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You know that feeling when you watch someone walk straight into a glass door and think “I’d never do that,” then five minutes later you’re picking glass out of your hair? That’s basically what happened with my retirement, except instead of a glass door, it was every single mistake I watched my buddies make.
Three of my closest friends retired before me. I had front row seats to their struggles, their regrets, their “wish I’d done this differently” conversations over breakfast at the diner. I took mental notes. Made plans. Told myself I’d be smarter.
Then I retired and proceeded to face-plant into every single thing I swore I’d avoid.
The money mistake that everyone makes
My friend Joe retired at 62. Six months later, he’s sitting across from me at the diner looking like he’d seen a ghost. Turns out he’d been spending like he was still pulling in a paycheck, not realizing how fast his savings were draining.
I watched him scramble to adjust, cutting back on everything, stressing about every dollar. I remember thinking, “That won’t be me. I’ll have a budget. I’ll track everything.”
Fast forward to my own retirement. First month, I’m feeling flush. Got my retirement savings, got my plan. By month three, I’m looking at my bank statement wondering where the hell all the money went. New tools I didn’t need. Trips to the hardware store out of habit. Buying rounds at the bar because I felt guilty not contributing like I used to.
The thing nobody tells you is that spending money when you’re retired feels different. When you’re working, you’re earning it back. When you’re retired, every dollar that goes out is one less dollar you’ve got for the rest of your life. That messes with your head in ways you don’t expect.
I spent six months doing exactly what Joe did—panicking, overcorrecting, making myself miserable counting pennies. Should have just listened when he told me to get a handle on it before I retired, not after.
Thinking your wife wants you home all day
My buddy Mike retired and turned into his wife’s shadow. Followed her to the grocery store. Sat in the kitchen while she had coffee with her friends. Reorganized her craft room “to help.”
Three months in, she threatened to go back to work just to get some space.
I laughed at that story for years. Told my wife Donna about it. We both agreed Mike was being ridiculous.
Then I retired.
First week, I’m following Donna around suggesting better ways to load the dishwasher. Second week, I’m rearranging the garage and asking her opinion every five minutes. By the third week, she’s looking at me the way you look at a fly that won’t stop buzzing around your head.
She finally sat me down and said, “I love you, but I had a life before you retired, and I still need that life.”
That stung, but she was right. I’d spent forty years out of the house ten hours a day. She’d built routines, friendships, activities that didn’t include me hovering around asking what’s for lunch at 10:30 in the morning.
We had to figure out how to be together more without being together constantly. Took us six months and more than a few arguments to find that balance.
The identity crisis nobody warns you about
This is the big one. The one I really thought I had figured out.
My friend Charlie retired and went into what I can only describe as a full tailspin. This was a guy who ran a successful plumbing business for thirty years. Within six months of retiring, he’s calling me at weird hours, talking about how he doesn’t know who he is anymore.
I thought he was being dramatic. I mean, you’re the same person, just without a job, right?
Wrong.
When I retired, I lost more than a paycheck. I lost my reason to get up. My excuse to get out of the house. The thing people knew me for. For forty years, I was Tommy the electrician. Then suddenly, I was just… Tommy.
I’d go to the hardware store and the guys would ask what job I was working on. “I’m retired,” I’d say, and watch their eyes glaze over. Nothing to talk about anymore. No shared language.
I’ve been writing about this stuff lately, trying to figure it out. Actually just came across this guide on retirement that really nailed what I was feeling. It’s by Jeanette Brown, who’s a life coach, and she talks about how retirement is actually an identity shift, not just leaving a job. That there’s real grief involved in letting go of who you were, even when you’re ready to retire.
I’ve mentioned her guide in a few recent posts because it keeps hitting on stuff I’m working through. This time, it was the part about identity that got me. She says it’s completely normal to feel lost, that it’s actually where reinvention begins. Would have been nice to know that when I was convinced I was losing my mind six months into retirement.
The guide’s free, by the way. Worth checking out if you’re anywhere near retirement or already in it.
Believing you’ll suddenly become a different person
Here’s the funniest one. All three of my friends had big plans for retirement. Joe was going to become a golfer. Mike was going to travel the world. Charlie was going to learn Spanish and finally read all those books he’d been collecting.
None of it happened.
Joe played golf twice, hated it. Mike took one trip, complained about airports the entire time, never left the state again. Charlie’s Spanish books are still sitting on his shelf, unopened.
Me? I was going to become a fisherman. Bought all the gear. The expensive rods, the tackle box, the whole deal. Been fishing exactly three times in two years. Turns out I don’t actually like sitting still that long.
We all thought retirement would magically transform us into these completely different people with completely different interests. Like we’d wake up on day one of retirement and suddenly love activities we’d never shown any interest in before.
What actually happened? We stayed exactly who we were, just with more time to fill.
Before I go
Look, I’m not saying retirement is bad. It’s not. I’m grateful every day that I don’t have to crawl through attics in July anymore. But it’s harder than anyone tells you, and in ways you don’t expect.
The thing is, you can watch other people make mistakes all day long. You can take notes, make plans, swear you’ll do it differently. But when it’s your turn, you’re probably going to stumble through the same stuff anyway.
Maybe that’s just how life works. Maybe we all need to make our own mistakes to really learn the lessons.
Or maybe I’m just stubborn. My wife would probably vote for that one.
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