At 20 degrees Centigrade anhydrous sodium sulfite has a tendency to form some clumps at the bottom of the beaker, which are quite hard and difficult to break with the glass rod, though after a few minutes of stirring they eventually dissolve.
It helps if you add the sulfite to the water little by little while stirring vigorously. The trick is to keep all of the sulfite moving all the time, not to allow any crystal to "rest", not even for one second.
This is normal behaviour.
Could it be that the older sulfite was initially anhydrous, but then gathered some water during the ten years of use?
Hydrated forms tend to dissolve easier. Those water molecules attached to the crystals seem to help with the hydrolysis, though I don't know the exact mechanism.