Retirement is not a permanent vacation or fantasy land where life's challenges disappear; it remains real life with ongoing financial stress, health issues, family complications, loneliness, and unexpected expenses. The happiest retirees are those who accept that retirement is simply another phase of life with both freedoms and challenges, rather than expecting it to solve all problems. Realistic expectations about retirement's realities—including continued money concerns, family dynamics changes, health challenges, and the need for purpose and social connection—lead to greater satisfaction and a more intentional, fulfilling retirement experience.
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Sorry, But Retirement WON’T be Like Skipping Through Fantasyland – But That’s OK追加:
For a lot of people, retirement exists in their minds like some kind of permanent vacation. No alarm clock, no deadlines, no stress, no problems, just endless freedom. Sleeping in late, traveling constantly, relaxing on some remote beach, and somehow living happily ever after. But here's something much closer to reality. Retirement is still real life. And real life doesn't magically stop being complicated just because you stopped working. Things will get better in certain ways, but the reality of life, the conditions of life, they're still there. Now, don't get me wrong, I'm not saying retirement is bad.
I personally greatly prefer being retired to my working life. But in many ways, retirement can be the best part of your life. You do gain freedom, control over your schedule. There's less workrelated stress. maybe none if you don't work at all. And finally, you have the ability to spend more time doing what matters to you. All of that is good. But this is important and this is the point of this video. Retirement is not fantasy land. You don't suddenly become immune to money problems, health issues, family stress, boredom, loneliness, unexpected expenses, or emotional struggles. They're all still there. In fact, some people are shocked to discover that retirement can actually magnify problems that were already there before you stopped working. Why am I being such a downer? It's a good question.
I think that if you're preparing for retirement, it's best to be realistic about the limitations so you're not overwhelmed or disappointed as reality sets in when when you do retire. If you are already retired and you're struggling with a life that doesn't look at all like the TV version of retirement, you won't think that you're doing something wrong. You're not. It's just life and life doesn't stop when you retire. You see, reality isn't positive or negative. It's neutral and it doesn't change just because you've retired. So, in this video, I want to talk about, you know, honestly about what retirement is really like.
the challenges nobody talks about enough and why having realistic expectations may actually help you to enjoy retirement a lot more than you would if you went in there with rosecolored glasses. So, let's get into a few things that can make retirement seem less like the fantasy land you might imagine it will be. First, um money problems don't magically disappear. I'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news here, but this is the ultimate reality. This is probably the biggest misconception about retirement.
A lot of people think, "If I could just make it to retirement, my financial stress will finally disappear. But retirement doesn't eliminate money problems." I'd love to tell you that it does. Maybe for some, if you're wealthy, it does. But if you're wealthy, you were wealthy before you you were retired, so um you probably didn't have those problems anyway. Sometimes retirement actually creates brand new problems like rising prices against the fixed income or big unanticipated expenses. Those don't ever go away. And suddenly every decision feels connected to one question. Can we afford this? Does that sound familiar? It's probably the question you've been asking yourself all your life. That can create stress even for people who have substantial retirement savings. Think about it.
Inflation is still rampant all over the place. it's been all of our lives.
Property taxes go up if you're a homeowner. Insurance gets more expensive, whether it's health insurance, auto insurance, home insurance, health care costs increase.
When is that ever going to change? I I I don't believe it will in my lifetime.
Cars break down. They need to be rep to be replaced at some point. Home repairs, they can run into the thousands of dollars. Unlike during your working years, you may not have the ability or the desire to simply earn more money whenever the need for more money arises.
This is especially true for retirees relying heavily on fixed income sources.
And honestly, one of the biggest emotional adjustments in retirement is shifting from accumulating money, which you may have been doing all of your life to suddenly slowly spending it. That feels uncomfortable for a lot of people.
Even financially secure retirees sometimes struggle psychologically with watching account balances decline.
That's one reason so many retirees continue to work part-time or develop side hustles once they retire. It's not always because they have to. A lot of times it's because the additional income creates emotional breathing room and financial breathing room, too. Very important. We'll talk about that a little bit more as we go on. Next, this is a big one, too. Family contact family conflicts don't suddenly go away.
Retirement doesn't magically transform difficult family relationships into perfect ones. In fact, it can sometimes make it worse. How could that be?
Because now everybody has more time, or at least you have more time. You may be more aware of the stresses and problems in various relationships.
One of the big ones, your spouse. You may spend more time with your spouse than you have in decades. You may get to know each other in ways that you didn't before because you're together all the time. You're not escaping to work anymore.
