Robert S. Runyon, posing in an austere-looking suit and tie, gazes down upon patrons from his portrait in the University of Nebraska at Omaha library. In contrast, the flesh and blood version introduces himself as โBobโ and sports a T-shirt with the phrase โLiterally GreatโฆFiguratively the Best.โ The UNO English Department shirt fits the wordsmith and lifelong learner like a glove.
โIโve always had books on a pedestal in my mind,โ says Runyon, who served as dean of the universityโs library from 1978 to 2000.
Runyon laughs, โBefore I retired, I thought, โIโve got to prepare for retirement so I have a reason to get up in the morning.โโ Chuckling, he continues, โIโm a lazy, sloppy, indolent person. And unless I have a reasonโunless I have a purpose, a life purposeโIโm just going to vegetate.โ
Nowadays, Runyon doesnโt have time to vegetate. He travels with his wife (Sheila), takes classes, and writes his memoir.
Despite Runyonโs appreciation of books, he has not always written them. Five years ago he saw a flier for a personal writing course at UNO. He asked instructor Elizabeth Mack, โWould you allow a 70-plus-year-old guy to come into your class?โ
Thatโs exactly why UNO offers the Senior Passport Program. Founded in 2001, the program allows seniors (age 65 and older) to take two courses per semester at a cost of $25 per year. The only requirements are an available seat in the class, instructor approval, and a desire to learn.
Runyon has since taken several creative nonfiction courses with professors John Price and Lisa Knopp: autobiography, nature writing, travel writing, and spiritual writing.
โAll of that was a strong experience,โ says Runyon. โThe encouragement I got from those people was enormous.โ Knopp even marked โAsโ on Runyonโs essays.
Runyon says, โSenior Passport students arenโt graded, but Iโm not sure I told her that because I liked getting As.โ
These classes jump-started Runyonโs work on his memoir: โI think Iโve got about 10 essays cobbled together, and Iโve got probably six or eight more in the hopper in various stages of completion.โ
Runyon says, โYou can be creative in your later years. The brain is continuously growing and changing. To me, that is a pivotal thing to think about, in the process of aging and, especially, of learning.โ
Julie Masters, professor and chair of the Department of Gerontology at UNO, explains, โJust as we need to exercise physically, we need to exercise cognitively.โ
Each year, anywhere from 60 to 100 seniors โcognitively exerciseโ through the Senior Passport Program. The program also impacts the instructors and other students in each class. Masters says, โThe Passport Program, in a way, allows for an infusion of the benefit of experience within the classroom environment.โ
Runyon connects with other students through writing, learning, and experience. โThe power of words is where it all resides with me,โ says Runyon. โYou find something that raises your passion.โ
Visit unomaha.edu/registrar/students/senior-passport.php for more information. Sixty-Plus in Omaha