You spend decades saving for retirement. You plan, adapt, and ultimately achieve your goal – then step away from your career into days that are entirely your own. Strangely, the whole thing seems strangely flat to you.
Financial planners see it all the time: Clients reach their goals and fall into a crisis of purpose. We believe that removing every financial worry and professional demand leads to a happier life. But a famous behavioral study shows that a stress-free life may not be the ideal retirement we want.
living in utopia
In the late 1960s, researchers John B Calhoun A carefully planned environment was created to test the limits of living without conflict. The study, known as Universe 25, provided a population of rats with unlimited food, fresh water, and a climate-controlled enclosure completely free of predators and disease.
By all conventional logic, this engineering paradise should have endured a lasting golden age. Instead, society collapsed.
The environment remained pristine and well-stocked, but absolute abundance destroyed the social structure. Because there was no longer a need to forage or survive, the only task for the animals was to navigate their social hierarchy. As the population grew, every available social role was eventually filled.
In natural habitat, even when all practical needs are taken care of, excess animals easily move in. Trapped in the enclosure and with no place to go, adults who found no place or no purpose retreated completely. They stopped communicating and stopped parenting. They spent their days exclusively in a state of passive defense eating, drinking, and grooming themselves until the population simply grew old and died.
Calhoun concluded that when all physical challenges are removed and social roles disappear, psychological death occurs long before the physical body actually fails. While critics rightly point out that rats are not humans – and a laboratory enclosure is not a natural society – the main caveat concerns human behavior.
a very human fear
The science of Universe 25 is debated, but the underlying fear is nothing new. The suspicion that living beings need a purpose for long-term survival predates modern behavioral studies.
In 1895, novelist H.G. Wells published “The Time Machine”, which imagined a distant future where humanity had split in two.
On the surface lived the Eloi – gentle, beautiful, childlike and completely driveless. Their every need was met by the Morlocks, underground inhabitants who fed, clothed, and cared for them. But that care had a price: the Morlocks raised the Eloi as livestock, a food source.
Having had everything available to them for generations had caused the Eloi to become too soft and curious to understand what was happening, let alone protest against it.
Wells was not writing a scientific paper and the novel is not evidence of this. He was dramatizing a deep intuition: that our strength and motivation come from striving against something. Remove every obstacle, and you risk losing the ability to do anything.
when the fight is over
We find ourselves reading on the beach, sleeping in late, and finally running away from the obligations that take up most of our lives. Yet many people feel that freedom itself creates a new challenge. Once survival is taken over, the question becomes how to spend a day, a year, or a decade in a way that feels meaningful.
Money can’t tell you which options are worth choosing – but without it, you have fewer choices. If you have more than $100,000 saved, consider consulting a professional to keep those options open. SmartAsset Offers a free service that connects you with a verified, fiduciary advisor in under five minutes.
The real work of retirement may not be filling your calendar or making yourself useful to everyone around you. It may be deciding what deserves your attention when something isn’t demanding it.
