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From: joinaarp@...
To: [email protected]
Date: Mon, 02 Feb 2026 19:12:44 GMT
Subject: Last Attempt - Don't Miss Out. Join AARP Today Choose Your Gift

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<!doctype html> <html lang="en" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <meta name="x-apple-disable-message-reformatting"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"> <title>AARP — 25% OFF Membership</title> <style> html, body { margin:0 !important; padding:0 !important; width:100% !important; height:100% !important; } body { background:#ffffff; -webkit-text-size-adjust:100%; -ms-text-size-adjust:100%; } table, td { border-collapse:collapse !important; } img { border:0; outline:none; text-decoration:none; -ms-interpolation-mode:bicubic; } a { text-decoration:none; } :root { --brand-red:#E42527; /* AARP red */ --ink:#111111; --muted:#666666; --light:#f7f7f7; } .container { width:100%; background-color:#ffffff; } .wrap { max-width:640px; margin:0 auto; } .header-bar { background:var(--brand-red); height:68px; } .topnote { font:12px/18px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:#777777; padding:12px 16px; text-align:center; } .topnote a { color:#0072c6; text-decoration:underline; } .brand { font:900 32px/68px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:#ffffff; letter-spacing:1px; text-align:center; } .section { padding:0 24px 4px; } .h1 { font:900 68px/1 Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:var(--brand-red); letter-spacing:2px; text-align:center; } .h1 .pct { font-size:96px; } .h1 .off { margin-left:10px; display:inline-block; } .h2 { font:900 48px/1.1 Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:#000000; text-align:center; margin-top:8px; } .lede { font:18px/26px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:#000000; text-align:center; margin:14px 0 8px; } .cta-row { text-align:center; padding:18px 0 24px; } .btn { display:inline-block; background:var(--brand-red); color:#ffffff !important; font:700 16px/20px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; padding:16px 26px; border-radius:4px; } .grid { width:100%; margin:12px 0 4px; } .grid td { vertical-align:top; width:50%; padding:22px 14px; } .kicker { font:900 22px/1.2 Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:#000000; letter-spacing:.2px; text-transform:uppercase; text-align:center; margin-bottom:8px; } .copy { font:15px/22px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:#333333; text-align:center; } .gift-hd { font:700 34px/1.2 Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:#000000; text-align:center; margin:18px 0 6px; } .gift-hd .red { color:var(--brand-red); } .gift-options { font:16px/22px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:#111111; text-align:center; } .gift-or { font:900 16px/1 Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; letter-spacing:.3px; margin:8px 0; color:#000000; } .fine { font:11px/16px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:#666666; text-align:center; padding:14px 24px 6px; } .footer { font:12px/18px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color:#777777; text-align:center; padding:18px 16px 36px; border-top:1px solid #eeeeee; } .footer a { color:#0072c6; text-decoration:underline; } @media (max-width:640px){ .h1{ font-size:56px; } .h1 .pct{ font-size:78px; } .h2{ font-size:36px; } .grid td{ display:block; width:100%; padding:18px 6px; } } </style> </head> <body> <div class="container"> <div class="topnote wrap"> You’re receiving this promotional email as part of a marketing list that you signed up for or opted into. If you’d like to unsubscribe from receiving these kinds of special offers, deals and discounts, click here. </div> <div class="header-bar"> <div class="brand wrap">AARP</div> </div> <div class="wrap section" role="article" aria-roledescription="email"> <div class="h1" style="margin:28px 0 6px;"> <span class="pct">25%</span> <span class="off">OFF</span> </div> <div class="h2">MEMBERSHIP</div> <p class="lede">Only $15 for your first year with automatic renewal.</p> <div class="cta-row"> <a class="btn" href="http://www.marrinejewelry.com/aavafazo" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">JOIN OR RENEW NOW</a> </div> <table role="presentation" width="100%" class="grid"> <tr> <td> <div class="kicker">DISCOUNTS</div> <div class="copy">Get everyday savings on groceries, dining out, cell phone services, eyeglasses and more.</div> </td> <td> <div class="kicker">TOOLS</div> <div class="copy">Online tools — to help you save money, plan for the future, search for a new job or stay fit.</div> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <div class="kicker">MEMBER-ONLY</div> <div class="copy">Access to exclusive products — Medicare Supplemental health insurance, dental coverage, eye care.</div> </td> <td> <div class="kicker">ADVOCACY</div> <div class="copy">A voice in Washington, DC and all 50 states. Helping fight age discrimination, protecting pension rights, Social Security, Medicare</div> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <div class="kicker">ENTERTAINMENT</div> <div class="copy">AARP members gain access to unique entertainment articles, podcasts and videos — plus over 15 member-only games like Atari’s Breakout and Pong!</div> </td> <td> <div class="kicker">COMMUNITY</div> <div class="copy">Your source for interactive workshops, online learning, and life skills for people over 50. Topics include job search skills, family caregiving and how to use technology to help improve your life.</div> </td> </tr> </table> <div class="gift-hd">Plus, choose your <span class="red">free</span> gift!