Fast approaching 60 years of age, I'm a trailing spouse who has a mixture of tenured, t-t, visiting, and part-time positions in a 30+ year career. Still like/love the classroom for the handful of students willing to take a chance, open their brains, and get after it.
But my current 3 year position is a crush of 80 freshman every term. Nothing but the same intro class over and over, some long days, and an amount of grading I didn't even do as a young man.

I've finished year one but have told the chair I can't come back and do another one. Because of this grumpiness and my age, the powers that be have tried to lure me back with a reduction of teaching from 4 to 2 sections per semester in exchange for a bunch of nebulous administrative work - assisting a terrific and interesting director. It's lousy money, 70% of what I used to make in my 30s at a far better school, but it's the only job I have in front of me.
I've decided I can't do another year of the straight 4/4 load of freshmen. But I fear - honestly - that my intractability will make it hard to work in administration FOR someone else. In all of my previous administrative work, I was in charge. I assessed the program, set a plan, organized the resources, found the money, and followed through.
This would not be that. This might include pushing a cart of bagels across campus, making some photocopies, and occasionally doing a little twirl in the ring on a topic with which I have experience.
There is no grand nest egg, though my spouse still works and could support us - I might have to switch to the lesser quality gluten free cookies. I don't have any appreciable other skills - my golf game has gone to shit after a surprising and long winter.
I sometimes feel like I'm staring at the retirement finishing line - oh so close - but with not enough steam to get to it. I'd like to do 4-6 more years of good work. But this opportunity - my only at this point - doesn't feel like it.
--Compound Cal