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Clock out or keep on trucking? Film follows 4 Manitobans' winding retirement journeys

What am I without my job? Four Manitobans a farmer, a nurse, a junk dealer and a teacher ask these questions and face the uncertainty that comes with retirement in the new documentary Work. Stream free on CBC Gem now.

Mixed feelings abound when work ends for farmer, nurse, teacher, junk seller

A nurse in top left, a farmer (top right), a senior woman in her junk store, a woman looking at an old family photo in her living room.
Four Manitobans, (clockwise from left) nurse Otto Chu, farmer Butch Harder, junk dealer Vivian Proden, and teacher Darlene Searcy, contemplate life after retirement in a new documentary called Work. (Photo collage by CBC, photos by Steve Suderman )

Work

Airs Saturday, Aug.26, 2023 at 7p.m. on CBC Manitoba.

Stream free onCBC Gem now.


Work can shape our daily routines and identity but what happens when careers wind down?

"I've been so used to building all my life, and so all of a sudden I'm not supposed to build anymore, I'm supposed to just stay stagnant," says farmer Butch Harder.

Butch, 76, contemplates handing his operation over to his son Dean Harder in Steve Suderman's documentary Work, which follows four Manitobans transitioning to retirement and their mixed feelings around that change. The newdocumentary is co-production with CBC's Absolutely Canadian documentary series and Winnipeg producer Suderman.

"What drew me to the project in the first place was just my own sort of ongoing obsession with trying to do work that I find meaningful but knowing that's not an option for everybody," Suderman said.

In the film, Darlene Searcy, 59, cleans excess rolls of tape from her drawer on one of her last days as a high school teacher. School was a haven for her, and that guided her career choice.

A woman in a yellow top looks at an old black and white photo of a man with two children.
Longtime teacher Darlene Searcy contemplates leaving her career and starting a new chapter in the documentary Work. As part of that transition, Searcy contemplates her childhood and how she was raised. (Submitted by Steve Suderman)

"Would I be a teacher again? No," she says. "So I think when you get to that point, you know that you probably need to leave the profession."

The turning point for leaving comes in various shapes. Junk seller Vivian Proden decides to close down her store, Junk for Joy, at age 85 because her right hip needs surgery.

And Otto Chu, a 63-year-old nurse, jokes at his retirement party that he has to follow his wife's advice.

"I have no choice. If I keep on working, she's goingtravelling about the world without me."

With all the time spent at work, it "shapes us in some ways," Suderman said, but "people in turn can shape their own work and bring their passion and values to it."

That reciprocal give-and-take comes through in the stories each person tells of their career memories, joys and challenges.

"Do I love my store? I more than love it," Proden says. She hasdedicated herself to the objects, and "the people that come with them."

A woman stands on a gravel road on a cement bridge.
Manitoban Vivian Proden started her business as an antiques and junk dealer when her family experienced a financial downturn decades ago. Proden opened up about her decision to close her business and start a new adventure, driving throughout the province. (Submitted by Steve Suderman)

As Butch and Dean Harder navigate a possible farm handover in the documentary, Chu, Proden and Searcy try out retirement with different results.

"We derive a lot of purpose from our work, not everybody," said Suderman, "but I think all of the subjects in this film struggle with that."

WatchWork on Saturday, Aug. 26at 7p.m.on CBC Manitoba.

Stream freeon CBC Gem now.