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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Reinventing Retirement
You work and work, and then what? Best case: You step into a reality designed
around your passions and priorities. Here are some tips for making it happen
- when and how you choose.
By Sarah Moran |
July-August 2008 |
Explore Your Options
Develop Your Dream
Manage Your Money
Make It Happen
My Kind of Retirement
Resources
Valerie and Eric Bressman have been retirement veterans
since their 30s. At ages 47 and 51, they’ve already enjoyed four extended breaks
from their jobs in Portland, Ore. Valerie, a manager of human resources
communications, and Eric, an architect, saved enough to travel the world for a
year in 2005. They’ve also spent extended periods of time in the South Pacific,
the Greek Isles and Europe during the past 16 years. The Bressman’s
“mini-retirement” trips were born out of their values and priorities. Traveling,
they say, puts their lives into perspective and helps them focus more on what’s
important in life. “Neither one of us feels defined by our jobs or careers,”
explains Valerie. “We’re defined by who we are and by our experiences.” For
the Bressmans and an increasing number of Americans, retirement no longer means
working yourself into the ground until you stop completely and embrace a
life of leisure. Instead, with some thought and planning, retirement can be
whatever you want it to be. “Most people’s vision of retirement is
culturally imposed, and they have a sense that they should stop working and
travel or play golf,” says Brent Kessel, author of It’s Not About the Money:
Unlock Your Money Type to Achieve Spiritual and Financial Abundance (HarperOne,
2008) and president of the wealth management firm Abacus Wealth Partners. “But
for most people who have been making a contribution [during their working
lives], what’s most fulfilling is continuing to make a contribution of some
kind.” “People want to be engaged,” agrees Richard Leider, coauthor of
Something to Live for: Finding Your Way in the Second Half of Life
(Berrett-Koehler, 2008) and founder of The Inventure Group, a Minneapolis-based
consulting and coaching firm. “They don’t want to check out of the universe;
they want to stay in it.” Retirees like these want more out of the second
(or middle) half of life, says Leider, so they are crafting their lives around
that goal. Some are going back to school or volunteering in their communities;
others are digging further into their life’s work as they write new chapters in
their lives. And although there’s no set formula for a satisfying retirement,
there are steps you can take at every stage of life to help make your retirement
dreams a reality.
Explore Your Options
Old notions of retirement are ripe for, well,
retiring. Many people no longer find the idea of endless days on a Florida
golf course particularly appealing (or financially feasible, for that matter).
In fact, studies show that many people today find the idea of a
do-nothing retirement boring, says David Corbett, coauthor of Portfolio Life:
The New Path to Work, Purpose and Passion After 50 (Jossey-Bass, 2006) and
founder of New Directions, a career transition service in
Boston. Instead, people are beginning to regard their
second-half-of-life options with an open mind — as a time to enjoy some
well-deserved leisure, certainly, but also as a time to live out long-held
dreams and to work toward new goals. In short, people are looking for both
pleasure and meaning. They want to continue to pursue the skills and passions
they enjoy, while weeding out the stresses and obligations they don’t. Many
are also facing the realities of smaller-than-anticipated retirement funds or
limited savings and are looking for financially viable options (such as career
downshifting, part-time work, self-employment or serial mini-breaks) to the
hard-stop retirements that many of our parents and grandparents took for
granted. As a result, a growing number of individuals are becoming more
selective, more proactive and more creative about how they go about tailoring
their retirements to their personal tastes — and financial realities.
Develop Your Dream
So how does one go about reinventing one’s own
retirement? Most experts recommend kick-starting the process with some good
old-fashioned self-reflection (don’t worry, we’ll get into the money stuff in a
moment). Leider, who also coauthored Claiming Your Place at the Fire: Living the
Second Half of Your Life on Purpose (Berrett-Koehler, 2004), proposes an “annual
purpose checkup” in which you ask yourself how much you agree with the following
statements: - I work at what I love to do.
- My daily choices are
driven by a strong sense of purpose.
- There’s a clear alignment between my
priorities and how I spend my time.
- I invest in making a difference to
others in the world.
- I know what I want to be remembered for.
