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Psychology says the people who reach 70 with strong relationships didn't get there through luck — they did the small work of staying curious about the people in their lives long after most adults stop asking real questions, and the curiosity isn't a personality trait, it's a discipline, and the dividend of that discipline is the only currency that actually matters at this age

Watching my 71-year-old friend transform a mundane grocery checkout into a life-changing connection made me realize why some people reach their seventies surrounded by deep friendships while others find themselves alone — and it has nothing to do with being naturally social or interesting.

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Watching my 71-year-old friend transform a mundane grocery checkout into a life-changing connection made me realize why some people reach their seventies surrounded by deep friendships while others find themselves alone — and it has nothing to do with being naturally social or interesting.

Last Thursday, I watched my friend Eleanor transform a grocery store encounter into something extraordinary. The cashier mentioned her daughter was struggling with algebra. Instead of the usual "that's tough" response, Eleanor asked, "What specific concept is tripping her up?" Twenty minutes later, she'd connected the cashier with a retired math teacher from our book club. This is Eleanor at 71: someone who turned the discipline of curiosity into a superpower that makes strangers feel like they matter.

I remember Eleanor at 50. Successful career, beautiful home, but something was missing. Her dinner parties were flawless but forgettable. Her relationships were pleasant but shallow. Then her mother's Alzheimer's diagnosis changed everything. Watching her mother forget the people she'd kept at arm's length taught Eleanor what really matters. She decided to practice curiosity like other people practice yoga - deliberately, consistently, even when it felt uncomfortable.

The moment most adults stop asking real questions

There's a specific point when adults trade curiosity for efficiency. Usually around 35, when careers demand more time and energy feels finite. We develop scripts: "How are you?" "Fine, you?" "Good, good." We mistake familiarity for intimacy, presence for connection.

Mark Reid, a marriage and family therapist, puts it perfectly: "Curiosity is one of the most powerful yet underrated tools for building and maintaining healthy relationships." Yet most of us abandon this tool right when our relationships need it most.

I fell into this trap after my second husband died. For six months, I ran on autopilot, having the same surface conversations with the same people. My relationships didn't end dramatically; they slowly deflated like tires with tiny leaks. It wasn't until my daughter asked why I never talked about anything real anymore that I realized I'd stopped being curious about my own life, let alone anyone else's.

The turning point came during coffee with a neighbor I'd known for fifteen years. She mentioned feeling invisible since retiring. Instead of my usual "retirement is an adjustment" platitude, I asked what invisibility felt like in her body. She burst into tears. We talked for three hours about identity, purpose, and the terror of irrelevance. That conversation, born from one curious question, transformed our polite neighborliness into genuine friendship.

Why curiosity is a discipline, not a personality trait

People assume I'm naturally curious because I was an English teacher. They're wrong. My curiosity is as cultivated as my garden - requiring daily attention, occasional pruning, and acceptance that some efforts won't bloom.

The discipline starts with simple practices. I keep a small notebook where I jot down specific things people mention. Not their birthdays or anniversaries - everyone remembers those. I note that my friend Sarah is reading about the history of spices, that my grandson is learning to identify bird calls, that my neighbor is trying to understand cryptocurrency. Next time we talk, I ask about these specific interests.

This discipline means choosing curiosity over advice-giving, even when every cell in my body wants to share my wisdom. When my son was going through his divorce, I desperately wanted to tell him what I'd learned from my own. Instead, I asked questions: What surprised you most about this process? What are you learning about yourself? His answers taught me more about resilience than my own experience ever did.

The compound interest of staying curious

Research from a study on aging found that curiosity in older adults is associated with maintaining cognitive, mental, and physical health, suggesting that staying curious may be key to adaptive aging. But the benefits compound far beyond health metrics.

Consider my weekly coffee group. Eight years ago, we were five widows making small talk. Then someone suggested we each bring one question we genuinely wanted others' perspectives on. Not advice - perspectives. Those questions cracked us open. We learned that Martha had always wanted to write poetry but thought she was too old to start. That Janet's greatest fear wasn't death but becoming bitter. That Patricia regretted never traveling alone.

Today, Martha has published two poetry collections. Janet volunteers teaching English to refugees, finding sweetness in their hope. Patricia just returned from solo camping in national parks. Our curiosity about each other became permission to stay curious about ourselves.

How curiosity saves long-term relationships

After 25 years of marriage, my friend Robert thought he knew everything about his wife. Then she asked him to attend a painting class with her. He discovered she saw colors he couldn't even name, noticed light patterns he'd never observed. "I realized I'd been living with an artist for decades without ever being curious about how she experienced the visual world," he told me.

Noelle Zamudio, a couples counselor, captures this beautifully: "Curiosity turns everyday moments into opportunities for connection and helps love grow deeper instead of stagnant."

In my own relationships, I've learned to ask questions that assume growth rather than stasis. Instead of "You still hate cilantro, right?" I ask, "How's your relationship with cilantro these days?" Silly? Perhaps. But my friend Linda recently revealed she'd been pretending to hate it for years because that's what everyone expected. Small revelation, but it reminded us both that people continue evolving.

The questions that actually matter at 70

Real questions at this age aren't about accomplishments or acquisitions. They're about meaning, fear, joy, and mystery. Here are the questions that have opened the deepest conversations in my seventh decade:

What's different about hope at 70 versus 30? What memory brings you comfort at 3 AM? What are you finally ready to forgive yourself for? What truth took you the longest to accept? What beauty have you noticed recently that you might have missed when younger?

These questions work because they assume complexity and evolution. They honor the full geography of a lived life rather than reducing someone to their roles or routines.

Last month, I asked my oldest friend what she was most curious about regarding her own aging. She said, "Whether I'll have the courage to keep changing or if I'll calcify into a caricature of myself." That question led to a pact: we'll tell each other when we see the other starting to calcify. It's a friendship maintenance plan built entirely on sustained curiosity.

Final thoughts

Yesterday, I met a young mother at the library struggling with her toddler. Instead of offering advice about child-rearing, I asked what surprised her most about motherhood. Her answer - "How much I miss my pre-mom self while simultaneously never wanting to go back" - led to a conversation about identity that clearly moved her. She thanked me for seeing her as more than just a harried mom.

This is the dividend of disciplined curiosity at 70: the ability to make people feel truly seen. It's not about being interesting; it's about being interested. The people who reach this age with strong relationships understand that curiosity is a practice, not a talent. They do the small, daily work of asking real questions and remembering the answers. They know that in a world of surface interactions, genuine curiosity is a radical act of love.

Marlene Martin

Marlene Martin is a retired high school English teacher who spent 38 years in the classroom before discovering plant-based eating in her late sixties. When her daughter first introduced her to the idea of removing animal products from her diet, Marlene was skeptical. But curiosity won out over habit, and what started as a reluctant experiment became a genuine transformation in how she thinks about food, health, and aging.

At VegOut, Marlene writes about nutrition, wellness, and the experience of embracing new ways of eating later in life. She brings a teacher’s instinct for clarity and patience to topics that can feel overwhelming, especially for readers who are just beginning to explore plant-based living. Her writing is informed by personal experience, careful research, and a belief that it is never too late to change.

Marlene lives in Portland, Oregon, where she spends her mornings reading research papers, her afternoons tending a modest vegetable garden, and her evenings knitting while listening to audiobooks. She has three adult children and two grandchildren who keep her honest about staying current.

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