</div> <div class="gift-options"> <div style="margin-top:8px;"><strong>$5 Chewy Gift Card*</strong><br>Card*</div> <div class="gift-or">OR</div> <div><strong>Insulated Trunk</strong><br><strong>Organizer</strong></div> </div> <div class="cta-row" style="padding-top:22px;"> <a class="btn" href="http://www.marrinejewelry.com/aavafazo" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">JOIN OR RENEW NOW</a> </div> <div class="fine"> *Chewy Gift Cards cannot be redeemed by residents of Alaska, Hawaii, any US territory (e.g. Guam, Puerto Rico, USVI), or countries outside of the US. </div> </div> <div class="wrap footer"> This is a Paid Advertisement. To opt out of this advertiser’s mailings please <a href="http://www.marrinejewelry.com/plying2">click here</a> or write to 2803 Philadelphia Pike Suite B #1228 Claymont, DE 19703. </div> </div> <div style="font-family: Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size:0; line-height:0; max-height:0; overflow:hidden;"> <p style="font-size:12px; line-height:18px; margin:0 0 10px 0; color:#000000;"> AARP traces its roots back to the late 1950s, when a retired high school principal named Ethel Percy Andrus discovered that one of her former colleagues was living in a chicken coop because she could not afford adequate housing or health care. Disturbed by this reality, Andrus began to look more closely at how older Americans were faring in the postwar economy, and she quickly realized that millions of people were entering retirement with few protections, limited access to medical coverage, and very little organized support. Building on earlier efforts with the National Retired Teachers Association, she helped create what would become AARP as a way to bring practical benefits, information, and collective strength to people over 50 across the United States. </p> <p style="font-size:12px; line-height:18px; margin:0 0 10px 0; color:#000000;"> In its earliest years, AARP focused heavily on health insurance because private coverage was often unavailable or unaffordable to older adults. The organization worked with insurers to design group plans that recognized the realities of aging and made premiums more manageable for retirees on fixed incomes. At the same time, AARP began publishing educational materials that explained complex topics—like medical costs, retirement planning, and consumer fraud—in clear and accessible language. This combination of practical benefits and trustworthy information set a pattern that still shapes the organization’s work decades later, long after the first membership cards were mailed out to a small but rapidly growing community. </p> <p style="font-size:12px; line-height:18px; margin:0 0 10px 0; color:#000000;"> As the 1960s and 1970s unfolded, AARP evolved alongside major national debates about Social Security, Medicare, and civil rights. The organization’s leaders understood that individual discounts and services were important, but that large-scale policy decisions in Washington, DC and in state capitols would ultimately determine whether older Americans could live with dignity and independence. AARP therefore expanded its mission to include robust advocacy, research, and public education campaigns. It testified before Congress, commissioned studies on aging, and used its publications to explain how proposed laws might affect people approaching or already in retirement. </p> <p style="font-size:12px; line-height:18px; margin:0 0 10px 0; color:#000000;"> By the late twentieth century, AARP had become one of the most recognized names in the country, not only for its work on behalf of older adults but also for its role as a trusted source of nonpartisan information. Its magazines and bulletins reached millions of households, providing articles on health, finances, work, travel, and volunteer opportunities. The organization built partnerships with community groups, local governments, and nonprofit organizations to deliver workshops, driver safety courses, and fraud-prevention seminars. In many towns, an AARP meeting or program was one of the few regular gatherings where residents over 50 could find both social connection and practical guidance. </p> <p style="font-size:12px; line-height:18px; margin:0 0 10px 0; color:#000000;"> When the internet era arrived, AARP adapted by building digital tools that mirrored its long-standing commitment to real-world usefulness. Online calculators helped people estimate retirement income, compare Medicare options, and think through how long their savings might last. Articles that once appeared only in print migrated to the web, where they could be updated more frequently and linked to additional resources. The organization also began to explore online communities and webinars, recognizing that many older adults were eager to learn new technologies if those tools clearly supported their goals and day-to-day needs. </p> <p style="font-size:12px; line-height:18px; margin:0 0 10px 0; color:#000000;"> Over time, AARP’s understanding of “aging” grew more nuanced. Rather than seeing life after 50 as a single, uniform stage, the organization started to highlight the diversity of experiences among its members: people working full-time, starting second careers, caring for grandchildren, managing chronic health conditions, or launching new businesses. Its research on “longevity economies” emphasized that older adults contribute significantly to consumer spending, caregiving, and civic life. This broader perspective influenced its programming, encouraging more offerings on lifelong learning, entrepreneurship, intergenerational connections, and healthy living at every stage. </p> <p style="font-size:12px; line-height:18px; margin:0 0 10px 0; color:#000000;"> One