For
those statements that already ring true to you, ask yourself how you might
sustain that sense of satisfaction (and the elements that create it) even as you
transition away from your current career. For those statements that are not
yet a true “yes” for you, evaluate what sorts of changes you can make to turn
them into yesses, particularly as you go about reinventing or phasing out
certain elements of your work life. Creating a unique, meaningful
retirement, says Leider, is first and foremost about leveraging “this formula of
gifts, passions and values.” Next step: Use the information that surfaces in
your annual purpose checkup to get clear about how you’d most like to spend your
retirement time. In the book What Color Is Your Parachute? For Retirement:
Planning Now for the Life You Want (Ten Speed, 2007), Richard N. Bolles and John
E. Nelson suggest that you ask yourself the following questions: - What do
you really want to learn about, or how have you dreamed of developing yourself?
- If you were determined to work at something that you absolutely love,
what might that be?
- What have you wanted to do, just for the sheer
pleasure of it?
Corbett suggests cultivating a life portfolio of five or six
part-time activities you enjoy enough to want to invest yourself in — regardless
of whether you’re paid to do them. These could be things like travel, hobbies,
time with loved ones, involvement with good causes or deepening your
spirituality. “When you’re young,” says Corbett, “you may not be thinking
about retirement, but you should be thinking about your life portfolio all
through your life. Have a plan that’s built around your values. Even if it sits
on the back burner for years, have something that’s always being nurtured.”
Manage Your Money
Dreams notwithstanding, you also need enough money to
achieve whatever your retirement goals turn out to be, and that takes planning.
It’s easiest, of course, if you begin saving early and wisely, but even that may
not be enough. In a world where it’s possible to live past 100, says
Kessel, “you have to be able to afford a 40-year retirement, and very few people
can do that without any type of income. So continuing to do some kind of work
that you love — and that you can see doing into your 60s, 70s and 80s — is the
surest retirement strategy.” The Bressmans, who are taking retirement in
several pieces, plan and save diligently for each adventure and are prepared
to work past traditional retirement age. Far in advance of a given trip, they
sit down and figure out how much money it will require and begin to save a
certain amount each month. They direct tax returns, bonuses and reimbursable
expenses at work into their travel savings account. Their approach has
some trade-offs — they know they may have to delay retirement for a few years.
Still, they say that what they’ve gained in perspective and experience
outweighs everything. Says Valerie Bressman, “We have no sense of regret
whatsoever.” Richard Broussard, a 70-year-old in Hartford, Vt., is doing —
and financing — his retirement differently. For him, a meaningful retirement is
all about staying active and giving back. To that end, he rides his bicycle
daily and gives back through involvement at his church, volunteering for the
Vermont Department of Corrections and helping with the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina. He also travels, visiting far-flung locales like Sweden, Iran and
Syria. Broussard makes this scenario work financially by continuing to work
part-time as a bus and limo driver, which supplements his retirement income from
Social Security and payouts from retirement plans with past employers. For
Broussard, the key to saving money for trips is consciously living within his
means, which is easier because he paid off his mortgage before retiring and
avoided debt back when he was working full-time. His part-time work now
supplements his finances and leaves other investment reserves untouched.
Other alternative retirement strategies include shifting away from full-time
employment to high-end consulting, starting an entrepreneurial business
connected with a passion or hobby, sharing a home and other living expenses with
a friend to help retirement funds go further, or choosing another creative
career reinvention that you love so much you never want to retire at all.
Make It Happen
Everyone’s goals and financial situations are different, so
consult a financial planner and educate yourself about the practical saving and
debt-management strategies that will best underwrite your retirement plan. Also
consider acquiring good healthcare and long-term disability coverage that will
support you in the event of an unforeseen crisis (see Resources below). The
main things you need to begin planning are a clear sense of your gifts, values
and priorities; a dollop of imagination; and the initiative to begin sketching
and saving for your plan, starting now. Share your retirement vision with your
life partner and look for opportunities to support each other’s dreams. Planning
ahead will give you the freedom to create a retirement that’s right for you. Sarah Moran is Minneapolis-based health writer.
