ATLANTA - As he approaches 80, Jimmy Carter could be enjoying retirement -teaching Sunday school, relaxing with family and reflecting on a life that has taken him from the peanut fields of Plains, Ga., to the White House and back.
Instead, Carter continues to use his status as a former president to promote peace, health and voting initiatives across the globe at a sometimes startling pace for his age.
I have been blessed by graduating from the White House at an early age
Carter, who left the presidency at 56, said. Enough so that I could use the prestige and fame and experience from being president of the greatest nation in the world to have access to leaders and understand the problems that they face.
The majority of the work that Carter does is through The Carter Center -a combination of a presidential library and a mini-United Nations he and his wife founded in 1982 on a wooded patch of land in Atlanta.
Carter, whose 80th birthday is Friday, won the Nobel Peace Prize two years ago. He has remained active on other fronts as well, from his woodworking shop in Plains to the stage of the Democratic National Convention in Boston.
Witness his schedule for this year: Carter traveled to Ghana, Togo and Mali in February as part of an effort to eradicate Guinea worm -a painful disease that has ravaged parts of Africa since Biblical times.
He spent a week in June in rural Alabama and Georgia helping build houses with Habitat for Humanity -an annual tradition he plans to take to Mexico next year.
In July, he joined Carter Center staff in Indonesia to monitor that nation's first round of elections, followed by a vacation in the Galapagos Islands.
He traveled to Venezuela in May and August for more election monitoring.
Last month, he spoke at his party's national convention in Boston.
And throughout the year, he continued to teach Sunday school in Plains and lectured at least once a month at Atlanta's Emory University, where he has been on the faculty since leaving the White House.
He published his 19th book, Sharing Good Times late last year and spent much of this year working on a sequel to The Hornet's Nest a novel of historical fiction set during the Revolutionary War.
At the same time, he continued to make time for hobbies that include woodworking and oil painting.
President Carter keeps a schedule that would wear out much younger men and women
said Steven Hochman, director of research for The Carter Center.
What helps him keep up such a pace at age 79, Carter says, is that it does not feel like work.
From his days as Georgia's governor from 1971 to 1975, some observers have called Carter a micro-manager. He says his later years have taught him to delegate day-to-day duties to others.
That's one of the lessons you learn with advancing age
he said. No matter how intense your commitment is to a profession or your current duties
there's always time to expand your life
to stretch your heart and mind and to have things that are much more enjoyable in your life.
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