For years I’ve talked about all the things I’d do in “my next life” . . . when I retired. Well, finally the day has come, and I wonder if I’ll do all the things I’ve dreamed, threatened, planned about doing.
1. I’ll sleep in until noon. That’s not something I have done in the month I’ve been retired, nor do I expect to do that. Most days I wake up at the same time as usual—between 5:30 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. Only on Saturday morning do I sleep in until 8:00 a.m.
2. We will travel and go all the places we’ve wanted to go and not had the time. Ha! Ha! Ha! Although we do have two “weekend” trips planned, to Ed’s 50th year class reunion in Burley Idaho and to his flight school reunion in Branson, Missouri, travel seems as distant as when we worked. Maybe after things slow down we’ll go on trips more often but now we are too busy with ordinary family and home things, and it seems so much more expensive to travel than when we worked.
3. I will get to all those home projects I’ve put off all these years. That is the biggest joke of all! I have tried to get a little work done on them every day (okay every week), but the pile keeps growing instead of going down. Maybe if I had 48 hours a day, didn’t need sleep and had the energy of a two-year-old, I could get the projects caught up, but I doubt it. I’ll keep working on the projects, but I think it is impossible to get caught up, even in “my next life,” which now will be the afterlife. Can spirits come back and organize their sewing room? Sort their photo albums? Clean up the basement? I sure hope so, or my kids will be angry that I never got these things done and left it for them!
4. I will exercise every morning at 7:00 a.m. How I could do this and still sleep in until noon, I’ll never know, but somehow I expected to get up and go exercise with the neighbor ladies who meet each morning at 7:00 a.m. for aerobics and then yoga. Although I am awake and busy, I can think of every excuse in the world NOT to join them. Even if I planned my own exercise routine, or walked, or did any type of exercise it would be good, but I still procrastinate. I didn’t really gain weight until after I was 50 years old, and I remember rationalizing that if I was skinny for the first 50 years of my life, I’d be resurrected skinny even if I was overweight the last part since it wouldn’t be 50 years (I don’t intend to live to be 100 years).
5. I will work in the garden for an hour in the early morning. I will walk in the garden in the early morning and look at all the work that needs to be done, maybe. But weed? In my dreams!
6. I will spend more quality time with my grandchildren doing fun things. Okay, that was a good idea, but it just hasn’t worked out too well. I’m still working on it. Give me time.
I give up! I don’t want to keep listing all the things I was going to do, in my retirement. I think I’ll go take a nap! That’s something I do now I’m retired that I said I would do!
Beth's Reflections on Retired Life: comments about my adventures after I retired from work.
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Hi Beth! I found your blog while I was looking around on Blogger! It's great to find people you know in unlikely places! But it isn't really unlikely that you would blog. You're a writer! So of course you would have a cute web address to add a random thought to whenever you felt like it! I wanted to tell you that I like your post! It is funny, but it also made me think about the things in my life that I put off until, well, who knows when! I see that retirement has been nice for you, but not the savior you maybe thought it would be for your many tasks and desires. I like to read literature, like your post here, that helps me evaluate my own life and improve it. I feel that your words have done that for me. So, thank you!
ReplyDeleteI'll see you soon! :)
Hey, are you also known as "the new me"? cause there was a comment on my blog from the new me. I assume it was the new beth.
ReplyDeleteLove your new blog.
You have a lot of talent. Thanks for the phone call too.