My Kind of Retirement
Not interested in the rocking-chair version of retirement? Here are some
convention-bucking alternatives: The Several-Sabbaticals Retirement. Instead
of working ceaselessly and then stopping permanently, consider working and
saving for several years, then taking a year off to travel or write a book.
Return to work for a few more years. Then pursue another passion for a
while. And so on. Consult a financial adviser, as well as a career coach, about
the best way to prepare for this work-play rhythm, and then schedule your first
sabbatical! (See “On Sabbatical” in the March 2007 archives.) The Giving-Back Retirement. After a lifetime of
developing your career skills, you are uniquely qualified to give back to the
community and the world. Consider mentoring, volunteering and community work,
perhaps with some paid consulting or part-time work on the side. The
Digging-in-Deeper Retirement. You’ve always loved your work as a therapist, so
instead of retiring completely, you move your practice to part-time and
go back to school for a higher degree, or you enroll in a specialized
program to enrich your knowledge, perspective and skills. The Career-Change
Retirement. Been an accountant all your life but always wanted to teach math —
or open a natural-foods cafe, or run a shoe store, or author a book? Make
retirement your chance to fulfill that dream or to discover a new one.
Resources
Something to Live for: Finding Your Way in the Second Half of Life by
Richard Leider (Berrett-Koehler, 2008) The New Retirement: The Ultimate Guide
to the Rest of Your Life by Jan Cullinane and Cathy Fitzgerald (Rodale, 2004)
What Color Is Your Parachute? For Retirement: Planning Now for the Life You
Want by Richard N. Bolles and John E. Nelson (Ten Speed, 2007) WEB www.wesabe.com — Wesabe is a nonprofit online
financial-advice community that lets users upload their financial information,
get advice from other users in similar situations and with similar goals, and
share what they are learning. www.fool.com/retirement.htm —
Started by two brothers as a financial-advice newsletter in 1993, The Motley
Fool is a clearinghouse of sound fiscal guidance. Find retirement tips on their
Web site, including everything from where to invest your money to how to avoid
common retirement-plan pitfalls.
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reinventing Retirement
You work and work, and then what? Best case: You step into a reality designed
around your passions and priorities. Here are some tips for making it happen
- when and how you choose.
By Sarah Moran | Life Balance Department, July-August 2008 |
Explore Your Options
Develop Your Dream
Manage Your Money
Make It Happen
My Kind of Retirement
Resources
Valerie and Eric Bressman have been retirement veterans
since their 30s. At ages 47 and 51, they’ve already enjoyed four extended breaks
from their jobs in Portland, Ore. Valerie, a manager of human resources
communications, and Eric, an architect, saved enough to travel the world for a
year in 2005. They’ve also spent extended periods of time in the South Pacific,
the Greek Isles and Europe during the past 16 years. The Bressman’s
“mini-retirement” trips were born out of their values and priorities. Traveling,
they say, puts their lives into perspective and helps them focus more on what’s
important in life. “Neither one of us feels defined by our jobs or careers,”
explains Valerie. “We’re defined by who we are and by our experiences.” For
the Bressmans and an increasing number of Americans, retirement no longer means
working yourself into the ground until you stop completely and embrace a
life of leisure. Instead, with some thought and planning, retirement can be
whatever you want it to be. “Most people’s vision of retirement is
culturally imposed, and they have a sense that they should stop working and
travel or play golf,” says Brent Kessel, author of It’s Not About the Money:
Unlock Your Money Type to Achieve Spiritual and Financial Abundance (HarperOne,
2008) and president of the wealth management firm Abacus Wealth Partners. “But
for most people who have been making a contribution [during their working
lives], what’s most fulfilling is continuing to make a contribution of some
kind.” “People want to be engaged,” agrees Richard Leider, coauthor of
Something to Live for: Finding Your Way in the Second Half of Life
(Berrett-Koehler, 2008) and founder of The Inventure Group, a Minneapolis-based
consulting and coaching firm. “They don’t want to check out of the universe;
they want to stay in it.” Retirees like these want more out of the second
(or middle) half of life, says Leider, so they are crafting their lives around
that goal. Some are going back to school or volunteering in their communities;
others are digging further into their life’s work as they write new chapters in
their lives. And although there’s no set formula for a satisfying retirement,
there are steps you can take at every stage of life to help make your retirement
dreams a reality.
