"What Will You Do When You Retire?"
One of the questions I constantly received from many
individuals when I announced my retirement was-what are you
going to do?
This, no doubt, is one of the key considerations before
anyone decides to take the plunge. Educator Barbara M. Walker has put together a neat slim
guidebook entitled CREATE YOUR RETIREMENT that provides the
reader with 55 valuable ways to reply to the question-what
you are going to do in your retirement? Walker divides her advice into 5 principal sections
concentrating on such topics as: what are your skills,
learning how to use the Internet and its many
possibilities, the fun aspect of retirement, and giving
something back to society.
Each section contains various exercises that analyse what
you have to offer and how to prepare yourself for the next
phase of your life. The transferring of skills is probably one of the most
important aspects of realizing a satisfying retirement. As
Walker points out, you can create new roles for yourself.
It is also important to view retirement as a career change.
Remember, you are not retiring from life, but rather from
your profession or employment. Walker maintains it is essential to look at the big picture
and don't be afraid to step out of your familiar box.
Analyse what you want and go for it. Perhaps, it is some
vocation you always wanted to pursue, but for some reason
never followed up. A considerable part of the book is devoted to exploring the
Internet and how to best gain maximum benefit.
The possibilities of the Internet are endless in planning
your retirement and forging new relationships. All you have
to do is to learn how to surf the net and think of it as
one big huge worldwide library containing unbelievable
resources. Other sections explore how you can give something back to
society such as volunteering, or even showing someone a
skill you may have acquired such as sewing, baking, etc.
There is also reference to how to psychologically set
yourself in the right frame of mind and to continually
analyse yourself in order to meet your goals and objectives. As the author mentions in her preface, "retirement is a
time of living and doing exciting things; it is the time of
loving and helping others, and it is about finding
the 'real you' within and manifesting that in all its
glory!" Therein lies the fundamental objective of the book
that I am sure will prove to be of great interest to the
soon-to-be-retired as well as the retired.
Reviewed by Norman Goldman
Courtesy Bookpleasures
Posted January 4, 2003
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