What is your retirement strategy?

This is not about investments!

 What is your retirement strategy?

Choose, don't settle.

Retirement strategies means more than managing your investments. Having enough money when you retire is important but not the only thing you need to manage. Retirement can mean 10 to 30 years (maybe more) years of your life. What you do with those years will make the difference as you look back on the day you die. Retirement strategy means what you did with those years, how you handled the resources of time, life experience and accomplishment. Were those years satisfying and fulfilling? Did you meet your life goals? Did your life matter? The answer lies with you and how you met the challenge of retirement.

It’s very personal.

Retirement strategy is a personal decision. There isn’t any universal measure of success or failure. It starts with what is important to you. It can be personal and self-satisfying or universal and altruistic. It can be timid or bold. In the end, nobody else’s standards matter. You are the master of your life.

Have conviction! 

Once you decide to make a plan, you have committed to taking control of your retirement lifestyle. You won’t accept just anything. Your life is important and you will do whatever necessary to make it as you want. But what are the options. I see it like this. There are three retirement strategies that you can embrace in your retirement plan. They are all good because they represent your decisions. So long as you have considered the options and selected the one that makes you happy, any strategy can be the right one for you.

Once you pick, you aren’t stuck with your choice. You can change strategy at any time. Don’t get hung up on which is the right one. Start by picking the one that feels right. The worst thing you can do is fail to choose because when you don’t choose a strategy, you aren’t in charge. You don’t know what will happen and somebody else will make decisions for you.

Strategy One: Stick with what’s working.

 What is your retirement strategy?

Keep doing what you love.

Maintain your current portfolio of life activities, relationships and environment. Change the amount of time you allocate as needed but don’t change much else. This would be most appropriate when you are pretty satisfied with your lifestyle or it might be what you choose while you try to decide what changes you want to make.

Strategy Two: Learn some new things.

 What is your retirement strategy?

Become a master

Choose this strategy when you know that there are some parts of your lifestyle that don’t work they way you want. This doesn’t mean you change everything at once. If you find more than one deficiency then pick the one that is most important and learn something new to make it better. This could mean taking up a new activity and becoming good enough to satisfy yourself. It could mean improving on skills you already have and becoming more expert. Then change your lifestyle to include your new skills.

Strategy Three: Shake things up.

 What is your retirement strategy?

See the world!

This is the most risky because you move away from what is familiar and you can’t always get back if you find you made a mistake. It also has the most potential to transform a dull retirement into something outrageous. This strategy could mean moving to another place, traveling more frequently. It could mean making a reality out of a long time fantasy like becoming a beachcomber or a volunteer for a foreign aid program. With this one, there are ways to test out the changes on a short term basis before committing to permanent change but if you don’t feel drawn to a big change in your life, this one may not be right for you.

Your turn! 

I hope you have chosen a strategy and aren’t letting control of your life drift. Leave a comment to let me know which path you are on and how it’s going.

 

Outrageous Retirement Wishes- Who do you want to spend time with?

Make New Friends

Even if you have a healthy and active community of friends and family after retiring, you need more.  Most people find that their community dwindles after retirement.  Maybe the friends from work no longer relate the way they used to. Maybe you never developed friendships because of work and family responsibilities. It doesn’t matter the reason. If you don’t have a community of friends and family in retirement then build one. Start by asking yourself who you would like to be part of your community and them plan your life to make room for them. Ask yourself three questions: Continue reading

Originally posted 2010-08-30 09:17:38. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Develop a sense of urgency – to pare down that bucket list

I’ve got a list! You might call it a bucket list

Actually it is more than one list- of things I want to do and have. I started it early on in life.

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Image by jayneandd via Flickr

There were the things I could do when I grew up; when I graduated; when I got married; became a father. And then the big kahuna of lists; the things I would do when I retired. I still have those lists because I never made everything on those lists happen. All along my life, I believed that there would be time to make them happen. I deferred for various reasons but the biggest was that I always believed I would have the time or money later. I thought that working harder now would make it possible eventually to have them all. Continue reading

Originally posted 2011-01-12 09:14:41. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Retirement: What puts you down?

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Image by whatleydude via Flickr

Even the best of us has a down day from time to time. In truth it is hard to stay positive today because we live in a world that glorifies the negative and ridicules the positive. Negativity surrounds us from the radio and television shows, print media and 95% of the people we meet. Have a good attitude and society marks you with a bulls eye. A good attitude is a target for negativity because negative people can’t stand the idea the anybody could be happy. They feel compelled to set you straight. We are all vulnerable to negativity but in different ways. Continue reading

Originally posted 2010-11-10 08:16:54. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Retirement Health – Have you considered the Paleo Diet?

300px Brazilian bouillabaisse Retirement Health – Have you considered the Paleo Diet?
Image via Wikipedia

Why change your diet for senior health?