way to understand the role AARP plays today is to imagine a member named Elena, who is 62 and lives in a mid-sized city with her husband and an adult son who recently moved back home. Elena works part-time at a local library, and she has been slowly piecing together what retirement might look like. Every Monday morning, before she leaves for work, she opens her laptop and logs into the AARP website. She checks a short article about new scams targeting older consumers, then uses a retirement calculator to see how an extra year of part-time work could affect her Social Security benefits. The numbers are easier to follow because the tools break down complicated ideas into clear steps, and she feels more confident each time she revisits them. </p> <p style="font-size:12px; line-height:18px; margin:0 0 10px 0; color:#000000;"> On Wednesdays, Elena’s routine includes caring for her mother, who lives across town and has recently begun to show signs of memory loss. When Elena first noticed the changes, she turned to an AARP caregiving guide she found through a newsletter link. The guide outlined what questions to ask doctors, how to organize medical information, and ways to involve siblings in shared decision-making. It also suggested local and online support groups. Using that information, Elena scheduled a family meeting and created a shared calendar so that everyone could participate in her mother’s appointments. What felt overwhelming at first became more manageable because she had a structured set of resources to lean on. </p> <p style="font-size:12px; line-height:18px; margin:0 0 10px 0; color:#000000;"> On Fridays, after dinner, Elena and her husband like to unwind with simple games on their tablet. They discovered a collection of classic titles through their AARP membership—puzzles, arcade-style challenges, and word games that remind them of the ones they played in their younger years. While they play, they sometimes listen to an AARP podcast about health or personal finance. The show introduces expert guests but keeps the language friendly and practical, focusing on small changes that can make a meaningful difference: asking better questions at doctor visits, reviewing beneficiary designations, or exploring flexible work options. These weekly habits quietly reshape how Elena thinks about her future, turning vague worries into concrete plans. </p> <p style="font-size:12px; line-height:18px; margin:0; color:#000000;"> On weekends, when the local community center hosts workshops co-sponsored by AARP, Elena often attends with friends from the library. One month, they join a session on digital safety that explains how to recognize fraudulent emails and fake websites. Another month, they participate in a seminar about midlife career changes and part-time consulting. At each event, Elena notices that the room is filled with people who share her questions and concerns, and that the presenters treat them not as passive recipients of charity but as active participants in their own futures. In this way, the long history of AARP—from its founding in response to a retired teacher’s hardship to its modern blend of advocacy, education, and everyday tools—shows up quietly in Elena’s daily life. It helps her protect her family, stretch her budget, stay engaged, and look ahead with a sense of agency rather than uncertainty. </p> </div> </body> </html>

Plain Text

AARP — 25% OFF Membership
You’re receiving this promotional email as part of a marketing list that you signed up for or opted into.
If you’d like to unsubscribe from receiving these kinds of special offers, deals and discounts, click here.
AARP
25% OFF
MEMBERSHIP
Only $15 for your first year with automatic renewal.
JOIN OR RENEW NOW
DISCOUNTS
Get everyday savings on groceries, dining out, cell phone services, eyeglasses and more.
TOOLS
Online tools — to help you save money, plan for the future, search for a new job or stay fit.
MEMBER-ONLY
Access to exclusive products — Medicare Supplemental health insurance, dental coverage, eye care.
ADVOCACY
A voice in Washington, DC and all 50 states. Helping fight age discrimination, protecting pension rights, Social Security, Medicare.
ENTERTAINMENT
AARP members gain access to unique entertainment articles, podcasts and videos — plus over 15 member-only games like Atari’s Breakout and Pong!
COMMUNITY
Your source for interactive workshops, online learning, and life skills for people over 50. Topics include job search skills, family caregiving and how to use technology to help improve your life.
Plus, choose your free gift!
$5 Chewy Gift Card*Card*
OR
Insulated TrunkOrganizer
JOIN OR RENEW NOW
*Chewy Gift Cards cannot be redeemed by residents of Alaska, Hawaii, any US territory (e.g. Guam, Puerto Rico, USVI), or countries outside of the US.
This is a Paid Advertisement.
To opt out of this advertiser’s mailings please click here or write to
2803 Philadelphia Pike Suite B #1228 Claymont, DE 19703.
AARP traces its roots back to the late 1950s, when a retired high school principal named Ethel Percy Andrus discovered that one of her former colleagues was living in a chicken coop because she could not afford adequate housing or health care. Disturbed by this reality, Andrus began to look more closely at how older Americans were faring in the postwar economy, and she quickly realized that millions of people were entering retirement with few protections, limited access to medical coverage, and very little organized support. Building on earlier efforts with the National Retired Teachers Association, she helped create what would become AARP as a way to bring practical benefits, information, and collective strength to people over 50 across the United States.