Adult children may start depending on you financially.
grandchildren may become a part of your weekly responsibilities. You know, we hear about grandfamilies a lot of times both parents are working or maybe there's a divorce. Who takes care of the kids and the grandparents? That's a whole new chapter in your life and it's a gamecher. Also, if you're young enough and you know your parents have lived this long, you may have aging parents who suddenly need caregiving support.
Let's say that you have several siblings, but you're the first one in your family who's been able to retire.
All the working siblings are going to look to you to take care of mom or dad.
It's just the way it works. Somewhere in the middle of all that, you're still trying to figure out your own retirement. That's stressful by itself.
Retirement also often changes family dynamics and ways people never anticipated. Here's something else people rarely talk about. A lot of couples discover they entered retirement with completely different expectations.
For example, one spouse may want to travel constantly. The other wants to stay home. One wants to spend money freely. The other one becomes extremely cautious financially and is always worried about the bank balances declining. One wants non-stop activity.
The other one only wants peace and quiet. That adjustment period can be surprisingly difficult. And some couples never come to a point where they totally reconcile the differences because retirement isn't just a financial transition. It's also a relationship transition as well.
Next, health challenges become more real. I I wish I didn't have to talk about this, but unfortunately for most of us who aren't able to retire in our 30s or 40s, aging comes with retirement.
So, this is a topic that's it's very real. It's it's right in front of you.
Nobody likes thinking about this, but the retirement years overlap with declining help health, at least eventually. And that could be either you, your spouse, or both of you. And even if you're healthy, if your spouse has chronic health problems, that's like you have them, too, because you're living together. You're taking care of each other, whatever the case may be, you're going to feel it. Now, hopefully you stay healthy and active for decades.
A lot of retirees do. Um, I've seen people in their 70s and 80s. There's nothing wrong with them, and I don't necessarily like those people, but eventually health issues do become harder to ignore. And I think a lot of people, maybe the ones who are seem to be extremely healthy, maybe just better at hiding it. I don't know. Maybe they have better pain medications. But suddenly retirement becomes less about bucket lists and more about doctor's appointments, medications, surgeries, physical therapy, or managing chronic conditions. Uh I know this is a problem for my wife and I. There are months where we have like three or four doctor's appointments, dentist appointments, eye doctor's appointments, whatever. We feel like we're always running to the doctor. And this is something that years ago we never did.
But as you get older, you know, there's prevention is worth, you know, what do they say? A pound of preventions or an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Yes. Your mind also goes, but I'm not going to talk about that. Um, so you want to be going to the doctor regularly, but sometimes it gets to be where there's too much of this. And I often think to myself, okay, when I turn 85, I'm just going to stop doing all this and let nature take its course because I don't want to be bothered anymore. But anyway, that's just me.
Unfortunately, even minor health problems can affect your retirement lifestyle and dramatically. For example, travel may become harder. If you have chronic arthritis, particularly in your lower, you know, in your legs, um mobility is limited. You're not going to be able to travel as much. Energy levels may decline. That means it's going to impact everything. Um everything from going out with friends or, you know, going out with your kids, um going out with your spouse on a date, um may decline because you just don't have the energy to do it. Physical limitations can change daily routines. For example, let's say an extreme example would be chronic back problems. It may be difficult even to drive to the grocery store or to complete a grocery trip. So, uh beyond the physical side, there's also the emotional side of aging. You begin recognizing that your body doesn't recover the way it once did. I used to get really impatient with older people when they say, "I don't want to, you know, I know so and so has a cold. I don't want to go spend time with them because I don't want to get a cold.
What's the big deal? It's just a cold cuz when you're in your 20s and 30s, you get a cold and a few days later you're back to normal. Not so when you get into your 60s and 70s, you get a cold and you you're laid up for three or four weeks.
Um you dealing with the entrails of that cold and the first few days of it could really could be almost debilitating. You may not want to get out of bed. It's just again you don't have the energy.
You may have other aches and pains. It's something you have to think about. It can be frustrating emotionally, especially for people who strongly identify with independence and productivity. This is why maintaining your health before and during retirement matters so much. That includes exercise, walking, you know, something simple like walking, strength training, healthy eating, stress management. That that that is a big one because you will have stress even in retirement, sleep. Um, you're probably already aware of this if you're over 60 or maybe you've read about it, but as you get older, it does become more difficult to complete a full night's sleep. They say you should get eight hours of sleep. That's true. It's just harder to come by when you get older. Um, there's just different things. You don't sleep as deeply for whatever reason. And it's ironic because sleep is one of the best medicines and it's also more difficult to come by as you get older. Those things become investments in your future quality of life and not just health advice. So do what you can to preserve your health.
