Royce Shook

6 years ago · 3 min. reading time · 0 ·

Blogging
>
Royce blog
>
Can you give your retirement a grade?

Can you give your retirement a grade?

I read an interesting post that asked this question: If you were to give the retirement life you have been living to this point a grade – like back in school – would you be looking at an “A” for excellent or a “C” for average or (hopefully not) an “F” for failure? 

The question could also be asked this way: If you were to give the life you have been living to this point a grade--like back  in school – would you be looking at an “A” for excellent or a “C” for average or (hopefully not) an “F” for failure?

This is a tough question to ask as there are a lot of variables, would you give yourself a pass or a fall. If I was asked this when I retired 11 years ago, I would have given myself a Fail, today I give myself a Pass. I failed for the first few years of retirement because I did not plan for it. I retired on the spur of the moment. The reasons at the time seemed good, but within a few months, I wanted to be back at work. So, I went back, part-time for a couple of years, full time for a couple of more, then back to part-time and finally I eased into retirement.  It’s not always easy to live the retirement of our dreams. I think the bottom line is are you happy with your second act, or is there room for improvement? And if there is room for improvement what can you do to improve?

Before assigning a grade to my retirement or your life there are a few questions worthy of consideration:

1. Do you find meaning in your life? Retirement planning and retirement itself are not just about finding the money. When we are working, we identify with our job/career or position. What is your net worth when you are no longer that person? We need a reason to get out of bed in the morning, what is yours? If you can’t find worthwhile endeavors beyond the job retirement can feel empty. It becomes difficult to motivate yourself to get out of bed each morning – what is the purpose? But if you have reasons, motivations, passions that excite you each day can offer a new opportunity. In retirement, you are the captain of your own ship, you don’t have to stick to the same sea that led you here. You are free to try new things, cut loose and do what feels good. Finding meaning in retirement is very personal and no two paths are exactly the same. How would you rate your current situation?

2. Do you have plans for the future? We all need goals they help us stay motivated, give us a reason to get up in the morning. Goals help you find your passion, whatever it is. Your passion could be traveling, or learning, reading or writing, painting or singing. What goals have you set for yourself for tomorrow? Next month? Next year?

3. What would you change about your situation? Retirement allows us to improve our situation, and to perhaps set out on new adventures. Are there areas requiring attention to realize the best life possible? Can you fine-tune your lifestyle to increase the likelihood of living a fulfilling life? If you have identified some areas that require attention, what is holding you back from starting to fix them?

4. What are the best things about being retired? Life is not easy, we can feel overwhelmed by money problems, health issues, or just sheer boredom. Some of my friends call me an optimist I typically see the glass half full. Many years ago, I found that that worrying had no effect on the issues I was facing. If I had control, I could take action, if the situation was out of my control, I could only react to what was happening.  Why not face the future like Frank Sinatra who sang “The best is yet to come”?

5. What are your plans to continue learning? Learning is second nature to humans, we have a deep desire to learn. Education and learning are not the same things. We learn through, reading, traveling going to seminars, taking classes, watching TV, listening to the radio, or just talking to people. Put that mind to work. Keep yourself engaged and challenged. You are never done learning.

6. Are you happy? At the end of the day when you glance into the mirror, what do you see? Retirement is about finding the right balance, between all of the conflicting calls on your time. Whatever path you discover, whatever steps and missteps you take, wherever your journey leads you if when it is all said and done you should feel positive about how your time is being spent. If you don’t take steps to change, if you do, feel free to do more of the same!

Each of us has the power to influence the quality of our retired life. It took me about 9 years to move from failing retirement to passing retirement. With planning my hope is that you take a shorter period of time to feel good about your retirement. Why settle for average when you can be excellent. When you think about it, now that you are retired is there a worthier focus for your attention?

16686470.jpg
"
Comments

John Rylance

6 years ago #6

Rather than giving my life grades, I prefer to as T S Elliot had Prufrock say " measure my life in coffee spoons" it's much less stressful.
I never thought I'd live past the age of 18. My whole childhood was geared towards that goal--just making it that far. I'm here to tell you to listen to this guy. Life doesn't always turn out how you expect. Plan for the future. It becomes the present sooner than you think.

Royce Shook

6 years ago #4

#3
Bill, that is very important. Love what you do and you will never work a day in your life, as my father said to me.

Bill Stankiewicz

6 years ago #3

I'm still working and love what I do 👍👍👍🐝🐝🐝

Royce Shook

6 years ago #2

#1
At 95 your mom sounds like a go to person. I hope she continues to have such a positive outlook for many more years. You are right, a pension check does take some of the angst out of making ends meet.

Helena Jansen van Vuuren

6 years ago #1

Mum who turns 95 at the end of this month despite being a bit frail is still a lesson in doing and looking forward. She knits and exhorts her fellow retirees to do something - the gang knit clothes for babies at the neonatal unit at their local hospital - maybe the motivation is the sherry they get when delivering the baby clothes! I do not envisage retiring when I get my first pension cheque next year when I turn 65 but will continue working part time and working on selling my pearls. A pension cheque just takes a bit of the angst out of making ends meet. Good article and good points to consider! Thank you!

Articles from Royce Shook

View blog
3 weeks ago · 2 min. reading time

Last thoughts on subjective ageing. Modern medicine should be adding life to years; not just more ye ...

4 weeks ago · 4 min. reading time

I was sent this by one of my high school friends, I added to it and thought I would share · 1. · I w ...

1 month ago · 1 min. reading time

When people ask me what I consider old I always say an age 10 years older than me. I found it intere ...

Related professionals

You may be interested in these jobs

  • Shopistry

    Développeur React

    5 days ago


    Shopistry Canada

    React Developer - Saaslify X - Webflow Ecommerce website template Sr. React Developer · Contract Canada Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit vel ut congue varius congue aliquet leo netus neque nibh semper in diam viverra nibh aliquam elit amet orci et dolor, f ...

  • Drummondville Volkswagen

    Homme de Cour

    6 days ago

    Direct apply

    Drummondville Volkswagen Drummondville, Canada

    Chez Drummondville Volkswagen, nous sommes en permanence à la recherche de nouveaux profils pour venir renforcer nos équipes afin de soutenir la croissance de notre concession. · **Deviens notre Homme de cour chez Drummondville Volkswagen** · Rendre service est ta deuxième nature ...


  • CIS Ontario Oakville, Canada

    Director, Enrolment Management · Rosseau Lake College has an exciting opportunity for a Director of Enrolment Management to join our team · About Rosseau Lake College · Rosseau Lake College is one of Canada's most unique independent day and boarding schools, offering extraordi ...