Sorry to burst your bubble but these studies you guys read about dying sooner because of flying to age 65 or just because you are an airline pilot are complete urban legend and shown to be total falsehoods. Dr. Sing Lin's and Cheng's "studies" have now been shown to be total garbage unless you are slaving in some cruel manaul Chinese coal mine.
Many people actually go into decline when they retire. They miss the comraderie, fellowship, friends, and the mental stimulation and sense of purpose of work. There is now a school of thought that working longer means a longer life for you.
http://www.geocities.com/dtmcbride/health/retirement_age.html
http://www.boeing.com/companyoffices/empinfo/benefits/pension/seminars/Rumor.pdf
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/4286.html
"I am now 61, forced to retire from the airlines last year, now flying for the U.S. Army. I feel great, love my job, enjoying life and have no intentions of retiring any time soon. Thirty years ago retirement appeared to be the ultimate situation. I tried the retiree lifestyle for about two months, missed flying terribly and discovered that boredom could be a fast track to early death."
Most of us have probably made observations that people who retire early, too often die early. Early retirement clearly appears to be unnatural for healthy people. People tend to deteriorate faster if they stop being productive especially after an active life long profession. “Early Retirement May Mean Earlier Death”--- Primary source: British Medical Journal Source reference: http://www.medpagetoday.com/InfectiousDisease/PublicHealth/tb/1980
"Age at retirement and long-term survival of an industrial population: prospective cohort study," BMJ, published online Oct. 20, 2005. “…Study found that retiring at age 55 was associated with an almost two-fold greater risk of dying compared with employees who postponed retirement until their 60s…investigators found that embarking on the Golden Years at age 55 doubled the risk for death before reaching age 65, compared with those who toiled beyond age 60…”