Next, there will be times when you'll be busier than ever. And I realize this whole concept flies in the whole face of retirement. And it surprises a lot of retirees, but sometimes retirement doesn't feel like retirement. People imagine endless free time, but a lot of retirees end up wondering how they were ever able to work full-time because retirement is so incredibly busy. And my wife and I wonder this a lot. We don't work full-time anymore. We both, you know, part-time, few hours a week. And yet, we're trying to fit, you know, we remember being able to fit our entire personal lives in with our work lives.
And now we're wondering how we ever had time to work because the personal lives are like a whole other thing that take up a big part of the schedule. I mean, think about it. Appointments, home projects, family obligations, travel, volunteer work, grandchildren, side jobs, community involvement, taking care of your health, managing your finances.
All these things matter. Some retirees become so overscheduled they accidentally recreate the same stress they were trying to escape during their working years. And honestly, there's an irony here. When you're working, you dream about free time. But once you retire, you often realize that unstructured time requires intentional management, too. Some retirees thrive on staying busy.
I'm sort of in that category, but not entirely. Others eventually discover they have a desperate need for balance.
That's me. Because being constantly busy is not automatically fulfilling. It's like filling up your schedule and thinking that's going to make you happy.
Rarely works. Retirement should create room for peace. You know, in my own situation, I'm intentional about this.
Um, because there have been times in the past where I've been a workaholic, although I've always thought of myself as being lazy. I don't know how I reconcile the two, but that is the case.
What I try to do in retirement is I spend the first few hours of the day being productive. But whatever that is, that's when I take my walk. It's when I pay any necessary bills if we have to go somewhere, take care. We usually make our doctor's appointments in the morning. I usually work on my YouTube videos in the morning, so I'm done like early afternoon. I got the rest of the day to do whatever I want. So, I try to balance each day. It's not like I'm looking at the monthly calendar and saying, "Yeah, I'll have fun on Saturday." No, it's not like that. I want to do productive things each day because that makes me feel like I've accomplished something and that's very important to me. And in college, I tested as having a a high achievement desire or drive in life. And that's always been true. I still have it. I like to achieve things even now that I'm retired, but I also like the idea that maybe the second half of the day my time to do whatever I want. And the good thing is I don't feel guilty about having nothing to do or just doing whatever I feel like because I've taken care of the things that I need to do that involve responsibility. That's just me. Come up with your own formula for that. Next, boredom and loss of purpose can sneak up on you. This is a surprise to people like some of the others, but it may be the most underestimated challenge of retirement. People think retirement means freedom from responsibility. It's partially true, but what they eventually discover is human beings need purpose.
Work provides more than income. People don't realize that it also provides structure, identity, goals, social interaction, mental stimulation, and you know, something as basic as a reason to get up in the morning. When that suddenly disappears, some retirees feel emotionally lost.
That's especially true in the first year or two. You know, one day you go to work for the last time and your life is totally structured. The next day you're retired and your life is totally unstructured. It's like somebody just pulled down the curtain on your previous life. What replaces it? This is especially true among people whose careers became a major part of who they are. Surprisingly, boredom can become exhausting.
Days begin blending together. I I I can attest to this. There have been times when I haven't done much. 2025 was my year of nothing. Um I've talked about in other videos, so I don't feel like talking about it again, but I didn't do anything productive during the year other than invest my money actively, and that kept me sort of engaged, but it didn't have that real didn't have that good emotional feeling. But anyway, um I found that in days when I didn't do anything, especially for multiple days, I'd get sluggish. I need something to do otherwise, you know. Um and the other thing is, you know, you kind of have to have a schedule, something to look forward to. So, you know, for me that was just uh that never worked. I could see that, you know, it doesn't make it difference if it's Saturday or Tuesday.
It's the same day, same thing. So, weekends stop feeling special because every day feels the same. That's what you've got to change. You got to build variety in. That's why a lot of happy happily retired people intentionally build structure in the retirement life.
That doesn't mean you got something going on all the time, but maybe a couple of things going each day that are meaningful. It's not because you have to, but it's because purpose matters.
