Reflection on retirement

3 February 2025
Winter 2025

Kaye McIntosh asks: What lessons have you learned that could help younger optometrists? And how do you make a success of life after your career ends?

Thanks to decades of experience, optometrists approaching retirement have learned what is important to focus on during their career. For Gordon Ilett MCOptom, it’s about “saying yes” when ideas come up. 

“That’s led me to some very interesting places and to undertake some very interesting work. Optometry isn’t just sitting in a consulting room, testing – be willing to explore other opportunities.”

Early in his career, Gordon was asked to work on the prevalence of visual impairment in patients with learning disabilities who had been institutionalised in residential care. That led to working with experts in the field, including Dr Maggie Woodhouse MCOptom, a leading optometrist and pioneer in research into the visual development of people with Down syndrome.

This progressed to working with the Special Olympics for people with learning disabilities, which took him to the US and Japan, and to become a trustee, and later chair, of the charity SeeAbility. 

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Related further reading

The College, The Association of British Dispensing Opticians (ABDO) and the Federation of Optometrists and Dispensing Opticians (FODO) back the Government’s commitment to put patients in the driving seat and give them more control and choice over their care.

One thing is certain: I wasn’t expecting the events of the last 10 weeks to take place when I wrote my last Optometry in Practice editorial in February this year.

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