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Retirement Advice
Retirement advice is offered from far and wide when you start considering your options but as soon as you begin anticipating the joy of something like retirement, some tin pot expert will give you retirement advice indicating not only is it bad for you, it could kill you.
Planning to retire is exciting, bittersweet and a little bit dangerous, all at the same time. Freedom from the daily grind, the hassled commute, the petty complaints of those you work with are all key factors anticipated. Freedom to sleep as long as you want and do what you want calls to us after years of running to someone else's timetable. But here is some timely retirement advice. There are downsides to retiring and here is where our cranky expert comes in. Often your work has ceased to be fulfilling, but remains a central anchor to your daily life. The ritual of a regular paycheck is not easy to let go of when you have an unknown number of years ahead to live off your assets. Sometimes, the social contact with your work colleagues is all the contact you manage if you have poor outside networks. And crucially, sometimes, our job is what we use to define who we are.
Research now indicates that unless you have a pretty good plan for your retirement, you can become depressed and isolated very quickly. Spend a few minutes imagining your daily life as a retiree. What will you do? Who will you talk to? Will you travel? Where will you live? What will get you out of bed every morning? After you imagine the first few mornings of blissful laziness, it will pale quickly when you think it could go on for many more years. It needs a plan. In this section, I will prepare retirement planning articles to assist you. Below is a list of possibilities I am working on. While you read it, think about some of the possibilities you might consider and write them down.
Based on what I know about my own
strengths
and covering things that are of interest to me, the list is long and growing! 1) Ensure retirement funds are sufficient and secure. Diversify investments into a range of sectors so funds are not exposed entirely to anything like the shock of another global financial crisis. As far as possible be debt free. Calculate the funds you may need
HERE.
2) Decide where to live. It will need to be small and efficient because energy and water costs are going to skyrocket in the coming decades. Garden space would be helpful to
grow veggies, berries and fruit.
Maybe chickens too. 3) Same with transport as above. Think small and efficient. 4) Improve social networks now. While raising the kids, I let that part of my life slip, but now I need to
re-establish friendship networks
that are not necessarily driven by where I live or work.
5) Plan to work 2-3 days a week. Whether that is at my current job or something else, I have a long list of things I would like to explore, from horticulture to apprentice furniture refinisher. The pay will be less important than the fulfillment offered in learning a new skill. The skills shortage will assist in providing these opportunities and the pay will be enough to supplement a retirement income.6) Plan to
volunteer
at least 1-2 days a week. Drive a bus, help school kids to read, visit patients in a hospital, garden for the elderly, weed the parks, plant trees, there's lots that needs doing. This will likely turn into a portfolio of deeds rather than the same things week in and week out. It's also a great way to make new friends and contacts that could turn into paid part time employment. 7) Continue to work on my website to build a community of women that help and be helped. 8) Travel regularly. Some trips will be to visit friends, some will be to do environmental conservation work around the world. I would like to register as a volunteer for a range of agencies that work overseas without putting myself in harms way, so no war zones for me. But I am happy to put my back into helping to build schools or teach english or plant gardens. 9) Beyond this, I have joined a choir, I am doing weekend conservation work and I am hoping to go back to school part time. All toe dipping exercises on my longer term plans. 10) Still of interest and not formally in the plan, studying a language and learning how to play an instrument, getting my motorcycle licence and building an eco-friendly house. All of this, of course, assumes good health, stable funds, kids established independantly and no catastrophies, like losing my job before I'm ready to go. It's all we can do. As John Lennon so famously sang in Beautiful Boy, '...life is what happens when you're busy making plans'. And even though life continues to happen, thoughtful planning can make a difference. I've found some good resources to assist you further in this. Firstly, some sage advice about how to approach your
spouse retiring,
which is essential reading! Secondly a whole website around the
idea of retirement
from people who have already done it. It has some interesting perspectives available. So what will your plans be?
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Other articles in the Retirement Advice section:
Retirement Advice Retirement from full time work is one of the most anticipated rites of passage in working life. But as soon as you get close, some tin pot expert will tell you why it's bad for you. Here is some retirement advice that will help.
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| Philanthropy Most of us have been trying to accumulate wealth over our working lives. But if you really want a taste of happiness, give it away. That is what philanthropy is all about and it's not just the rich doing it.
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