It's going to matter until the day you die. So, embrace that. Don't feel like it's odd or that you're somehow not doing retirement right. That's not true at all. Purpose can come from part-time work, a side hustle, volunteering, church involvement, getting engaged in fitness routines or healthy eating, better cooking, travel, learning new skills. You know, for me, I've had to learn new skills with this YouTube channel, and it's that's really been stimulating to me. Starting a business, again, you know, believe it or not, YouTube is a business. Um, if you run it that way, I do. Um, helping family members. Um, I don't so much excel in that area because my family isn't too needy. I'm very blessed in that way, but I like spending more time with my family. Then creative hobbies. This is an area I never had hobbies in my life.
Um I was always just busy doing meaningful things in my life. There there was no need for me to do hobbies.
In fact, my son once it was making up Christmas lists and he said to me, he said, "Daddy," he said, "You need to get hobbies so that we know what to get you for Christmas." Sorry, I still haven't.
That was probably 10 years ago. Um I'm just not a hobby person. Never have been. Retirement works best when you retire to something and not just away from something like work. Next, friendships often change more than expected. This is another shocker. It's a reality nobody prepares you for.
Retirement can become socially isolating. There are some good videos out on YouTube about this exact topic.
Work friendships often fade much faster than you think. my experience and I didn't retire from a job so I didn't have this departure but earlier in life I had different jobs where I was really friendly with some people and I thought those friendships would survive me leaving the job didn't happen that way you get together maybe once maybe twice with certain people after that and then it ends um then you're reduced to the occasional phone call maybe the occasional text and even that goes away because you don't have the cement that held you together when you were working together and that was you know, central purpose, same schedule, the same people that you knew. Um, you had all of that.
That's all gone. So, don't anticipate that your work friendships are going to survive your retirement.
Maintaining friendships in retirement actually does take effort. I don't mean to be the bearer of even more bad news, but it's true. Think about this. You hit retirement, some friends relocate. Even if they may be your best friends, but they relocate because that's what people do in retirement. Not everybody, but um some people they will, you know, especially people up here in the north, they want to move to Florida or the Carolinas, wherever the case may be.
Others become consumed with family obligations. You know, the typical one is where there's one of their children is divorced or they have to take care of an aging parent. All of a sudden, that becomes their life. There's no time for a social life. The only way you're going to maintain that friendship is maybe if you, you know, jump in there and try and help them with what they're doing.
Otherwise, out of necessity, the relationship's going to be severed. Some experience health problems, and this is especially true as you get older. Um, you lose mobility or maybe you just don't have the energy or you're constantly running to doctors, whatever.
Your life becomes different and that just happens. Sadly, over time, people pass away. It's just again one of the realities of life. This becomes even more noticeable as you move deeper into retirement. In other words, as you get older. That's why social connection becomes incredibly important. And not just emotionally, but physically and mentally, too. Because what bothers you emotionally is going to have an impact on your physical health. Isolation can quietly damage your retirement quality of life. And this is one reason community matters so much more during retirement. You've got to be connected.
It's not like an option. Some people are content to just sit home, you know, watch TV, talk to their spouse, you know, take a walk around the block. Um, I don't think that's most of us. We are social animals. And I think we need community with other people. That's whether it's church groups, volunteer organizations, hobby clubs, fitness groups, part-time work, whatever it is. Staying connected with people matters. I know a lot of people want to retire just to get away from people. And yeah, when you're stuck with people in the four walls of work, I can understand that. But in general, I find that people once you get to know them are better than what you ever thought they were. and having more in your life is better up to a point. It matters a lot. So, make sure you build socialization into your retirement plan and your retirement life. Next, um we've kind of covered this already, but it really rates its own separate discussion. Unexpected expenses never stop. This is one of the biggest retirement myths that expenses suddenly become predictable. You set up a budget, everything's within the budget. You budget for this, that, and the other thing. I can promise you there's there's a budget buster or two that's going to hit you every year because it almost never works out cleanly. In retirement, surprise expenses continue showing up like uninvest uninvited guests for dinner. Um, think about home repairs.
Some of them are on the inexpensive side. Maybe you can do them yourself, but eventually everything in the house has got to be repaired. Houses don't repair or replace themselves. You need a new furnace, you got to get a new furnace. A new roof, you got to get a new roof. You may have to spend money helping family members. Um maybe giving them money, paying bills, whatever the case may be. Unexpected medical bills.