Explore Your Options (Back to Top)
Old notions of retirement are ripe for, well,
retiring. Many people no longer find the idea of endless days on a Florida
golf course particularly appealing (or financially feasible, for that matter).
In fact, studies show that many people today find the idea of a
do-nothing retirement boring, says David Corbett, coauthor of Portfolio Life:
The New Path to Work, Purpose and Passion After 50 (Jossey-Bass, 2006) and
founder of New Directions, a career transition service in
Boston. Instead, people are beginning to regard their
second-half-of-life options with an open mind — as a time to enjoy some
well-deserved leisure, certainly, but also as a time to live out long-held
dreams and to work toward new goals. In short, people are looking for both
pleasure and meaning. They want to continue to pursue the skills and passions
they enjoy, while weeding out the stresses and obligations they don’t. Many
are also facing the realities of smaller-than-anticipated retirement funds or
limited savings and are looking for financially viable options (such as career
downshifting, part-time work, self-employment or serial mini-breaks) to the
hard-stop retirements that many of our parents and grandparents took for
granted. As a result, a growing number of individuals are becoming more
selective, more proactive and more creative about how they go about tailoring
their retirements to their personal tastes — and financial realities.
Develop Your Dream (Back to Top)
So how does one go about reinventing one’s own
retirement? Most experts recommend kick-starting the process with some good
old-fashioned self-reflection (don’t worry, we’ll get into the money stuff in a
moment). Leider, who also coauthored Claiming Your Place at the Fire: Living the
Second Half of Your Life on Purpose (Berrett-Koehler, 2004), proposes an “annual
purpose checkup” in which you ask yourself how much you agree with the following
statements: - I work at what I love to do.
- My daily choices are
driven by a strong sense of purpose.
- There’s a clear alignment between my
priorities and how I spend my time.
- I invest in making a difference to
others in the world.
- I know what I want to be remembered for.
For
those statements that already ring true to you, ask yourself how you might
sustain that sense of satisfaction (and the elements that create it) even as you
transition away from your current career. For those statements that are not
yet a true “yes” for you, evaluate what sorts of changes you can make to turn
them into yesses, particularly as you go about reinventing or phasing out
certain elements of your work life. Creating a unique, meaningful
retirement, says Leider, is first and foremost about leveraging “this formula of
gifts, passions and values.” Next step: Use the information that surfaces in
your annual purpose checkup to get clear about how you’d most like to spend your
retirement time. In the book What Color Is Your Parachute? For Retirement:
Planning Now for the Life You Want (Ten Speed, 2007), Richard N. Bolles and John
E. Nelson suggest that you ask yourself the following questions: - What do
you really want to learn about, or how have you dreamed of developing yourself?
- If you were determined to work at something that you absolutely love,
what might that be?
- What have you wanted to do, just for the sheer
pleasure of it?
Corbett suggests cultivating a life portfolio of five or six
part-time activities you enjoy enough to want to invest yourself in — regardless
of whether you’re paid to do them. These could be things like travel, hobbies,
time with loved ones, involvement with good causes or deepening your
spirituality. “When you’re young,” says Corbett, “you may not be thinking
about retirement, but you should be thinking about your life portfolio all
through your life. Have a plan that’s built around your values. Even if it sits
on the back burner for years, have something that’s always being nurtured.”
Manage Your Money (Back to Top)
Dreams notwithstanding, you also need enough money to
achieve whatever your retirement goals turn out to be, and that takes planning.
It’s easiest, of course, if you begin saving early and wisely, but even that may
not be enough. In a world where it’s possible to live past 100, says
Kessel, “you have to be able to afford a 40-year retirement, and very few people
can do that without any type of income. So continuing to do some kind of work
that you love — and that you can see doing into your 60s, 70s and 80s — is the
surest retirement strategy.” The Bressmans, who are taking retirement in
several pieces, plan and save diligently for each adventure and are prepared
to work past traditional retirement age. Far in advance of a given trip, they
sit down and figure out how much money it will require and begin to save a
certain amount each month. They direct tax returns, bonuses and reimbursable
expenses at work into their travel savings account. Their approach has
some trade-offs — they know they may have to delay retirement for a few years.
