How to Create a Happy Retirement by Tuning Out Well-Meaning Advice
Up to this point in our lives, we've lived pretty
externally. We've gone for some or all of the following: education,
career, money, marriage, kids, house, new careers, bigger houses, etc.
And, that's okay. But, if you've been making transition decisions all
along based on externals (should's, have-to's, taking the path of least
resistance, and living up to other's expectations), then you're headed
in the wrong direction for this next transition.
As you move forward this time, you have a choice: business as usual
(with the same less than thrilling result), or do it differently and end
up with what you really want in your life. To do it differently you'll
want to take an internal journey. You'll tune in and discover who you
are and what would bring the most meaning to your life. And ask
yourself, what if this time:
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You went for what YOU want, desire, yearn for,
and what would fulfill you and bring you the most joy?
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You got to bring all of you ? not just the most
"appropriate" parts -- to what's next?
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You stopped waiting to weigh less or know more
or ________ (you fill in the blank) to start living your life?
To truly revolutionize retirement, you'll have to
tune out the advice that's screaming at you from these five sources:
1. Conventional Wisdom. Traditional conventional wisdom tells
us that it's time to rest and play, take it easy, and ride off into the
sunset. It insists that if we just have enough money, retirement will
take care of itself. It whispers that this is the beginning of the
end. Well, personally, I'm not ready to cash it in just yet, thank you
very much. And, I'll bet, you aren't either. So ignore the old
Conventional Wisdom, and model a whole new way of thinking.
2. Financial Advisors. Let me be perfectly upfront. I have
nothing against financial advisors. My experience, though, is that many
of them are listening to the old Conventional Wisdom on money. They
don't realize that those tired old formulas (you know, the ones that
tell you that you'll need 80% of your current income to maintain your
current lifestyle) are, well, tired and old and no longer fit many of
us. They don't see that we're earning longer, creating exciting new
careers (and revenue streams), and most importantly, figuring out how we
want to live and THEN figuring out how much money we'll need.
3. Listening to Friends. Friends mean well, but they often
project their fears and limiting beliefs onto us and can bring us
crashing down if we let them. Take my client, Jane, who at 61 was
"downsized" by her company, but in no way was she ready to retire. So,
she took the bold step of following her dream of becoming a life coach.
Since confidence builds more confidence, it wasn't long before she
decided to take an even bigger leap and moved to Asheville, North
Carolina -- another lifelong dream.
Interesting that just as Jane was beginning to
soar, some of her friends tried to shoot her down. Her friends where
she was living didn't want to lose her, and her friends where she grew
up wanted her to come "home". Jane knew instinctively that staying would
have kept her stuck, and going home, for her, would have been moving
backwards. Jane listened to her heart, and now she's living her
dreams. The best part? She's combined her coaching and everything she
learned from her big move into a fabulous new business called Relocating
Single.
www.RelocatingSingle.com.
4. Advice from Families. Families also mean well, but don't
really know what's best for us. Take Rachel, a widow, who is newly
retired and selling her house. Her grown kids were pushing hard for her
to move into a retirement community, but at 65 it just didn't feel right
to Rachel. Instead, she followed her heart and embarked on her lifelong
dream of traveling in India and told the kids she'd "think about" the
retirement community when she returned.
But, high in the hills above Rishikesh, Rachel
stumbled into a beautiful oasis called Ramana's Garden, home to 60
orphans. She fell in love with Ramana's Garden. She fell in love with
the kids. She signed on for a two-year volunteer stint. Three months
later, enter Jan, a retired IBM executive from the Netherlands. He fell
in love with Ramana's Garden. He fell in love with the kids. He fell
in love with Rachel, and signed on for two years. Six months later they
were married. Sigh.
5. Spouse/Significant Other. Here's what I see over and over
again at my Boot Camps with many of the women who come with their
partners. Instead of playing 100% for themselves, they spend the
weekend focused on and worrying about their other half, waiting for them
to figure out what they want and then sort of following along. When I
work with couples, I insist on working first with each partner
individually to discover what they really want, then bring them together
to see where the touch points are and help them negotiate the rest.
The best way to revolutionize retirement is to commit to doing this
transition differently than any that have come before. Start by tuning
in to your heart, and tuning out the rest.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Certified Retirement
Coach Lin Schreiber, author of the popular The ABC's of Revolutionizing
Retirement, helps self-reliant women reinvent themselves in the next
stage of life, formerly known as "retirement." To claim your copy of her
free popular Revolutionize Retirement Starter Kit, visit her site at
http://www.RevolutionizeRetirement.com.
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