Retirement:
Don't Lose
Your Sense
of Purpose
What
Will Retirement
Be Like?
"It
will be great
to do what
I want when
I want."
"Whew,
no more office
politics to
deal with!"
"At
last, the
government
will be paying
me for a change."
"I'm
finally F-R-E-E-E!!"
These
statements
reflect some
of the positive
things about
retirement
that almost
everyone looks
forward to.
Unless it's
due to illness,
the reason
most retirees
leave their
jobs is because
they want
to, not because
they're pushed
out. So for
most, that
last day on
the job is
a joyful one
filled with
an invigorating
sense of personal
freedom.
But
many retirees
are not prepared
for another
feeling that
often follows
that last
day of work:
a profound
sense of loss.
You've
Got Company
A study sponsored
by Civic Ventures,
Temple University,
and the Center
for Intergenerational
Learning surveyed
retired people
of all economic
levels, and
found that
the majority
had one thing
in common:
They felt
lonely. It
wasn't for
lack of friends,
family and
active social
lives. Instead,
it was a loneliness
for the kinds
of relationships
they had established
during their
working years.
Almost all
workers are
part of teams
of some kind,
and those
teams have
daily problems
to solve,
solutions
to work out,
new ideas
to introduce.
An
architect
who spent
her life drawing
plans had
an office
full of people
who understood
her work and
appreciated
her creative
new ideas.
A science
teacher of
many years
had near-celebrity
status among
his peers
and his students,
who always
seemed to
be talking
about the
cool things
they were
learning in
his class.
The manager
of quality-control
at an auto-assembly
plant felt
pride in his
team and got
a special
thrill each
fall when
the new models
came out and
he saw them
on the road.
At
retirement,
they may all
have one thing
in common:
loss of a
sense of purpose.
The architect's
purpose was
to create
satisfying
designs, the
teacher's
to stimulate
young minds,
the quality-control
manager's
to assure
that his company's
products measured
up to top
standards.
What will
replace the
job satisfactions
that were
so much a
part of their
identities?
These
days, with
rumblings
that social
security might
not last and
with health
care costs
escalating
alarmingly,
many retirees
find that
instead of
feeling the
total freedom
they dreamed
about, they
are haunted
by worries
about whether
they have
enough money
saved to actually
enjoy their
retired years.
The fact that
people are
living so
much longer
than they
did a decade
ago should
seem like
good news-but
the prospect
of how to
finance all
those extra
years is troublesome
to many people
when they
leave the
workforce.
It's
a fact that
retirement
can be an
unsettling
time. But
it doesn't
have to be.
Many
people have
a different
view of retirement.
One respondent
in the study
mentioned
above said:
"I
like to think
of myself
as retiring
TO something
as opposed
to retiring
FROM something."
In
other words,
retirement
shouldn't
be a stopping
point, but
a continuation
of the journey
through life.
Why toss all
the experience
you've gained
through years
of working?
You're one
of the "wise
ones"
now. There
are people
out there
who value
you.
A
2005 comprehensive
study released
by AARP and
Towers Perrin,
a human resources
consulting
firm, showed
that many
employers
are beginning
to recognize
the value
of older workers.
It's that
old-fashioned
work ethic-you
know, expecting
to actually
show up on
time and give
a fair day's
work for a
fair day's
wage. In its
September,
2006, Bulletin,
AARP honored
50 US employers
who are "friendly"
to older workers.
But
doesn't going
back to work
defeat the
whole idea
of being retired?
Isn't it supposed
to be time
to stop showing
up for work
when someone
else says
you should?
You wanted
freedom, remember?
Do you have
to give that
up to regain
that sense
of purpose?
Absolutely
not.
Thousands
of people
of all ages
are making
money in home
businesses
that allow
them to be
their own
bosses and
retain the
exhilaration
of the freedom
to run their
own lives.
At the same
time, they're
able to generate
extra income
to bulk up
the nest egg
and provide
substantially
more financial
security for
the 20, 30
or more years
to come. Freedom
from financial
worry is just
as important
as freedom
from job demands
if you're
going to enjoy
the rest of
your life.
And as a home-based
entrepreneur,
you can still
enjoy all
the dreams
you planned.
As long as
you have a
computer and
a phone, you
can run your
"home"
business from
anywhere you
call home-including
your vacation
cottage, RV,
or even your
favorite beach.
If
you're retired,
or soon will
be, now is
the time to
get started.
You already
have the skills
you need.
With a little
extra help
from the experts,
you can fine-tune
them and start
right away
to put
a sense of
purpose back
in your life.
Just
fill out the
form below
for additional
information
on a home
based business
that you can
operate that
will fulfill
your needs.