Imagining retirement
A commenter I'll call Ms. K. left a remark on a blog elsewhere; I will paraphrase.
From her 40ish perch, in the midst of professional and parental responsibilities, she imagines her eventual retirement will be a rolling festival of trips, booze, crafting and living in a cool loft. (The photo at left is from the Canadian Association of Retired Persons, or CARP, the best association acronym ever.)
And, maybe she'll have that. But her vision made me laugh, as my own retirement is quite different—not only from hers, but from how I thought it might be. In my 40s, I too saw retirement as a calm harbour, but in fact it has demanded a vigilant watch instead of one hand on the tiller and the other on a tall G&T.
We stick to a budget, but there have been unanticipated expenses. One adult child needed ongoing support to change careers; the other embarked on a graduate degree in his second language, which took an extra year of study. We don't have to help out, but we wanted to, and the kids are doing their part by securing grants, working and stretching those dollars.
As for the booze: when my parents were in their 60s, I used to think, You could go out every night! Why don't you live it up? Now I know: any more than two glasses of wine in an evening and I wonder, Are they speaking Czech?
I don't miss being a big deal (biggish, whatever) at work. I'm happy to help on the occasional project, but after brief re-immersion in the Sturm und Drang of the workplace, gratefully lean back again.
Retirement has served me not a bacchanalian banquet but a dim sum platter of bite-sized pleasures: time to learn new things, take walks, meet a friend in mid-day, write.
Women who said, "I can't imagine what I'd do if I retired" have found a middle path; they supply teach, volunteer their professional skills through organizations like SCORE, or work part-time.
Others are spending time caregiving. Several friends visit frail parents most days, and one is, along with her husband, raising a two-year-old granddaughter.
There is one group who are notably unhappy: women laid off two to five years before they planned to retire and who have been unable to find other employment. It's not solely the drop in income, it's the abrupt cessation of the identity derived from work. They feel differently when asked to leave the party before they chose.
Ms. K. may also find that, around retirement age, losses pile up. Your health or that of a partner, if you have one, may not be robust. One widowed acquaintance is wondering if the trips she and her husband dreamed of could be any fun on her own. There is death, divorce and also the shock of finding out your beloved's idea of bliss is 220 games of golf per year, scores recorded on a calendar.
For some, retirement means struggle. The Conference Board of Canada's report on Elderly Poverty says: "Although the current poverty rate among the elderly (defined as age 65 and older) is significantly lower than in the 1970s, the increase documented in the Statistics Canada data from 3.9 per cent in 1995 to 10.2 per cent in 2005 and again to 12.3 per cent in 2010 is troubling.
Among the elderly, the biggest jump occurred in the group of elderly women. Between 2006 and 2010, 160,000 more seniors were said to be living in low income. Of that amount, almost 60 per cent were women."
If I were to give one piece advice to Ms. K. (a fellow Canadian): don't count on the government to provide the same benefits my cohort are getting now, by the time you are 65.
Summer closure
This is the last post for the summer; as usual, I spend this short, sweet season away from online life. I wish you a splendid season of strawberries, warm, starry evenings, and close conversations in lawn chairs.
The current forecast is for the Passage to reopen shortly after Labour Day, though posts could be sporadic during our burnished September. I'm becoming a foul-weather writer. The best way to hear of its opening is to become a follower, which encourages me, too.
Thank you warmly for reading; I'm grateful for your comments, stories, questions and links. You have made the Passage what it is!
From her 40ish perch, in the midst of professional and parental responsibilities, she imagines her eventual retirement will be a rolling festival of trips, booze, crafting and living in a cool loft. (The photo at left is from the Canadian Association of Retired Persons, or CARP, the best association acronym ever.)
And, maybe she'll have that. But her vision made me laugh, as my own retirement is quite different—not only from hers, but from how I thought it might be. In my 40s, I too saw retirement as a calm harbour, but in fact it has demanded a vigilant watch instead of one hand on the tiller and the other on a tall G&T.
Les gars |
As for the booze: when my parents were in their 60s, I used to think, You could go out every night! Why don't you live it up? Now I know: any more than two glasses of wine in an evening and I wonder, Are they speaking Czech?
I don't miss being a big deal (biggish, whatever) at work. I'm happy to help on the occasional project, but after brief re-immersion in the Sturm und Drang of the workplace, gratefully lean back again.
Retirement has served me not a bacchanalian banquet but a dim sum platter of bite-sized pleasures: time to learn new things, take walks, meet a friend in mid-day, write.
Women who said, "I can't imagine what I'd do if I retired" have found a middle path; they supply teach, volunteer their professional skills through organizations like SCORE, or work part-time.
Others are spending time caregiving. Several friends visit frail parents most days, and one is, along with her husband, raising a two-year-old granddaughter.
There is one group who are notably unhappy: women laid off two to five years before they planned to retire and who have been unable to find other employment. It's not solely the drop in income, it's the abrupt cessation of the identity derived from work. They feel differently when asked to leave the party before they chose.
