I should rate my retirement a 10, but I am such a whiner I'm knocking it down to a 9 due to my body getting old too fast. I'm only 66 (will be 67 in less than a month) and retired one year and 4 days ago, but since I retired it seems like every time I do anything my body breaks down. I love to walk but from walking too much now I've got a splint pad to wear on my foot, special shoes, stretchy ankle supports, stretchy knee supports, and I'm having some foot pains that will probably need to be addressed medically eventually. And last night I ordered some walking sticks/trekking poles.
I can't do the Tai Chi class because having done it one time my shoulders (ligaments or tendons in them I think) developed burning pain and its been 3 or 4 weeks and one still isn't completely back to normal.
I had to start bone medicine this year because that dexascan they do when a person starts Medicare showed some vertabrae are so decalcified they are at high risk of fracture. Aaaghhhh, it's like retire and immediately become decrepit! I expected to have more vitality and physical ability for the early years of retirement. My 'Go-Go' years look to be more like 'Go-oops-ouch' years.
At most I can do one thing in a day, there is no energy for doing a this and a that, I'll do a this and then its time to go home and collapse.
But otherwise my retirement is a thrilling unexpected 9. My original plan had been bare-subsistence finances and rattling around alone in my endless-maintenance-issues but otherwise paid off house in Nebraska, but thanks to the awesome real estate bubble last spring I've been able to escape Nebraska, and relocate to an affordable smaller apartment in an amazing retirement community with access to an exciting metropolitan area. And I'm so happy with my building, it is such a nice feel to go through the lobby and see a bunch of 80/90-somethings sitting together on the beautiful chairs in the pretty mirrored sitting areas having some social time (though for myself I hope to be frisky enough to go to the clubhouses and beyond for the next several years).
I can't do the Tai Chi class because having done it one time my shoulders (ligaments or tendons in them I think) developed burning pain and its been 3 or 4 weeks and one still isn't completely back to normal.
I had to start bone medicine this year because that dexascan they do when a person starts Medicare showed some vertabrae are so decalcified they are at high risk of fracture. Aaaghhhh, it's like retire and immediately become decrepit! I expected to have more vitality and physical ability for the early years of retirement. My 'Go-Go' years look to be more like 'Go-oops-ouch' years.
At most I can do one thing in a day, there is no energy for doing a this and a that, I'll do a this and then its time to go home and collapse.
But otherwise my retirement is a thrilling unexpected 9. My original plan had been bare-subsistence finances and rattling around alone in my endless-maintenance-issues but otherwise paid off house in Nebraska, but thanks to the awesome real estate bubble last spring I've been able to escape Nebraska, and relocate to an affordable smaller apartment in an amazing retirement community with access to an exciting metropolitan area. And I'm so happy with my building, it is such a nice feel to go through the lobby and see a bunch of 80/90-somethings sitting together on the beautiful chairs in the pretty mirrored sitting areas having some social time (though for myself I hope to be frisky enough to go to the clubhouses and beyond for the next several years).