When you are young, your body can run on auto pilot. It is an amazing machine and it can repair and cope with many stresses. When you get to retirement age, it is a different story. Either the neglect and stress of your lifestyle is beginning to produce some health problems or you worry that it is coming. Your doctor wants you to lose weight and lower your cholesterol. You get some stiffness now and again. Is it just aging or can you get control back. Two of the best ways to improve your health are to change your diet and start exercising. Today lets talk diet and consider the Paleolithic Diet – sometimes called the caveman diet. Continue reading

Originally posted 2010-08-24 07:53:52. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Retirement Advice: Know what’s important.

300px Stetson cowboy hat 1920s renovated Retirement Advice: Know whats important.
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Hats off to Joan

I rail about the benefits of blogging for ‘mature’ people “Why do I rail?” you ask. If you have followed me for a while you know that it is just what I do but there is reasoning behind it. Blogging or reading blogs is a good way to get your thinking right or to understand the thinking of other people. If you don’t have anything to say yourself then you should be reading the blogs of people who do. I can’t tell you how much I have learned about life from connecting with other people through their blogs. Through their thoughtful posts I can learn how they approach life and make real decisions. I like to think that each of us should make our lives extraordinary (sometimes I say outrageous) but it is hard to do because society wants us to be responsible and cautious. I think that you need to do things that you will remember all your days with great pleasure instead of not doing them and regretting what you could have done. One of the bloggers I read regularly did just that and she shared her decision process with her readers. Joan looked at her choices and rejected conventional wisdom. Joan decided to be outrageous. Continue reading

Originally posted 2010-10-29 09:38:24. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Take Charge of Your Attitude

Ded%C3%A3o Bottini Take Charge of Your Attitude
Image via Wikipedia

The posts this week asked two questions about attitude: What gets you up and what puts you down. These are critical questions for anybody who isn’t willing to settle for what everybody else has. If you want something different, you have to fight for it. It is a struggle to keep your motivation and drive even just to get up out of bed in the morning. Getting up is only the start, however because the next task is to counter the negatives that tell everything is hopeless and not to even try.

Clearly the answer is a positive attitude that carries you forward to your dreams. You can’t let someone else control your thinking. So what can you do? How can you keep focused on your outrageous lifestyle goals and how can you fight off the negative forces that tell you you can’t do it? How can you have a positive attitude in a negative world? It is a challenge but a big part of the answer is to get reinforcements. Learn two important keys to developing and maintaining a positive attitude.

 Take Charge of Your Attitude

Originally posted 2010-11-12 08:47:28. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

What is your definition of Finishing Strong?

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Image by ted.sali via Flickr

Retirement: the end or the beginning?

I shared my vision about finishing strong a few weeks back.I opened up about how I view my life in the home stretch and what I want to make of it.   It wasn’t  that I think you will share my vision about what that means. I wanted to start a dialogue with others that are entering the final laps in their life. Are you content to coast to the finish? Or do you want to pick up the pace, pull out the stops and cross that line in a blaze of glory? Now that blaze of glory may look different to you.  Maybe it won’t look like a blaze of glory to some but to you it means that you invested your time in making the final chapters in your life story the best ones.

But what does finishing strong mean to you?

If that is you then, I want to know what that means for you. I opened up about how I view my life in the home stretch. I know for me it doesn’t mean 24-7 drudgery. I want to be enjoying the world and my family, making memories and building a legacy. For me that includes building a community of like minded people and making some money. Your idea may be completely different but if you don’t want your last years to dribble away,  we can help each other.  We may not agree on our goals or activities but we will share the vision of finishing strong.

Share your finishing strong vision

Does finishing strong mean a second income to supplement your retirement? Are you looking for a vehicle to make that second income happen without requiring  a full time job?

Does finishing strong mean becoming a part of an organization that helps the needy, supports activities you enjoy and makes the world a better place?

Does finishing strong mean using the resources you have built to explore the world and its beauty, make memories for your family and leave a legacy?

Does finishing strong mean learning all you can about healthy aging and doing everything you can to stay healthy and vital to the end?

Join the community

Whatever finishing strong may mean for you, share it in the comments. Join the mailing list.  Come back and participate.  You may be thinking that you want all of the above.  That is ok.  I know exactly how you feel.  But pick one area and get started on the adventure.  We all start with baby steps.  But we do have to start.

 What is your definition of Finishing Strong?

Originally posted 2010-06-28 09:02:12. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Retirement Lifestyle: What is your legacy?

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Image by George Eastman House via Flickr

What does ‘legacy‘ mean to you?

It is money and things that you can buy with money? Is it extravagance and luxury? Is it something you buy? Is it a college endowment or a wing at the hospital that makes your name immortal? Is it a lifestyle that sets you apart from other people and gives your family a unique quality of life.  Do you want to leave a legacy? Continue reading

Originally posted 2010-10-08 08:19:04. Republished by Blog Post Promoter