I turn 40 this week. I grew up in Silicon Valley and have coded since I was 10, went on to get a BS and MS in computer science. I've worked at several software and Internet companies, many startups, managed large teams of 30+, including offshore teams. Long story short I've played many non-programmer roles as well in my career which have been very beneficial in developing my career skills.
I still code a lot as an independent contractor. It seems I have to re-invent myself every year to stay current with the marketplace (Rails, iPhone/Objective C, jQuery, keeping up with .NET changes, which is the platform I work on mostly).
It's great because I enjoy being able to hack on any number of platforms and languages, but it takes a lot of work to become proficient at each one and to know the inner-nuances of them and get involved in their respective communities. It's hard to remain expert in many platforms if you're not using them on a regular basis (my enterprise Java skills are shot).
While I love to code, I think I'm getting tired of coding for other people, the stress of hitting deadlines and their budget restraints, especially when they don't pay me or have trouble paying me on time. It's very demoralizing and makes me seek out a more stable source of income.
Lately my passion has been coding trading indicators and automated trading strategies for futures and currencies markets. I've always had a passion for trading and have been trading the markets as a hobby (sometimes, a very expensive hobby) for years and now I'm using my coding skills for that.
Eventually, I think I will make enough income trading that I can trade for a living, and coding will just be a tool that I use for trading or any other software product/web services that I may want to launch, or not.
The great thing about that is I can trade/code any where in the world and not need to be in-front of customers. We're already setting goals for which countries my wife and I want to bring the kids to and live in for a few months out of the year. I should have never read "The 4-hour Work Week" :)
At the end of the day coding is a tool, a trade skill, that can be used for many things above and beyond having a job writing code for a company. I'm very grateful to live in an era of computing and the many opportunities and conveniences it provides.