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Retirement

Planning your retirement? Join our Retirement forum for advice and help from other Mumsnetters.

Struggling with what to do now I'm retired!

119 replies

Llaregub · 20/08/2024 14:46

I see that most of the threads here are focussed on finance, so I'm not sure whether this is the best place for this, but here goes. It's long because I wanted to include some detail.

I've worked since I was 12. My parents ran a business and I was expected to work after school and at weekends. I worked during university holidays. For 20 years I had a day job and also did freelance work on the side in order to save for a house deposit and then pay the mortgage. Until early last year, when the organisation I worked for (an arts-based research institute) closed down and we were all retired or made redundant I had worked 44 years straight since graduating. No children, so no maternity breaks etc. I was fortunate because for the last 19 years I'd really enjoyed my work and the people I worked with. So not working is something new to me.

My partner seized the opportunity to retire too (he's 18 months younger than me) and we travelled for six months and then came back to get on with the next stage of our lives. DP has thrown himself into a local charity he's been peripherally involved with for years, taken up rowing and cycling and spends the rest of his time gardening and doing DIY. He's loving it.

I've not found it so easy. I joined a few classes (pottery, art, pilates, the usual suspects) and while I enjoy them and it's nice to chat and meet new people, I haven't gelled in the fairly easy way I've been used to in the past. I no longer seem to fit in anywhere. I got elected onto the local community council, only to find that it was a hotbed of vicious infighting and machismo. When I left after 10 months the clerk to the CC said that in her three years in post I'd been the only reasonable councillor she'd worked with. I CVS volunteer service which places people with skills in groups or charities that need those skills. I was placed in a voluntary sector organisation, working one day a week. The manager who recruited me was seemed enthusiastic. I had the induction and spent a day or two seeing what they did and where I might fit in and be useful. Then he went off sick and that was it: despite calling or emailing the organisation each week or so to remind them I'm here and happy to help, there's been tumbleweed for months.

I'd always thought I'd do an MA in retirement and went to an open day for mature students. It was the opposite of inspiring and instead of signing up I came home disillusioned. The professor I spoke to suggested a PhD but I really don't want to spend three years learning a lot about a very small subject area.

I even enquired at the local bridge club to see if there were any lessons for beginners and was told very snootily that they didn't accept beginners...

In short, I can't seem to find my retirement tribe. I'm too academic for the arty, woo-ish paint and pottery crowd, not tough enough to deal with the rough and tumble of community politics, too committed to freedom of thought and speech to thrive at university and I'm not even wanted to work for free. My confidence and self-esteem is at an all time low. Even my partner has commented that I probably need to go back to work.

Would someone please assure me that I'll find a way through this!

OP posts:
Beetrickspotter · 20/08/2024 19:57

what about more travelling. my retirement plan is periods of staring at the wall/crocheting/gardening/sleeping in late/watching lots of films/reading books/making and eating cakes/walking the dog interspersed with travels when UK is dark and cold

when you retire don't you just enjoy doing what the hell you like, when you like and not being responsible for owt?

Thistooshallpsss · 20/08/2024 20:09

I’m going to add my voice to citizens advice. The training is quite extensive it’s not an easy and there are always rabbit holes of expertise to go down.

Carebearsonmybed · 20/08/2024 20:16

A magistrate.
Other charities
Set up your own charity
Charity shops
Party politics
Strength training
Hillwalking
Collecting
Book clubs
Write your memoir
Write a biography of someone you admire
Do an open uni course.
Volunteer tutors
Photography
Baking
Gardening
Fostering

Chewbecca · 20/08/2024 20:25

I'm early stages of my (early) retirement and have started quite a few new things and am pretty settled but haven't nailed it yet.
DH and I are travelling a lot so that does restrict quite a lot, especially on the volunteering front. We spend a lot of time planning trips!
I have made some new connections but no new friends (yet), haven't got to that stage.
I am fitter than before, having time and energy to exercise is a real boon.
Dressmaking has been my biggest win - really quite challenging and very satisfying. The women in my group seem nice too.
I have contemplated learning but again, the desire to travel a lot prevents it. Maybe when the travelling calms down a bit!
Good luck!

Edited for typo

Llaregub · 20/08/2024 20:32

I may have communicated poorly. I'm not bored. I have loads of things I could and do do, including playing the uke (I learned during lockdown) and brushing up my basic Spanish and German (also learned during lockdown). I'm not looking for hobbies. In the last week I've been kayaking and paddle boarding, spent hours gardening, made two birthday cakes for a friend's 50th, offered doggie daycare for a neighbour, fetched an elderly neighbour from hospital and got her back in her home and finished making some roman blinds. I've also helped DP replace the water pump in our camper van and then helped him transport some wardrobes for someone in need. I'm not lonely or isolated or lacking interests.

I think what I'm increasingly clear on is that I miss conversations about ideas. I'm not an academic but I used to work in an academic-type institution and I took it for granted that most days I'd have an interesting conversation that would make me think. I miss the company of people who love ideas: who talk about history and philosophy and art and culture. DP does his best but he's a doer more than a thinker.

