This year marks a milestone - more years of retirement than working years (since finishing schooling).
I've worked since before kindergarten - back then in my Dad's lab, washing test tubes, and a zillion odd jobs while in school years to make money, ranging from manufacturing match folders in our family basement with family photos of the buyer, to writing a kid column in our town paper, to assisting the mapping of the geology of Glen Canyon before the flooding of Lake Powell. But those were interim jobs while continuing schooling.
At age 50, the last kid was going to college in the fall. and the house would be just us. That summer we paddled down the Missouri River in a two-person kayak for two months -it was the first time we had had so much time just us together since our first child arrived - and on that paddle trip we loved sharing all our time and experiences together. It dawned on us after the trip that in our lives together, in a sense, we worked for money, for our needs, but also mostly to have time - time free for our family - and that time earning money and time together were not usually compatible. So - with a choice of more time together or more money, after that kayak trip, we opted for time together rather than more money - that fall we resigned our teaching jobs.
Now we have had as much time 'retired' together as working 'together.' It was the right choice. We love to travel, and have been together to visit all the continents, and many times to most. We love trains, so we had time to rail around the world. We share a love of water, and have lived on the water 10 of our married years. We love being outdoors - and have shared 6 1/2 months living continuously outdoors together as we walked from Georgia to Maine on the Appalachian Trail.
Retired, we have been 'just plain useful.' When a grandchild is about to be born, we are there - six times now. When a family member is ill, we can be counted on to be there helping. We share trips - overseas, camping, hiking, boating - with friends, or with the kids and g'kids when possible. We watch them graduate, cheer at their sports events, go to dance competitions and debate contests. We eat the fish they catch, the first elk they shoot, the first attempt to make a "tofu delight" dinner.
We have time to listen - to laugh - to cry - sharing the lives of friends and family, through births, hard times, and death. 'Just plain useful'
A friend told us, when we said we were about to quit the jobs we loved, "I don't understand - how can you? Your lives will be so unproductive!"
Welcome to the "unproductive" life of retirement , Bill.