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๐‘บ๐’Š๐’„ ๐‘ป๐’“๐’‚๐’๐’”๐’Š๐’• ๐‘ฎ๐’๐’๐’“๐’Š๐’‚

Itโ€™s been said that life is change. Iโ€™m one of those people who prefer to see changes coming from way, way down the track. No, indeed; I like my planning time. Iโ€™m not a fan of change that shows up on the doorstep, unannounced, suitcase in hand. (Boss in his office: โ€œCome on in and close the door.โ€ As a phrase conducive to a panic attack, thatโ€™s right up there in ascending order with โ€œThereโ€™s been a downturn in businessโ€ and โ€œWe have to let you go.โ€) So, yeah, in reality change-planning time is mostly a fantasy. Even when a particular change is a long way off, itโ€™s a surprise to me when it finally shows up, because now I have to deal with details. Take retirement, for example; thatโ€™s a huge change. Iโ€™ve known about retirement in principle since my very first job, of course, in a โ€œthat doesnโ€™t apply to me nowโ€ kind of way. I didnโ€™t contribute to a retirement plan for many years, because I needed that money to stay alive until I did retire, which would be at a time so far in the future I couldnโ€™t envision what it would look like. Now itโ€™s a couple hundred years later and Iโ€™m staring retirement hard in the face, and itโ€™s not blinking. Surprise!

I recently had to pin down a retirement date, which had the crazy effect of Making It Real. Iโ€™ve had my current corporate job for over twenty years, and you wouldnโ€™t believe the logistics that go into Real Retirement Planning. One of the lesser items is that the computer Iโ€™m glued to day after day is a corporate asset that doesnโ€™t belong to me, so I have to get a replacement. Okay, not that big a deal, really, but Iโ€™ll also have to switch from the corporate help desk to Geek Squad. I like Geek Squad, but they arenโ€™t free. Speaking of free: healthcare plan costs take a critically sharp upturn at retirement. Old people need care! We tend to have creaky joints and foggy eyesight. My corporate healthcare plan is pretty good and I donโ€™t have to pay for the plan itself. When Iโ€™m on my own healthcare dime, though, I may have to switch out cable/wifi payments for healthcare payments; those incremental channel subscriptions add up after a while. Thereโ€™s a serious planning item right there.

What does my After Retirement Life look like? Iโ€™ll be able to devote significantly more time to writing, which is what Iโ€™ve wanted to do since I was a kid. Also โ€“ no more corporate work, for the win! I may still wake up at oโ€™dark-thirty, but I donโ€™t have to set the alarm. I may have publishing deadlines and other time commitments to meet, but I wonโ€™t have corporate deadlines that might have dire consequences all around if not met. All in all, the corporate v. retirement trade-offs arenโ€™t looking so bad.

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