
Originally Posted by
herbgeek
I've been retired almost 4 years now, and haven't fully found my groove. I had been planning on getting out of the workforce earlier than typical since discovering Your Money or Your Life, so it wasn't like I hadn't thought about what I'd do all day.
The first 6 months I signed up fo every class and activity I could find locally, and that was fun. I also got the gardens I'd often neglected back in shape which was a physical challenge for a few months. Then my Dad got cancer and died pretty quickly, leaving my Mom with dementia behind. So there were weekly visits, and grocery shopping, and food prep every week until she had deteriorated to a scary point, and we had to put her in assisted living. Meanwhile the pandemic happened, which meant all the activities I was signed up for came to a halt.
Even though I'm an serious introvert, the pandemic was mentally difficult for me. There's a difference between choosing to stay home and having to stay home.
I miss working with tools and techology, so I've volunteered to handle the website for a Over 50 women's group I'm a member of. Its not regular enough, or challenging enough now that I've learned the web tools but it helps to scratch that itch a bit. I joined a book club recently, even though I always saw myself as not a book club person (I read mostly non fiction/self help stuff). Once a year or so I take a Coursera that is completely out of my element (this year its an introduction to classical music, last year was neurobiology). I joined a discussion group at my senior center, as well as exercise classes. I joined a "learning in retirement" program at a local community college which has members presenting various topics for one hour talks- yesterday the morning session was a ghost hunter, and the afternoon session was a local person who started a distillery.
I found that retirement takes more work than I imagined. I have to spend a lot of time finding things to do. I'm trying to find more "series" things like my learning in retirement program and not just one off classes. I still don't have a good social network, so I do most of my stuff solo. I have difficulty making friends, so I'm hoping doing more "series" things will help, where you see the same people repeatedly. Winter's are harder- both to find activities and to fight my natural hibernation instincts. In the summer, in addition to all the gardening, spouse and I will drive around and look at touristy places, picnic, and go for hikes/bike rides.
Sometimes I miss working. The actual work part, not the sitting in meetings and dealing with politics part. I like figuring out how software works. But tech companies tend to be all consuming - unless you have a specific in demand skill , part time is really not an option (and I don't). I really like having the flexibility of sitting outside with a cup of coffee on a gorgeous morning and just hanging with the birds, and I wouldn't want to give that up. So occasional boredom is the "cost" for this, still a good trade off IMO.