OP posts:
Llaregub · 20/08/2024 20:39

Fushia123 · 20/08/2024 18:44

I would second looking into volunteering for ReadEasy. Training given and then you are matched up with an adult non reader to work 1:1 with. The agreement is 2 half hour sessions per week with your learner but with travelling to the venue and planning time it’s more like 2 hours. Work independently but as part of a team who meet every couple of months. The readers find that the world opens up for them with job opportunities, confidence and being able to text at last.
It’s a responsible role but can make a real difference.

This sounds like something I could be good at. Thank you.

OP posts:
barnstone · 20/08/2024 20:40

So how about looking for Philosophy or History clubs near you? There are a number of academically-leaning groups where I live that arrange weekly discussions and talks.

Are you still, or could you be, in touch with the people you used to work with? It sounds like you miss their company so maybe you should reach out to them again?

Llaregub · 20/08/2024 20:43

I'm a parish councillor (and recognise your description 🙂).

I take my hat off to you.

OP posts:
Horseracingbuddy · 20/08/2024 20:45

I feel I miss those conversations with people who 'get me' too! I meet lots of people but not that many I feel in tune with. I mentioned meeting a lady recently who I found really inspirational, we chatted for hours while volunteering at a festival. The one thing that struck me was she was willing and open to try anything. She said some things worked out better than others but she wanted to try new experiences before she was old.

Yoyooo · 20/08/2024 20:49

If you like travelling how about learning a language? You could join local groups, study for exams, go aboard for classes etc. lots of scope for enjoying it the way you want to.

Thedownsideisup · 20/08/2024 20:50

Check whether there's a "Philosophy in Pubs" group near you https://www.facebook.com/share/g/fNMry3Rjfz7s9MxM/

Join a Humanist or Unitarian Universalist church

Volunteer at an organisation that helps asylum seekers

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/share/g/fNMry3Rjfz7s9MxM

eggplant16 · 20/08/2024 21:04

Fail like and epic fail now.

Mischance · 20/08/2024 21:18

Join your local U3A .... our local one is brilliant. You need never be bored! The number of activities/classes/meals out/ visits is endless. I run trips to classical concerts in nearby cities for them.

Mischance · 20/08/2024 21:21

I also run a villages choir, help with a village womens group, belong to a choral society, am a trustee of the village hall, paint ... no time to be bored.

crockofshite · 20/08/2024 21:33

Magistrate?

aramox1 · 20/08/2024 21:41

Sympathies! I don't know where you are but if near London Birkbeck might be more engaging. Crowd-sourced research projects might also be interesting. There's so much art, isn't there!
You can still go to academic events if you aren't a student- lots of seminars etc are open to all if you're near a university town and if not there's lots online now too.

achillesshield · 20/08/2024 21:57

If English Lit is your bag, check out the OU Masters course. I've enrolled for this year; they offer a stimulating and flexible course, with different pathways you can choose according to your own interests. Otherwise, Cambridge ICE (Institute of Continuing education) offer interesting undergraduate certificate/diploma courses, with weekend online tutorials. Or look at CityLit, which can be excellent, of University of York Learning for pleasure distance learning.

leafinthewind · 20/08/2024 22:02

Thedownsideisup · 20/08/2024 20:50

Check whether there's a "Philosophy in Pubs" group near you https://www.facebook.com/share/g/fNMry3Rjfz7s9MxM/

Join a Humanist or Unitarian Universalist church

Volunteer at an organisation that helps asylum seekers

Or the Quakers. Our local Quakers are big on talking about ideas. (I admire them but haven't the patience myself.)

Betty789 · 20/08/2024 22:08

Are you near a place which hosts a book festival? Our local one is run by a team of volunteers and I always think it looks great- they source authors, organise events, create the programme etc.

Betty789 · 20/08/2024 22:10

Or, just to go against the grain, do something completely different..get a job in a shop, or driving a van, delivering prescriptions. You'll meet a totally different range of new people.

Altho personally I'm hoping retirement allows me to speak to far fewer people 😂

LaurieFairyCake · 20/08/2024 22:18

Start a new Bloomsbury group

I'm probably thicker than you Grin but can I come

SwedishEdith · 20/08/2024 22:25

LaurieFairyCake · 20/08/2024 22:18

Start a new Bloomsbury group

I'm probably thicker than you Grin but can I come

I was about to suggest something like that - be a Dorothy Parker and start an Algonquin Round Table. Had to look that up to remind myself I'd got that right but saw they met every day 😲 for lunch. Probably a bit much.

coronafiona · 20/08/2024 22:29

Join siroptimists? It's a women's group. They do all sorts.

Llaregub · 20/08/2024 22:29

LaurieFairyCake · 20/08/2024 22:18

Start a new Bloomsbury group

I'm probably thicker than you Grin but can I come

Of course you can!

OP posts:
LizzieSiddal · 20/08/2024 22:36

Like other people have suggested, look into becoming a magistrate.

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