Um this is really why you want to have the best health insurance in retirement that you can get largely to protect your assets. I I I worked in insurance very briefly when I was in college and I remember the sales manager saying that the real purpose of health insurance wasn't really so much to protect your health as it was to protect your assets. Um because if you're rich you're going to spend a lot of money on health care if you have no health insurance. So that's what your health insurance does. I personally like having the higher premium lower out-of- pocket policies and that's what we have and it's it's working beautifully for us. Insurance increases. This is a fact of life. Health insurance goes up.
Car insurance goes up. Homeowners insurance goes up. And it seems like they go up every year. Car replacements.
This is a big one. Maybe you like to drive your cars for 10 or 15 years. Take good care of them. Excellent. It's good way to save money on payments. However, at some point, you're going to have to replace that car. And the average cost of a car right now is around new car is around $50,000. You could spend a lot less, but it's still a big chunk of money. If you have $300,000 in savings and investments and suddenly you need to buy a brand new car for $35,000, that's about 12% of your portfolio. It's a lot of money. So long-term care needs, these come out of nowhere. They could be temporary. They could be, you know, ongoing. But it's almost impossible to prepare for this fully, but you have to have some sort of, you know, awareness of it at least.
And don't think these things can't happen because your peace will be disturbed at some point with any one of these. And because retirees often live on a tighter cash flow, unexpected expenses can feel more stressful than they did during your working life. So this is why an emergency fund is really important.
You not only want one when you retire, but you also want to have a budget, you know, in your budget, a line item where you're refilling that that emergency fund all the time because you are going to have expenses and you got to put the money back. The amount of money you started retirement with is not going to cover you for the next 10 or 20 years. I can promise you. Flexibility becomes one of the most valuable retirement skills you can develop. Uh for my wife and I, I think that's one of our soft superpowers. We are very flexible. Um, and that's how we've lived our lives and it's how we're, you know, surviving in retirement because retirement rarely unfolds exactly according to plan. That's where flexibility becomes really important.
Also, resilience. You're going to there are times when you're going to take a step back. You have to weather it and just be prepared to go forward. Charge forward. Now, I don't want to be too negative on this. Retirement can still be wonderful. It's just not going to be perfect. And I don't think I need to tell you that after all this, you might think that I'm painting retirement as depressing. I'm not. Retirement can absolutely be fulfilling, meaningful, peaceful, and enjoyable. In a lot of ways, it can be the happiest stage of life. And I'm going to confess for me right now, a lot of people say, "I wish I was a teenager again, or I wish I was in my 20s." I am absolutely content where I'm sitting right now. Um, this is the best life I've ever had. I I like it. I have more control over my time, my life, my money. I love it. And I think it can become the happiest stage of your life. But you have to have the right expectations. Happiness in retirement usually comes from realistic expectations, not from fantasy expectations. That's the point of this video. The happiest retirees often understand that retirement is simply another phase of life. It's not like you walk through a portal and you're going into, you know, you're stepping into heaven on earth.
Nope. No heaven. It's not fantasy land.
And it's it's not a permanent vacation.
It's just life with more freedom and flexibility. That's enough for me. And honestly, accepting that reality can remove enormous pressure. Because you may be thinking, you know, I'm retired and I just don't feel like my life is as stress-free as I as I wanted it to be or as I see it to be with other people.
It's not true. It's perfectly normal if you're going through that. If you stop expecting retirement to solve every problem, you're going to be happier in retirement. Instead, focus on building a life that feels meaningful, balanced, financially stable, socially connected, and emotionally healthy. So, let's wrap it up. Retirement is not about escaping reality. Again, this is the whole point of this this video. We're talking about reality here. It's not good or bad. It's about gaining greater control over your time, your priorities, and your lifestyle. If you do that, you hit pay during retirement. There will still be challenges even if you accomplish those things. Money concerns are still going to happen. Family problems, they're going to be there no matter what. Health problems, you know, hopefully you'll avoid that, but probably you won't sooner or later. Unexpected expenses are going to come up. And some days may feel surprisingly ordinary or even stressful.
But there will also be freedom that comes with retirement. Freedom to slow down, freedom to choose, freedom to spend more time with the people you love, freedom to focus on what really matters to you. And maybe that's the better version of retirement anyway. It is for me. I'm content with those things. It's not fantasy land. It's just a more intentional life. What are some of the biggest negative surprises you've discovered in retirement? Leave your thoughts in the comment. They might help others to have a more realistic view of their retirement, whether they're in it or they're planning for it. If you like the content you're watching, please hit the like button. It helps this channel.
And subscribe to the channel as well.
Thank you for watching and I'll see you in the next video.
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