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20 Ways to Stay Busy in Retirement

November 18, 2011 RSS Feed Print

Keeping busy in retirement is important to our general well being and sanity. Once we are no longer part of the working world, it is now our personal responsibility to fill the days with creative endeavors.

[See The 10 Best Places to Retire in 2012.]

The good news is that we are only limited in what we can pursue by our imagination. However, if we do not plan ahead, the seemingly boundless opportunities may fail to satisfy us. Although many retirees claim they are busier than they were while working, others face boredom and months with little on the calendar to look forward to. In such an environment it is easy to lose your sense of purpose, become bored, and potentially find yourself fighting depression. This is not how retirement is supposed to be.

Some people have more than enough interests and passions to fill every moment of retirement. But others may welcome a little help keeping busy. Here are twenty things to do in retirement:

[See Why Baby Boomers Will Have a Great Retirement.]

  1. Plant a garden – flowers or vegetables
  2. Learn a new language
  3. Pick up a guitar or other musical instrument
  4. Write a book – not necessarily to sell, but to share your thoughts
  5. Document your family history with pictures and stories
  6. Create photographic works of art – consider using modern software and services like Shutterfly
  7. Dust off your old fishing pole
  8. Go back to school and take classes you want to
  9. Donate your time
  10. Fine tune your landscaping to show off your abode
  11. Try your hand at selling the fruits of your hobbies at a local art festival
  12. Test your artistic ability by painting or sculpting
  13. Mentor a youngster
  14. Travel to a location where you can test your newly-learned language
  15. Drive an RV across the country or wherever you choose
  16. Learn to cook – as extravagantly as you wish
  17. Try coin collecting
  18. Learn bridge or other social games
  19. Travel near or far
  20. Research and build your family tree

[See Why Early Retirement is Not for Everyone.]

When it comes to keeping busy in retirement, the real measure of success is the quality of life we experience. Try to set up activities that will make you feel satisfied with how you have spent your time. A little advance planning can help you to make your retirement years worthwhile and meaningful.

Dave Bernard is not yet retired but has begun his due diligence to plan for a satisfying retirement. With a focus on the non-financial aspects of retiring, he shares his discoveries and insights on his blog Retirement–Only the Beginning.

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If you're in retirement, you are most likely one of the older persons in your extended family. Now is the time to build that family history. Build a hard copy book with pages that includes something positive about each individual. Include photographs of indivduals, groups, and even personal items that might be passed along. Spend some time at local library researching census records. Visit and photograph homes at the addresses listed in the census records. What you include is only limited by your imagination. Copy and consolidate home movies to DVD or an electronic file. Once you compile this information make sure you digitize everything for future generations. Distribute hard copies and electronic media to all the youngest members of the family to ensure your work gets passed along. This entire process is a great way to hone your writing skills, learn and keep pace with new technology and ensure that your family history gets passed along accurately.

John O of MI 9:12AM December 19, 2011

I have planned many things for my retirement but there are things that a person does not cover well. I plan on moving up into the woods on 40 a and living back in the sticks. I'll be heating with wood and cooking with wood. No cell phone service no TV no close neighbors no traffic no lights no horns honking no airplanes nothing but trees wild life and a creek that runs year round 20 ft in front of the house. 54 miles to the nearest town one way and looking forward to a hard time back in the sticks for maybe 10 years then I'll be about done in. Please consider your health problems before retiring. A real look into your own question of what good years you'll have ahead is worth the time to repair yourself today not in 5 years. 64 and counting the days

Roy of 6:06AM December 09, 2011

Love the Retirement list - and definitely a good idea to have it as a retirement bucket list. I've managed to complete 8.

I'm currently working on my own online bucket list on Wanderable (www.wanderable.com) where people share tips and ideas with others! It's a great motivator for crossing things off your bucket list and its helped me organise my 5 year plan! =)

Nicole Smith of CA 8:59AM November 19, 2011

On Retirement

Retirement planning ideas and advice from top personal finance and lifestyle bloggers, including Money Ning, Live and Invest Overseas, Dan Solin, Good Financial Cents, Retire by 40, Retirement–Only the Beginning, Free Money Finance, Money Crashers, The Dough Roller, and Sightings at 60.

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