By Oluwole Solanke PhD, FCIB
Introduction: The False Deadline of Success

In today’s fast-moving world, society often celebrates youthful achievement as though success has an expiration date. Social media glorifies young millionaires, teenage innovators, and early achievers, creating the dangerous illusion that prosperity belongs only to the young. Many older people silently begin to feel left behind, forgotten, or irrelevant.
But life itself tells a different story.
Prosperity is not the exclusive property of youth. Wealth, influence, wisdom, fulfillment, and greatness are not tied to age. Human potential does not retire. Dreams do not grow old unless the mind surrenders them.
True prosperity belongs to those who remain purposeful, disciplined, hopeful, and courageous regardless of age.
As the famous saying goes:
“It is never too late to become what you might have been.” — George Eliot
Youth Has Energy, Age Has Wisdom
Youth is often blessed with strength, speed, and ambition. But age carries something equally powerful: experience. Experience teaches lessons that books cannot explain and failures cannot erase.
Many people who struggled in their younger years eventually discovered prosperity later in life because maturity refined their judgment and sharpened their understanding of life.
A young person may run faster, but an older person often knows the right direction.
History is filled with individuals who achieved greatness after many setbacks, disappointments, and years of obscurity. Their stories remind us that prosperity is not a race against time but a journey of persistence.
“The glory of young men is their strength, gray hair the splendor of the old.” — Proverbs 20:29
Prosperity Begins in the Mind
One of the greatest barriers to success is the belief that “my time has passed.” Poverty often begins as a defeated mindset long before it appears in physical reality.
Prosperity starts when people refuse to surrender their dreams because of age, setbacks, or public opinion.
Some people are old at thirty because they stopped believing in possibilities. Others remain youthful at seventy because they continue learning, growing, and serving humanity.
A positive mindset keeps the spirit alive.
“Age is an issue of mind over matter. If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.” — Mark Twain
Late Bloomers Often Build Lasting Success
Many successful people discovered their purpose later in life. Their stories prove that destiny is not controlled by the calendar.
Colonel Harland Sanders founded KFC in his sixties after facing numerous failures. Nelson Mandela became President of South Africa at the age of 75 after spending 27 years in prison. Grandma Moses became a famous painter in her late seventies.
These examples remind humanity that life can still produce greatness in unexpected seasons.
The sun that rises in the afternoon still gives light.
Prosperity Is More Than Money
Many people define prosperity only through financial wealth, but true prosperity is broader and deeper.
Prosperity includes:
Good health
Peace of mind
Strong family relationships
Wisdom
Positive influence
Fulfillment
Spiritual growth
Service to humanity
An elderly person who mentors others, supports a family, or inspires a community is prosperous in ways money alone cannot measure.
Some young people possess money but lack peace. Some older people possess wisdom, honor, and fulfillment that money cannot buy.
“Wealth consists not in having great possessions, but in having few wants.” — Epictetus
The Danger of Worshipping Youth
A society obsessed only with youth risks ignoring the treasures hidden in older generations. Elders carry history, culture, resilience, and lessons gained through sacrifice.
When experience is ignored, mistakes multiply.
Civilizations progress when youthful innovation works together with mature wisdom. The energy of youth and the stability of age must complement one another rather than compete.
A tree survives storms because of deep roots, not only fresh leaves.
Reinventing Yourself at Any Age
Life gives people multiple opportunities to begin again. A lost business, failed marriage, retirement, or disappointment does not mean life has ended.
Many individuals discover new passions after retirement:
Some become writers
Some start businesses
Some become teachers and mentors
Some return to school
Some dedicate their lives to helping others
Every new day is evidence that life has not given up on anyone.
“Your future is not behind you; it is still ahead of you.”
The human spirit was designed for renewal.
Young People Must Learn Patience
The pressure to “make it quickly” has caused many young people to become anxious, desperate, and discouraged. Real prosperity often requires time, discipline, character, and endurance.
A seed planted today does not become a mighty tree tomorrow.
Young people should understand that life is not a competition against others. Every person has a different timing, journey, and assignment.
Comparison destroys joy while patience builds greatness.
Older People Must Refuse Defeat
Likewise, older individuals must resist hopelessness. Retirement should not mean mental retirement. Gray hair is not a sign of uselessness but evidence of survival, endurance, and accumulated wisdom.
The world still needs the voice, knowledge, and guidance of experienced people.
As long as there is breath, there is purpose.
“Do not regret growing older. It is a privilege denied to many.”
Conclusion: Prosperity Has No Age Limit
Prosperity does not belong only to the youth. It belongs to visionaries, workers, dreamers, believers, learners, and resilient souls of every generation.
Life is not measured merely by youthful speed but by meaningful impact.
Whether one is twenty or seventy, the opportunity to grow, succeed, inspire, and prosper still exists. The greatest tragedy is not aging; it is abandoning hope.
Never allow society to place an expiration date on your destiny.
The river continues to flow regardless of how old the water may be.