Ms. K. may also find that, around retirement age, losses pile up. Your health or that of a partner, if you have one, may not be robust. One widowed acquaintance is wondering if the trips she and her husband dreamed of could be any fun on her own. There is death, divorce and also the shock of finding out your beloved's idea of bliss is 220 games of golf per year, scores recorded on a calendar.
For some, retirement means struggle. The Conference Board of Canada's report on Elderly Poverty says: "Although the current poverty rate among the elderly (defined as age 65 and older) is significantly lower than in the 1970s, the increase documented in the Statistics Canada data from 3.9 per cent in 1995 to 10.2 per cent in 2005 and again to 12.3 per cent in 2010 is troubling.
Among the elderly, the biggest jump occurred in the group of elderly women. Between 2006 and 2010, 160,000 more seniors were said to be living in low income. Of that amount, almost 60 per cent were women."
If I were to give one piece advice to Ms. K. (a fellow Canadian): don't count on the government to provide the same benefits my cohort are getting now, by the time you are 65.
Summer closure
This is the last post for the summer; as usual, I spend this short, sweet season away from online life. I wish you a splendid season of strawberries, warm, starry evenings, and close conversations in lawn chairs.
The current forecast is for the Passage to reopen shortly after Labour Day, though posts could be sporadic during our burnished September. I'm becoming a foul-weather writer. The best way to hear of its opening is to become a follower, which encourages me, too.
Thank you warmly for reading; I'm grateful for your comments, stories, questions and links. You have made the Passage what it is!
Comments
Have a wonderful summer, Duchesse!!
Have a wonderful summer, I'll miss your posts and look forward to September.
We are still healthy and strong at 62 and 67 but the days of walking 8 hours or playing a 3 hour gig could come to an end at any time. Financially, I am spending more on travel now thinking that perhaps at 65 and 70, our priorities might change. As retired Canadians, we have a relatively comfortable life but I have concerns for the future of my single daughter who is employed in the food service industry. Have a lovely, relaxing summer and I shall look forward to reading more in the fall.
I think being a foul weather writer is exactly what retirement can be. No more, no less, matching your skills to your inclinations and resources.
The pension I receive is not vast as I always worked part time but my husband is still working and will be until he turns 70, that is the plan....but who knows? We have no mortgage but a heritage bungalow that requires constant repairs so we may need to rethink our housing at some point. Retirement is an adjustment bug one that I can highly endorse!
Enjoy your summer holidays and will be here when you get back.
Wendy
We'll deeply miss Montreal, especially during the summer terrasse & festival season. It has been our home for 40 years & we love it. But you are right, it is time to seize the day while we still can.
I always enjoy your posts about our lovely city. Enjoy your congé. I will look for you in the Fall.
When we run into each other, you'll tell me more about your volunteering, which sounds very interesting.
And enjoy a spritzer of white wine, fizzy mineral water from Milano, and a dash of fresh lime juice!
One to consider is underlying emotional stability. My 93-year-old father-in-law was just telling me about an 83-year-old friend of his who is, to put it bluntly, an emotional and physical wreck. My father-in-law and the man's wife (I'll call her Frances) both blame retirement. Nature rushes to fill a vacuum; in this case, the man's anxiety has exploded and deformed his life.
I admire your caring and plans for volunteering. I work in a community pharmacy and regularly see the reality of what you are saying. Even with provincial assistance for medication, we have ladies who struggle to afford their medication. The whole situation is very sad.
Cathy Wong
I would love to simplify our life upon my husband's retirement. He is not quite as interested in a simple life. I think some of the adjustment (aside from financial adjustment) will be finding a lifestyle that suits us both.
I'm very, very lucky that I'm quite healthy and have enough money. My husband is still working, for another 3 years or so. After my mom died (and my 24/7 caretaking was over) I was mostly a vegetable for a year or two. After I had that time to regroup (again, I'm very fortunate) I started getting Out In The World. I started golf and tennis lessons with friends, and I volunteer at Dress for Success, which is a great organization.
The volunteers tend to be well-off ladies, but the clients are low income unemployed women. It brings the disparity of income and circumstances into sharp focus. Today, for example, I "suited" a client who was SO excited to get a suit, blouse, shoes, and handbag. She told me she'd never owned a suit, and her delight in her appearance in her new outfit was heartwarming. Meanwhile, in the warehouse area, we were unpacking and sorting a huge donation from the family of a woman who had died, and left 48 boxes of clothing, including 150 pairs of shoes. I helped sort the blouses; three racks packed completely full, some with the tags still on. Talbots, Doncaster, Eileen Fisher, etc., nice quality stuff, but SO MUCH stuff!
Obviously, I have no delusions of grandeur on my outlook for retirement. I see my husband and I living very frugally and enjoying a simple life.
I endorse the people saying 'don't wait to live your life'. My mum died at 62 so didn't get decades of an enjoyable retirement. She did suck all the juice she could out of life while she was sick though, with travel and volunteering and spending time with friends and family. I've got the family tendency so I don't know how long I'll have of retirement. Carpe diem! (but also save and invest wisely)
And I wasn't going to go on and on here. . . oh well!
Enjoy your summer, that beautiful city in that heat, the life on the streets, the colour of the markets. . . .
Swissy