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Emigration was the only way out Mervyn left for the States and worked in hospital maintenance before joining a bank, while Joyce got a job as a nurse in Britain, then in New York State. The couple met and married in Albany, N.Y., and finally settled in Springboro, Ohio, where Mervyn's banking career flourished. He worked his way up the ladder to become the president of KeyBank's Dayton office. Joyce worked at local hospitals and raised the children.
When they retired and their kids left home, the couple, always active volunteers, felt dutybound to do even more. "Coming to the U.S. and [having the chance] to capitalize on so many opportunities, we always had the feeling that we'd been given so much blessing, and there was only one reason why to share with the less fortunate," says Mervyn.
After thorough research and long family talks, the Alphonsos joined the Peace Corps. They shuttered their house and prepared to return to their native land: Guyana. Only this time around, they would be teaching life skills and preventive health care to a downtrodden population that they knew all too well.
It has been more than four decades since John F. Kennedy famously exhorted a generation of young people to "serve our country around the globe," but for many that message is still as fresh as the day it was first uttered. In spite of the rough conditions, travel advisories and the war on terrorism, scores of older Americans are uprooting their lives to help needy nations improve their living conditions. Some journey to dangerous spots like Liberia and Afghanistan, but most seek adventure in relatively safe regions of the world.
Baby boomers seem to be particularly eager to start a challenging new life abroad. The International Executive Service Corps (I.E.S.C.), which matches executives with business-development work abroad, has watched the average age of its participants drop from 68 in the mid-1990s to about 53. Other organizations, like WorldTeach, report increased interest from the retired population.
Gary Myers, 49, isn't a thrill seeker, but this past summer he leaped at the chance to travel to civil war engulfed Liberia. Myers, who was a surgeon in Oklahoma, had grown frustrated with American medicine's commercialism. With his kids grown and some money saved, he volunteered with Medecins sans Frontieres, which placed him in Liberia. Seeing children with machine guns at the Monrovia airport, "I really thought I was flying into hell," he says. He worked hard, ignoring the mortar fire at sunrise and sunset as patients with serious gunshot wounds stumbled in. Whereas in the U.S. he would have taken care of 10 patients a day, here he was treating as many as 80. "This is a way for me to use all these things I learned and practice a more pure [form of medicine], the way I had intended to in med school," he says.
For former globetrotting executives, international aid work fills the void that can come with retirement. For example, Gillette executive Mark Cutler, 54, had lived in five countries worldwide, becoming V.P. of Gillette's international group before he took early retirement last year. Suddenly the workaholic had nothing but free time. "It was very hard to walk away from Gillette at that age--[I didn't want] to replace those intellectual challenges with golf," he says. He tried traveling, and he puttered around his Longmeadow, Mass., home, but nothing gave him the thrill of international work. Having done some Gillette work in Eastern Europe, he jumped when a former co-worker suggested that he sign up with I.E.S.C., which assigned him to projects in Kazakhstan and Russia. He's now back to fast-paced work, converting biochemical-warfare facilities into peacetime factories and, in tandem with U.S. agencies, finding jobs for former government scientists. "It's incredibly rewarding," he says, being "so closely linked to something that is trying to fix mankind."
Life had also become predictable for Don Ramirez, 53, a financial planner in Canberra, Australia. The former Philippine army officer was itching to work overseas again and signed up with the United Nations Volunteers. He is currently organizing elections in Kandahar, Afghanistan a hazardous task, as the explosion of a car bomb outside his office in November made obvious. Though unnerved, he wasn't hurt. "Things here are still very unpredictable," he says, but thanks to his life experience, "I am quick to adapt to an ever changing, even hostile, international environment."
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