For many years before he passed, my father-in-law Tom liked to point out that he was retired and rarely had significant obligations on his calendar, unlike those of us still working for a living.
It would be a family get-together on a Sunday, and someone would say something like, "I have to work tomorrow." Someone else would chime in, "Me too."
Then Tom would flash that funny little mischievous grin of his and say, "Not me!"
I have often wondered what that life would be like.
Actually, we all get glimpses of it on our days off. Especially our weekday days off.
The stores and the roads are relatively empty. We're free to structure our time however we like.
And sometimes, after that giddy feeling of being unencumbered by job-related responsibilities passes, we're also free to be bored.
I look ahead a decade (or so) hence to my own retirement, Lord willing and the creek don't rise. The possibilities are intriguing and exciting, but I also worry I'll run out of things to do.
I imagine it takes a little while to get the hang of being retired. By the time I call it quits, I anticipate having been in the full-time workforce for 44 years or more.
That's a fur piece, as my dad used to say. Certainly long enough to develop deeply ingrained patterns of behavior necessary to survive and thrive in the world of work.
Changing those patterns can, I assume, be a bit of a challenge, especially when you reach an age when change of any sort is met with skepticism or outright annoyance.
How am I going to deal with that?
Maybe more importantly, how will Terry deal with having me around all the time?
I can't say for sure, but I can tell you something I noticed recently when talking with her.
It was a particularly stressful and busy week, and I sighed and said to her, "Am I retired yet?"
It took her less than half a second to reply with a sharp and emphatic, "No." The message I took away was, "No, you are not, and I would prefer you not be retired for as long as possible so I don't have to share this gloriously empty house seven days a week."
Maybe, if she has her way, I'll never have to worry about how I spend my retirement days because I'll never be allowed to retire in the first place.