Five Ways to Avoid Having a Retirement Identity Crisis
A few years before my first "retirement", my
husband and I attended a cocktail party where I became keenly aware of
how attached everyone I met that night was to their work identity. On
the way home, I remember smugly commenting how sad it was that so many
people would be lost without the identity provided by what they did for
a living. So imagine how stunned I was, those few years later, to find
myself completely and totally lost when I left my career as TV and
special events producer. I found I no longer knew who I left my title
behind.
My friend Nancy had "retired" to the country at the age of 45 when her
husband -- twenty years her senior -- retired from his career. She had
what -- at the time -- seemed like terrific advice. "Just tell anyone
who asks that you're temporarily retired," she said with a twinkle.
"First, they'll be terribly jealous, and then, of course, they'll ask
what you used to do. Voila, you have your identity back!"
Now that I'm older (and hopefully wiser) and have survived my first
retirement identity crisis, I now know that clinging to the past is not
the way to successfully make this transition. While it can be scary to
walk away from the identity you carried for so many decades, there are
some excellent ways you can avoid a serious identity crisis:
1. Think of retirement not as an ending, but as your next career
move. Who said retirement has to be a drop-dead point? Stop looking
at this transition as the end of life as you've known it -- the big
black hole into which you are about to freefall. Instead, approach this
next stage of life as if you were planning the next step in your career.
It doesn't matter if you want what's next for you to be a 180 degree
departure from what you've been doing. As you craft your next "move",
you'll be creating a new identity.
2. Start trying on new identities for size before you retire.
Don't wait to begin exploring what's next until the day you walk out the
door of your current work life. Use your time wisely by dipping your
toes into lots of different activities and experiences. The more things
you try, the more easily you'll be able to determine what you really
want to be doing next. Some things will work; some won't. And, it'll all
be perfect, because along the way, you'll be building confidence in your
abilities, and weeding out those things that aren't a good fit for who
you are now.
3. Tell people you're rewiring, not retiring. I recommend Jeri
Sadler's book, Don't Retire, Rewire, to everyone I know,
not only because it's a great book, but because the title is the best
description of what it is we're really doing as we transition into this
next life stage. This is a great time to gain the tools you'll need to
overcome whatever might short-circuit your success.
4. Better yet, let go of caring what other people think, say or do.
Remember, this is your time, and there is no such thing as a permanent
record. What if you finally do what you want to do? What's the harm in
taking all the time you need to discover what it is you want to do, and
exactly who it is you want to be? Isn't it time you let go of worrying
about what other people think, and stopped twisting yourself inside out
to please them? And ask yourself this: is it really other people judging
your decision to retire and take a new life course, or is it just you
judging you? Is the chorus of naysayers in your head so loud that it's
paralyzing you from making the best possible choices about who you want
to be for the rest of your life?
5. Drop the masks and get to know the real you. How much of the
identity you've been carrying around all these years is the real you,
and how much of it has been masking who you are in your soul? How much
of your personality did you leave at home every day? How much were you
able to express the "real" you in your career? This is the grand
opportunity in the transition in to retirement: to finally get to know
your true self, the identity at your core, your essence, and then find
ways to express it fully in the world.
If you look forward to creating a whole new fabulous you in retirement,
you won't have to fear what's next, and you certainly don't have to
worry about losing your identity.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Encore Career Coach
Coach Lin Schreiber, author of the popular ABC's of Revolutionizing
Retirement, helps self-reliant women reinvent themselves in the next
stage of life, formerly known as "retirement," by designing a new encore
life that includes a fulfilling
encore
career. To claim your free Encore Career Starter Kit,
visit her site at =====>
http://www.EncoreCareerStarterKit.com
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