Tuesday, April 14, 2026

'None of the Miseries Foretold for the Retired'

A reader asks what I make of retirement after fifteen jobless months. I’m mildly surprised by what little difference it makes. I started working at age twelve and without trying developed a reliable work ethic. Twenty-five years as a newspaper reporter, almost twenty years as a science writer for universities. No regrets, I learned a lot and met a lot of interesting people but I don’t miss it. I heard stories about guys who retired and promptly had heart attacks. I’ve never had a gift for boredom, real or feigned. 

On average I now drive twice a week, at least once to visit the Fondren Library at Rice University. I never liked driving so that’s a gift. I sleep in a little later. I’m learning to take my time in the morning. I enjoy my coffee. I answer emails at leisure. I read, usually seated by the front window so I can observe the garden and its visitors. I’ve never been able to believe in the future so I dwell in the present, which is more real, and the past, which is more interesting.

 

Consider “Sleep, Loss” (In Code, 2020) by Maryann Corbett, who likewise has experienced “none of the miseries foretold / for the retired”:

 

“Once past the pang of handing in her keys,

she met none of the miseries foretold

for the retired. Those bus-stop waits in the cold

were well lost, and she slept the sleep of peace

alarmless. What dawned slowly was a dulled

or loosened hold on morning’s luxuries—

the moon, a sliced pearl set in lapis skies

diamonded by one planet, with the gold-

red band of sunrise chasing her.

And she thought

then of an older loss: when her last child

had learned to sleep till daylight, and her lulled

limbs fled communion with the monk, the night-

watcher, the graveyard shift, as she became

an outcast from the house of two a.m.”

4 comments:

  1. I had absolutely no problem retiring at the end of 2010, when I was 58. I drove away from the building and never looked back. Don't miss it at all.

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  2. I started gainful employment at age 12 when my older brother subdivided his newspaper route and gave me a small section. I delivered the afternoon newspaper for the next six years. I retired at 70 after a 45-year career in the healthcare trenches. I enjoy the leisurely freedom of retirement, though my wife and I provided daycare for our grandkids until they started school. The only black clouds in the sky are created by reading the news and stewing about the prospects for the world.

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  3. I will soon have been retired for 15 YEARS (vs. your 15 months), but your reflections on what it's like (or feels like) to be retired chimes with my own. Part of my own blog was, for several years, devoted specifically +to periodic posts about post-retirement vs. pre-retirement routines, interests, etc. Among the surprises, alas, is that my energy level for doing more reading (without nodding off for mini-naps between reading and garden-gazing stints) does not match the extra time I've had to read since retiring all those years ago. The good news, however, is that I have more time to insure that whatever I DO read these days is of superior quality - and that is partly due to the suggestions you've made in your blog that I've followed up on. Thanks for making my latter-day reading experiences richer than they otherwise would be!

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  4. In retirement, I don't even miss the good things of my former job.

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