Staying Connected to Technology on Your Terms
March 11, 2026
You’ve spent decades building expertise in your field, raising a family, and contributing to your community, and you’ve adapted to plenty of change along the way. Retirement doesn’t erase that capability. Staying connected to technology isn’t about proving you can keep up. It’s about choosing what’s worth your attention, staying open to what genuinely matters to you, and letting the rest pass without guilt.
The Technology Gap Doesn’t Have to Be a Chasm
Adapting to technology in retirement often feels like an all-or-nothing proposition, but that’s a false choice. You don’t need to master every new platform or gadget that emerges.
Focus on selective adoption of technology that actually serves your priorities and relationships. Video calls with distant grandchildren make sense. Following cryptocurrency trends probably doesn’t, unless you’re actually interested.
Many people approaching or entering retirement find that technology anxiety stems from a few frustrating experiences rather than actual inability. Your grandchild can navigate an app instantly because they’ve internalized certain interface patterns, not because they’re inherently smarter. Once you recognize those patterns, new technologies become less intimidating. Take your time, ask questions without embarrassment, and remember that even younger generations struggle with unfamiliar platforms.
Start With What Solves Real Problems
The easiest entry point into new technology is finding tools that address actual frustrations in your life. Banking apps eliminate trips to the bank.
Navigation apps prevent getting lost in unfamiliar areas. Prescription refill apps save phone calls and waiting on hold. When technology solves a genuine problem you’re already dealing with, learning it feels less like homework and more like practical improvement.
You might also consider what keeps you from staying in touch with people you care about. If distance makes regular visits difficult, video calling becomes worth the learning curve. If you’re missing out on photos of grandchildren because they’re only shared digitally, figuring out photo sharing apps suddenly matters. Let your actual needs guide which technologies deserve your attention.
Staying Engaged After 60 Means Setting Boundaries
Choosing to learn some new technology doesn’t mean accepting every digital trend that comes along. You can use email and text messages without joining every social media platform.
You can bank online without shopping online. You can video chat without understanding how the algorithm works. Selective engagement keeps technology useful without letting it become overwhelming or intrusive.
Some retirees embrace smartphones and streaming services while ignoring social media entirely. Others master video editing to share family memories but never touch online shopping. Both approaches work because they’re based on genuine interest and practical benefit rather than pressure to keep up. The key is making deliberate choices about where you invest your time and attention.
Connection on Your Terms
Adapting to technology doesn’t require abandoning your preferences or tolerating things that genuinely bother you. You can learn to text without accepting that it replaces phone calls. You can use a smartphone without keeping it within reach at all times. You can engage with technology that brings value while maintaining boundaries around what feels intrusive or unnecessary.
Your decades of experience adapting to previous technological shifts give you an advantage younger people don’t recognize. You remember when ATMs seemed complicated, when email felt impersonal, when cell phones were for emergencies only. Each of those technologies eventually became second nature because they solved real problems. The current wave of technology follows the same pattern—some of it will prove genuinely useful, and the rest will fade or remain irrelevant to your daily life.
Sources:
Oechsli Institute. “Technology on Your Terms.”Oechsli Institute, 1 Mar. 2026, www.oechsli.com
Disclosure:
This information is an overview and should not be considered as specific guidance or recommendations for any individual or business.
This material is provided as a courtesy and for educational purposes only.
These are the views of the author, not the named Representative or Advisory Services Network, LLC, and should not be construed as investment advice. Neither the named Representative nor Advisory Services Network, LLC gives tax or legal advice. All information is believed to be from reliable sources; however, we make no representation as to its completeness or accuracy. Please consult your Financial Advisor for further information.