Butterfly
SF VIP
- Location
- Albuquerque, New Mexico USA
I have been retired for 11 years. I retired mainly because my employer raised the requirements (instead of teaching three courses per semester, I would have had to teach four). It was just too much. I was already working 60 hours a week, and didn't see how I could add to that. I don't have a pension. I have a 401K and it has taken three big hits (9/11, stock market crash, housing crisis), so it is now my smaller monthly check. I am fortunate to have monthly payments from two of my ex-husband's former employers, due to a good lawyer for the divorce settlement agreement. They kicked in a couple of years ago when my ex retired. I had a small business that used to pay about $600 per month, but is down to $150. Every year I cut as many expenses as I can.
The bigger issues for me are what to do with the time I now have, and how to deal with the loss of the job I loved and the personal rewards I received from it. When a working person retires and is no longer defined by how he or she made a living, then how does one define oneself? If I am no longer a teacher, what am I? That is the problem I deal with daily: who am I now, with no spouse, kids moved away long ago, no important job? I recommend that those who would like to retire confront this question and find answers to it before giving up a job.
I deal with the same problem in many ways. I miss what I did -- I don't miss the job I retired from (it was awful, VERY difficult boss, toxic environment). I really liked what I did and the challenges of the work itself. I also enjoyed the comaraderie with other co-workers and my peers at other firms and the feeling of being part of a team.