Still, they say that what they’ve gained in perspective and experience
outweighs everything. Says Valerie Bressman, “We have no sense of regret
whatsoever.” Richard Broussard, a 70-year-old in Hartford, Vt., is doing —
and financing — his retirement differently. For him, a meaningful retirement is
all about staying active and giving back. To that end, he rides his bicycle
daily and gives back through involvement at his church, volunteering for the
Vermont Department of Corrections and helping with the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina. He also travels, visiting far-flung locales like Sweden, Iran and
Syria. Broussard makes this scenario work financially by continuing to work
part-time as a bus and limo driver, which supplements his retirement income from
Social Security and payouts from retirement plans with past employers. For
Broussard, the key to saving money for trips is consciously living within his
means, which is easier because he paid off his mortgage before retiring and
avoided debt back when he was working full-time. His part-time work now
supplements his finances and leaves other investment reserves untouched.
Other alternative retirement strategies include shifting away from full-time
employment to high-end consulting, starting an entrepreneurial business
connected with a passion or hobby, sharing a home and other living expenses with
a friend to help retirement funds go further, or choosing another creative
career reinvention that you love so much you never want to retire at all.
Make It Happen (Back to Top)
Everyone’s goals and financial situations are different, so
consult a financial planner and educate yourself about the practical saving and
debt-management strategies that will best underwrite your retirement plan. Also
consider acquiring good healthcare and long-term disability coverage that will
support you in the event of an unforeseen crisis (see Resources below). The
main things you need to begin planning are a clear sense of your gifts, values
and priorities; a dollop of imagination; and the initiative to begin sketching
and saving for your plan, starting now. Share your retirement vision with your
life partner and look for opportunities to support each other’s dreams. Planning
ahead will give you the freedom to create a retirement that’s right for you. Sarah Moran is Minneapolis-based health writer.
My Kind of Retirement (Back to Top)
Not interested in the rocking-chair version of retirement? Here are some
convention-bucking alternatives: The Several-Sabbaticals Retirement. Instead
of working ceaselessly and then stopping permanently, consider working and
saving for several years, then taking a year off to travel or write a book.
Return to work for a few more years. Then pursue another passion for a
while. And so on. Consult a financial adviser, as well as a career coach, about
the best way to prepare for this work-play rhythm, and then schedule your first
sabbatical! (See “On Sabbatical” in the March 2007 archives.) The Giving-Back Retirement. After a lifetime of
developing your career skills, you are uniquely qualified to give back to the
community and the world. Consider mentoring, volunteering and community work,
perhaps with some paid consulting or part-time work on the side. The
Digging-in-Deeper Retirement. You’ve always loved your work as a therapist, so
instead of retiring completely, you move your practice to part-time and
go back to school for a higher degree, or you enroll in a specialized
program to enrich your knowledge, perspective and skills. The Career-Change
Retirement. Been an accountant all your life but always wanted to teach math —
or open a natural-foods cafe, or run a shoe store, or author a book? Make
retirement your chance to fulfill that dream or to discover a new one.
Resources (Back to Top)
Something to Live for: Finding Your Way in the Second Half of Life by
Richard Leider (Berrett-Koehler, 2008) The New Retirement: The Ultimate Guide
to the Rest of Your Life by Jan Cullinane and Cathy Fitzgerald (Rodale, 2004)
What Color Is Your Parachute? For Retirement: Planning Now for the Life You
Want by Richard N. Bolles and John E. Nelson (Ten Speed, 2007) WEB www.wesabe.com — Wesabe is a nonprofit online
financial-advice community that lets users upload their financial information,
get advice from other users in similar situations and with similar goals, and
share what they are learning. www.fool.com/retirement.htm —
Started by two brothers as a financial-advice newsletter in 1993, The Motley
Fool is a clearinghouse of sound fiscal guidance. Find retirement tips on their
Web site, including everything from where to invest your money to how to avoid
common retirement-plan pitfalls.
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