Retirement: 50 Days In

Just start walking.


Fifty days into retirement, the biggest thing I’m noticing is all the traffic in my mind about what I should be doing. It’s definitely uncharted territory. Even though I have my finances somewhat in order and hobbies lined up, there’s still this underlying sense that I’m drifting sideways instead of moving forward, and that I’m not doing it the “right” way—or that there even is a right way—when I know this is just a process.

Sundays are interesting. There’s still that work mindset that tries to creep in—the old feeling that Monday is coming and I need to be ready for it. I actually have to stop myself and say, “Hey, dude, I don’t work anymore.” That part is slowly fading.

What I didn’t expect were some of the identity emotions that come with no longer being a programmer analyst. For years, professionally, that’s what I did. I solved problems, worked on a team, and updated the UCHealth app. I was a developer. Now it brings up the question: what is my craft now? I’ve got a good twenty-plus years in this encore phase, and right now I’m clueless what it’s going to look like—but I have faith it will get clearer as I go, and I’ll slowly get my feet underneath me.

Another thing I’m noticing is just the sheer number of hours in a day. To be honest, it’s a little overwhelming, even with hobbies and my daily list of activities. That’s a lot of time I’m not accustomed to. Some days, it feels like the hours stretch endlessly. It’s a strange mix of freedom and responsibility—freedom to explore, but responsibility to make the time meaningful. Learning to pace myself and not feel guilty for simply being is proving to be its own practice. And what the hell is this “just being” all about anyway? It’s a concept I’ve heard a lot, but actually sitting with it—without doing, planning, or checking something off—is proving a lot harder than I thought.

My typical day right now is working on my mind, body, and soul. For my mind, I’m learning and practicing German and continue to read a lot. For my body, I’m doing cardio and weights. And for my soul—still figuring that part out—but it shows up in small ways, like walks with Alice and trying to connect with the universe a bit more.

Then there’s the other side of it: what I think I should be doing. There are a lot of things around the house and outside the house that I haven’t started. Things I tell myself I should be working on, but I’m not.

I think I’m on the right path. Obviously—how could I not be on the right path. People talk about having your finances, hobbies, and connections in order before you retire, and that all matters. But beyond that, it’s a very personal experience. Only you can walk that part, and only you can really speak to it.

For now, I’m just navigating it one step at a time—learning to quiet my mind, ease up on myself, and give myself a little grace.

Don’t get me wrong—I’m definitely happy to be in this new phase of my life. But yeah… it’s definitely a trip!

Jocko: “You have to start waking … the ‘thing’ is not going to come to you.”

https://youtu.be/z0CCtUpDomo?si=9_7NI600Jihoy-e4

-Dwight

11 responses to “Retirement: 50 Days In”

  1. Loved the link, Dwight! And your post… I found it took a couple of years to get really comfortable with moving beyond that “work Identity”. But you know, I found it so worth it to just sometimes not walk! Just being- not moving- just watching the beauty and time pass while you just “be”. Being or feeling lost in the woods w/o having our perceived past identity to fall back on or distract us is challenging but for me, a vital and most important lesson. I found I was so much more than I thought I was…. and a whole lot less than I thought I was……. just one soul among the many. Hope this doesn’t sound like advice giving- this post just brought me back to my early days of freedom.🤓

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    1. I can definitely see that perspective too, Elizabeth. It can be uncomfortable being lost or heard it called the messy middle … but just being there allows new truths to appear. Thanks so much!🤗

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  2. My dad was no ready to retire or giving up his ide tity of a lifetime I suppose and decide to stay on for an other year but ended up regretting it. It was that I be year too many. Retired fir few good years now and really enjoying it. I never seen it so serene and he loved his job. I suppose it is a big adjustment that doesn’t happen overnight. My mom was no.better, she struggled with it too and ended up to be busier than before, we alluohes that she use more petrol now than when she was working and commuting every day. One thing she loved from.day one though : not rushing in the morning. She could kill you fir suggest I gbyer to get ready before 10 now😂

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    1. That’s hilarious—I’ve noticed the same thing. I’m actually using more gas now, driving to hikes instead of just walking Alice around the neighborhood. I’m trying different things, feeling my way through this whole retirement phase. It’ll come together.😊

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      1. It will and you ll love it🥰

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  3. I’m still in the throes of work but I can relate to feeling “what I think I should be doing.” I know that I’m going to need to overcome that feeling. I feel it now even thinking about retirement. Ha ha, but I love that it sounds like you’re getting better with it each day! It shows me that there’s hope! Ha ha.

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    1. Definitely hope, Brian! I started some new adventures that I’ll post about soon. 😊❤️

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  4. I retired several years ago. My husband retired last September. It’s a work in progress.

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    1. Definitely discovering that – I’m up for the challenge😊

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  5. You are doing great, Dwight. I can definitely relate to the identity part! ☺️

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    1. Thank you, Anne❤️

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