My DF was a chemist and optician, we lived over the shop until he was 70 and I went to college when he bought his dream cottage about 10 miles away, and my parents travelled to the shop daily on their scooters 365 days a year, snow, ice, no problem (they opened every day, including Xmas, Boxing Day, NYE, Good Friday and Bank Holidays for an hour, supposedly for urgent prescriptions, but if someone wanted anything else, they were there). He wanted to run the cottage with an acre of land as a smallholding, but never quite managed the time. My parents retired when he was 72 and lived there for a further 5 years until his death. My mother, after he died, took on a new lease of life - leading light in the WI, took neighbours to church etc. She was a lot younger, but came from a long line of well-over-80s - she always expected to live to 100, but thank goodness, having developed dementia in her 80s, didn't make 90. I'm over 70, F/T carer for two family members, with an 86-year-old MIL who is still driving, more radical by the day and again from a long-lived family, with all her marbles intact. She's waiting for hip surgery when I expect to add her to my caring role. I took an interest in politics when I was about 14 when we had a school mock election tying in with one of the General Elections and that interest has remained with me throughout my whole adult life. Even after I gave up my very active Labour Party membership, my son joined and for the last 5 years or so, we have delivered leaflets etc. To be honest, my party of choice has become so divided and I can't see Corbyn as anything other than a disaster for the party that unless things change dramatically for the better, I doubt if I will vote. Where I live is a 100% safe Labour area - the other 2 main parties don't even bother to leaflet here, still less canvass on the doorstep! - but even if it were not the case, the only other party I might consider as an alternative is the Greens and they have never even put up a candidate here in General Elections. But I digress - all I intended to say is that at 71, whether I live for another year, 10, 20 or even 30+, while I am able to reason, I expect to retain my right to vote for the welfare of my local area and the country as a whole. DS, now mid-30s, has always bemoaned the apathy of his generation - when he was at Uni, his college tried to set up a protest group to fight tuition fees and allied issues, but his fellow students couldn't even be bothered to attend a meeting, let alone march. I like the idea that the latest 16-20+ age group seem to be thinking politically again, but they haven't got the knowledge or wisdom that 60, 70 or 80+ years on the planet appears to impart.