Anonymous wrote:I am about to retire, and don’t think the routine you have fallen into needs fixing.
In my mind, retirement represents freedom. There is no wrong way to exercise that freedom.
You are taking care of family (a healthy priority), and taking care of yourself (by exercising daily).
If, as you mentioned, you need more in a few years, it sounds like you have the funds to make that happen . You are sitting pretty.
One thing I hope to increase when I retire is keeping in touch with old friends. Also, my home needs a ton of organization and upkeep.
That may sound boring , but I look forward to living with less clutter. That will encourage me to have people over (which hasn’t been “a thing” for years).
Yes, I envision more travel and volunteer work (I really miss time with little kids, since my own has left the nest). But we shall see how things unfold.
Good luck to us all!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see posters who say they are going to work until they die, or retire and work PT retail or consulting, travel more, or volunteer more.
If you are retired, what expectations did you have ahead of retirement and what is your life actually like today?
DH and I retired early in our 50s after some health scares, as well as seeing friends die from heart attacks, cancer, etc. We both took packages and we sold our vacation home to pay off our primary mortgage.
My expectation: We would continue to work in some capacity - consulting, sitting on boards, etc, as well as volunteer and travel. I also had ambitious fitness goals - marathons! triathlons!
Reality: I planned to take six months off to recharge. Six months turned into a year. One year turned into three. I have no interest in ever working again. DH is the same. I don't know if it is just total burnout on corporate life, but neither one of us can bear the thought of another Zoom call or calendar invite. The same feeling applies to volunteering and fitness - I don't want to HAVE to do anything, including a volunteer shift at the museum. I exercise daily for the enjoyment of it, not to reach some goal. Basically, the whole "busyness" and goal-oriented portion of my identity is GONE, which is rather shocking to me. My 30 or 40-year-old self would be horrified by this person, and I assumed I'd die of boredom. But I'm pretty content.
What do we do? Right now we're in sandwich generation mode, with 1 elderly parent needing support, 1 kid still at home, and some extended family needing help (job search, addiction recovery). I feel grateful to have the bandwidth to help with that without also juggling a job. I consider that my volunteer time. I'm enjoying the monotony of everyday things, like cooking or walking the dog or grocery shopping, without being in a rush. We've cut back on housecleaners and gardeners and handymen so we are doing all that ourselves.
I think/hope we'll enter "phase 2" of retirement in a few years after the last child is flown, the parent and dog pass away and we can travel more. But if we don't get beyond phase 1, that's okay too.
For those who have BTDT, what does your retirement look like? Is it what you expected?
After one year, I'm still in phase 1, like you. I don't think I will ever move on. It's amazing to not have to work. I'm perfectly content. I didn't expect to be so happy about it and expected that I'd want to do more, but I don't. Have helped my kids with some things and I cook and manage my house, but that's it.
Anonymous wrote:I see posters who say they are going to work until they die, or retire and work PT retail or consulting, travel more, or volunteer more.
If you are retired, what expectations did you have ahead of retirement and what is your life actually like today?
DH and I retired early in our 50s after some health scares, as well as seeing friends die from heart attacks, cancer, etc. We both took packages and we sold our vacation home to pay off our primary mortgage.
My expectation: We would continue to work in some capacity - consulting, sitting on boards, etc, as well as volunteer and travel. I also had ambitious fitness goals - marathons! triathlons!
Reality: I planned to take six months off to recharge. Six months turned into a year. One year turned into three. I have no interest in ever working again. DH is the same. I don't know if it is just total burnout on corporate life, but neither one of us can bear the thought of another Zoom call or calendar invite. The same feeling applies to volunteering and fitness - I don't want to HAVE to do anything, including a volunteer shift at the museum. I exercise daily for the enjoyment of it, not to reach some goal. Basically, the whole "busyness" and goal-oriented portion of my identity is GONE, which is rather shocking to me. My 30 or 40-year-old self would be horrified by this person, and I assumed I'd die of boredom. But I'm pretty content.
What do we do? Right now we're in sandwich generation mode, with 1 elderly parent needing support, 1 kid still at home, and some extended family needing help (job search, addiction recovery). I feel grateful to have the bandwidth to help with that without also juggling a job. I consider that my volunteer time. I'm enjoying the monotony of everyday things, like cooking or walking the dog or grocery shopping, without being in a rush. We've cut back on housecleaners and gardeners and handymen so we are doing all that ourselves.
I think/hope we'll enter "phase 2" of retirement in a few years after the last child is flown, the parent and dog pass away and we can travel more. But if we don't get beyond phase 1, that's okay too.
For those who have BTDT, what does your retirement look like? Is it what you expected?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Career = life.
What is wrong with you OP?!?
SMH. You will learn the hard way PP.
Anonymous wrote:If you are retired, what expectations did you have ahead of retirement and what is your life actually like today?
It hadn't occurred to me how much I'd miss the structure of my career day to day and my coworkers-turned-friends. I am on a couple of boards, I volunteer at two organizations, we travel quite a bit and for longer chunks of time than pre-retirement, I do a bit of consulting, and we host nieces and nephews more often than we did previously.
Anonymous wrote:Career = life.
What is wrong with you OP?!?
If you are retired, what expectations did you have ahead of retirement and what is your life actually like today?