In its earliest years, AARP focused heavily on health insurance because private coverage was often unavailable or unaffordable to older adults. The organization worked with insurers to design group plans that recognized the realities of aging and made premiums more manageable for retirees on fixed incomes. At the same time, AARP began publishing educational materials that explained complex topics—like medical costs, retirement planning, and consumer fraud—in clear and accessible language. This combination of practical benefits and trustworthy information set a pattern that still shapes the organization’s work decades later, long after the first membership cards were mailed out to a small but rapidly growing community.
As the 1960s and 1970s unfolded, AARP evolved alongside major national debates about Social Security, Medicare, and civil rights. The organization’s leaders understood that individual discounts and services were important, but that large-scale policy decisions in Washington, DC and in state capitols would ultimately determine whether older Americans could live with dignity and independence. AARP therefore expanded its mission to include robust advocacy, research, and public education campaigns. It testified before Congress, commissioned studies on aging, and used its publications to explain how proposed laws might affect people approaching or already in retirement.
By the late twentieth century, AARP had become one of the most recognized names in the country, not only for its work on behalf of older adults but also for its role as a trusted source of nonpartisan information. Its magazines and bulletins reached millions of households, providing articles on health, finances, work, travel, and volunteer opportunities. The organization built partnerships with community groups, local governments, and nonprofit organizations to deliver workshops, driver safety courses, and fraud-prevention seminars. In many towns, an AARP meeting or program was one of the few regular gatherings where residents over 50 could find both social connection and practical guidance.
When the internet era arrived, AARP adapted by building digital tools that mirrored its long-standing commitment to real-world usefulness. Online calculators helped people estimate retirement income, compare Medicare options, and think through how long their savings might last. Articles that once appeared only in print migrated to the web, where they could be updated more frequently and linked to additional resources. The organization also began to explore online communities and webinars, recognizing that many older adults were eager to learn new technologies if those tools clearly supported their goals and day-to-day needs.
Over time, AARP’s understanding of “aging” grew more nuanced. Rather than seeing life after 50 as a single, uniform stage, the organization started to highlight the diversity of experiences among its members: people working full-time, starting second careers, caring for grandchildren, managing chronic health conditions, or launching new businesses. Its research on “longevity economies” emphasized that older adults contribute significantly to consumer spending, caregiving, and civic life. This broader perspective influenced its programming, encouraging more offerings on lifelong learning, entrepreneurship, intergenerational connections, and healthy living at every stage.
One way to understand the role AARP plays today is to imagine a member named Elena, who is 62 and lives in a mid-sized city with her husband and an adult son who recently moved back home. Elena works part-time at a local library, and she has been slowly piecing together what retirement might look like. Every Monday morning, before she leaves for work, she opens her laptop and logs into the AARP website. She checks a short article about new scams targeting older consumers, then uses a retirement calculator to see how an extra year of part-time work could affect her Social Security benefits. The numbers are easier to follow because the tools break down complicated ideas into clear steps, and she feels more confident each time she revisits them.
On Wednesdays, Elena’s routine includes caring for her mother, who lives across town and has recently begun to show signs of memory loss. When Elena first noticed the changes, she turned to an AARP caregiving guide she found through a newsletter link. The guide outlined what questions to ask doctors, how to organize medical information, and ways to involve siblings in shared decision-making. It also suggested local and online support groups. Using that information, Elena scheduled a family meeting and created a shared calendar so that everyone could participate in her mother’s appointments. What felt overwhelming at first became more manageable because she had a structured set of resources to lean on.
On Fridays, after dinner, Elena and her husband like to unwind with simple games on their tablet. They discovered a collection of classic titles through their AARP membership—puzzles, arcade-style challenges, and word games that remind them of the ones they played in their younger years. While they play, they sometimes listen to an AARP podcast about health or personal finance. The show introduces expert guests but keeps the language friendly and practical, focusing on small changes that can make a meaningful difference: asking better questions at doctor visits, reviewing beneficiary designations, or exploring flexible work options. These weekly habits quietly reshape how Elena thinks about her future, turning vague worries into concrete plans.
On weekends, when the local community center hosts workshops co-sponsored by AARP, Elena often attends with friends from the library. One month, they join a session on digital safety that explains how to recognize fraudulent emails and fake websites. Another month, they participate in a seminar about midlife career changes and part-time consulting. At each event, Elena notices that the room is filled with people who share her questions and concerns, and that the presenters treat them not as passive recipients of charity but as active participants in their own futures. In this way, the long history of AARP—from its founding in response to a retired teacher’s hardship to its modern blend of advocacy, education, and everyday tools—shows up quietly in Elena’s daily life. It helps her protect her family, stretch her budget, stay engaged, and look ahead with a sense of agency rather than uncertainty.

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