A few days back, I found myself standing in my garage, staring at a wall of tools I haven’t touched in two years. Wire strippers, voltage testers—all organized exactly how I left them the day I retired. My wife Donna came out to tell me dinner was ready, found me just standing there, and asked what I was doing. “I don’t know,” I told her. And I meant it.
That’s the thing about getting older that nobody prepares you for. You spend decades building a life, chasing goals, working toward some version of yourself you’ve got in your head. Then one day you wake up in your sixties and realize that version isn’t coming. The promotion you thought you’d get, the relationship you thought would heal, the person you thought you’d become—somewhere along the way, those possibilities closed up shop and you didn’t even notice.
I spent forty years as an electrician, running my own business for twenty-two of them. Every morning, I knew exactly who I was: the guy with the van, the toolbelt, the solutions to people’s problems. I was building something. Working toward something. The business would grow, I’d hire more guys, maybe expand to commercial work. My son Kevin would join the company. We’d work side by side, and I’d teach him everything I knew.
None of that happened.
Here’s what I’m learning: there’s a grief that comes with aging that has nothing to do with death. It’s the grief of the life you thought you’d have. The marriage you imagined versus the one you got. The kids you planned for versus the ones actually sitting at your table. The career you mapped out versus the one that actually paid your bills.
I watch my friends navigate this differently. Some double down, still chasing that imagined life at sixty-five like they’re thirty. They’re getting divorced, buying motorcycles, starting new businesses they don’t need. They’re running from something, and what they’re running from is the life they actually built.
Others just go numb. They retire, sit in their recliners, and wait. For what? They don’t even know. They’re stuck in some kind of purgatory between the life they had and whatever comes next, unable to move forward because they can’t let go of what they thought they’d have by now.
I get it. I spent the first year of retirement pretending I was just taking a break. Kept my phone number on the van. Kept telling people I was “staying busy” when they asked how retirement was treating me. The truth was, I was lost. The man I’d been for forty years was gone, and I didn’t know who was supposed to take his place.
The turning point came when my son called me one night, about six months ago. He wanted to talk. Not about money, not about a place to stay, just to talk. We sat on my back deck until two in the morning, and he said something that stuck with me. “Dad,” he said, “I spent so many years trying to be the person I thought you wanted me to be that I never figured out who I actually was.”
I wanted to tell him he was wrong, that I just wanted him to be happy. But sitting there in the dark, I realized he’d just described my entire life.
My father was a pipefitter who believed men worked with their hands and didn’t complain. So that’s what I became. He died without ever saying he loved me, and I spent decades thinking that was normal, that feelings were something women dealt with while men dealt with everything else. It took me until my fifties to tell my own sons I loved them without choking on the words.
The life I thought I’d have was built on a foundation of other people’s expectations. My father’s idea of what a man should be. My generation’s definition of success. My own ego’s need to be needed. And now, at sixty-six, I’m finally asking: What do I actually want? Who am I when nobody’s watching?
The answer isn’t what I expected. I’m a guy who likes writing in a journal. Who tears up at my grandson’s Little League games. Who can admit that missing Danny’s high school graduation rehearsal for an emergency call-out still haunts me, not because of the call, but because I chose work over him without even thinking about it. I’m someone who’s learning that strength isn’t about never showing weakness—it’s about being honest about who you are, even when that person isn’t who you planned to be.
Donna and I talk more now than we have in years. Real conversations, not just logistics about bills and schedules. The other day, she reminded me about when we met at that county fair when we were twenty, how she beat me at the ring toss and I kept coming back to try again. “You never could accept losing,” she said, but she was smiling. “Maybe that’s not such a bad thing to learn now.”
She’s right. The secret to happiness in your sixties isn’t about finally achieving the life you planned. It’s about grieving that life—really grieving it, letting yourself feel the loss of all those unopened doors—and then turning around to see what you’ve actually built. It might not be what you expected. It probably isn’t. But it’s real, and it’s yours, and there’s something to be said for that.
Standing in that garage last week, surrounded by tools I’ll probably never use again, I realized something. I’m not the guy with the van anymore. I’m not building toward some future version of myself. I’m just here, now, with the life I actually built instead of the one I planned. And maybe that’s enough. Maybe it was always supposed to be enough. We just couldn’t see it until now, when the fog of ambition finally clears and we can look around at what we’ve got. It’s not perfect. It never was going to be. But it’s ours.














