Retirement can feel like standing at a crossroads. After decades of routine, the question of what comes next isn’t always easy to answer. For Steve, a volunteer at Weald & Downland Living Museum, the answer turned out to be hiding in plain sight — or rather, in the timber-framed buildings of the Sussex countryside.
“I was a member of the museum,” Steve recalls, “and when I retired I thought this would be a great place to do something.” So he did what any curious person might do: he walked in and started looking around.
He never quite made it past the first trade he encountered.
A World Away from the Office
Steve spent his working life behind a desk; the familiar rhythm of office life. What he found at Weald & Downland Living Museum was about as far from that world as it’s possible to get.
“It’s just so radically different from anything I’ve ever done,” he says. “This is just the most different environment you could possibly be in.”
That contrast, rather than being unsettling, turned out to be exactly the point. The Museum’s working demonstrations bring centuries-old crafts back to life, and volunteers like Steve are at the heart of that. Surrounded by traditional tools, natural materials, and the kind of slow, deliberate craftsmanship that the modern workplace rarely makes room for, Steve found something he hadn’t expected: a new kind of confidence.
Learning Skills, Building Confidence
Seven years on, Steve has acquired practical skills he never imagined he’d have. And those skills haven’t stayed within the Museum’s boundaries. “I’ve learned some skills and that’s given me confidence to do other stuff outside of the Museum,” he says.
That ripple effect is one of the quiet stories volunteering so often tells. What begins as a way to fill time or give something back gradually becomes something more personal — a renewed sense of capability, a reconnection with the pleasure of making and doing.
The People Make It
But for Steve, the Museum isn’t just about trades and craftsmanship. It’s about community.
“The people here are great,” he says warmly. “There are so many lovely people here.”
Weald & Downland Living Museum depends on its volunteers — not just for the practical running of its demonstrations and events, but for the spirit they bring to the place. Visitors come to see history brought to life, and it’s the enthusiasm of people like Steve that makes that possible.
Get to know Steve! Watch his full video interview here:
Could You Be Our Next Volunteer?
Steve’s story is one we hear again and again: a lifelong interest in history, a love of the Museum, and a desire to be part of something meaningful. Whether your passion is agricultural heritage, building conservation, crafts, education, or simply welcoming visitors — there’s a place for you here.
If you’d like to find out more about volunteering at Weald & Downland Living Museum, check out our Volunteering Page or speak to a member of the team on your next visit. We’d love to hear from you.
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