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Retirement: Opportunity for Growth or Regression?

Submitted by Virginia Watts on Mon, 11/14/2011 - 13:17

I have been retired for four years, one month, two weeks, and three days.  And I am still trying to discover who I am or what I can be outside of who I was in the workplace.  It's shocking to me how much of my "self" was defined and reinforced by what I did during those forty years.  

Nothing seems to have prepared me for the freedom to do exactly what I want to do with my time.  I'm slow to learn new ways of being, that's obvious.  And it isn't that I don't enjoy the luxury of sleeping in of a morning, or lingering over the paper, or reading a novel in the middle of the day.  But I do miss the daily routine, the conversation with co-workers, the working lunches...and the feedback and reinforcement (positive or negative!) that what I am doing makes a difference.

My family are very supportive and appreciative of what I do with and for them -- it isn't that.  And I do enjoy having time to iron pillowcases and tablecloths, to cook meals, work in the garden, and create the home I've always wanted without giving any of these tasks short-shrift because of the press of "real" work.

So I struggle now to discover the me in retirement.  And it is not an easy journey, in spite of the fact that I have more time than ever before to pursue this "me."  I am realizing how much has depended on the outside world, the mirrors that others held up that help reveal the facets of self that might otherwise go unrecognized.  It is a self-absorbed journey, I agree, but no more so than it has been all along.  I see that now. 

Perhaps it is what we humans are always about.  Looking for affirmation, response, definition when we can't find the words -- from others.  Now I am the wife, the mother, the grandmother, the mother-in-law, the volunteer -- and I have to face the challenge of sometimes being lonely, sometimes feeling disconnected, and sometimes being in absolute free-fall. 

I never expected this.  Nothing has prepared me for it.  But I refuse to apologize for finding this particular journey so personally and so particularly challenging.  I have always loved a challenge.  And that's not different.  I'll hang on to that.