its good to be busy, Hinson said.
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