Tuesday, April 7, 2026

My role is , it used to be...

There’s a moment that doesn’t get talked about enough.

It doesn’t happen at the retirement party, when the cake is cut, and the speeches are warm. It happens later, on a quiet morning, when the alarm doesn’t ring, the calendar is empty, and a question drifts in:

“Who am I now?”

For most of our lives, the answer felt easy.

We were what we did.

Teacher. Manager. Electrician. Nurse. Business owner. Caregiver. Titles, roles, responsibilities, they gave shape to our days and, over time, to our identity. Even if we didn’t say it out loud, we began to believe it:

“This is who I am.”

And then one day, it changes.

We retire.

And suddenly, that familiar answer disappears. Not gradually, but all at once. The introductions shift from “I am…” to “I used to be…”

“I used to be a principal.”
“I used to run a company.”
“I used to…”

And if we’re not careful, that sentence quietly finishes itself in a way that hurts:

“…but now I am nothing.”

That’s the part of retirement that catches people off guard.

It’s not about money. It’s not even about time.

It’s about identity.

Losing a role can feel like losing a piece of yourself. And like any loss, it comes with grief. Real grief. The kind that doesn’t always show up as tears, but as restlessness, frustration, or a sense that something is missing.

Some people try to outrun that feeling. They fill the space quickly, going back to work, staying busy, saying yes to everything. Others try to numb it. And the truth is, substance use among seniors is higher than most people realize, often because people are trying to quiet that inner discomfort.

And then there are those who sit with it.

Not easily. Not quickly. But honestly.

They move through the stages we associate with any kind of loss, denial, anger, bargaining, sadness, and eventually, acceptance. Not the kind that says, “It’s over,” but the kind that says, “This is different… and maybe there’s something here for me.”

Here’s where the shift begins.

Because the truth is, we were never just our titles.

Even when we were working, what mattered most wasn’t the label on the door. It was what we were doing inside that role. Solving problems. Helping people. Creating. Leading. Building. Teaching. Listening.

Doing.

That’s the thread that runs through a life, not the title, but the action.

And that’s the key to stepping into retirement with a sense of purpose.

The people who navigate this transition best, the ones who seem to land on their feet, usually start earlier than you’d expect. Late forties. Early fifties. Not because they’re eager to leave work, but because they begin asking a different kind of question.

Not, “What will I be when I retire?”

But, “What will I be doing?”

It’s a subtle shift, but a powerful one.

Because when you think in terms of doing, you’re not limited by a job title. You’re opening a door to possibility.

You might be learning.
You might be mentoring.
You might be volunteering.
You might be creating something you never had time for before.
You might be connecting in ways that work once crowded out.

You’re still contributing. Still engaged. Still growing.

The difference is, now it’s on your terms.

I remember a man who struggled deeply in his first year of retirement. He had held a senior role for decades, and when it ended, he felt untethered. Lost. For months, he introduced himself with “I used to be…” as if that past role was the only thing that gave him weight.

Then something shifted.

He started helping a neighbour with small projects. Fixing a fence. Repairing a gate. One thing led to another. Soon, people were calling him, not because of his past title, but because of what he could do.

One day, someone asked him what he did.

He paused, smiled, and said, “These days? I help people keep things working.”

No title. No resume. Just truth.

And you could hear it in his voice; he had found his footing again.

That’s the opportunity retirement offers, if you’re willing to see it.

Not an ending, but a redesign.

A chance to reconnect with the parts of yourself that may have been sitting quietly in the background for years. A chance to ask, “What matters to me now?” and actually build your days around the answer.

So, if you’re approaching retirement, or standing right at the edge of it, don’t wait for that empty feeling to arrive before you start thinking about this.

Begin now.

Make a list, not of titles, but of actions.

What do you enjoy doing?
What have you always wanted to try?
Where do you feel useful, engaged, alive?

Because those answers will carry you forward far more than any job description ever could.

And if you’ve already retired and find yourself in that space of “I used to be…”, be patient with yourself.

You’re not starting from nothing.

You’re starting from experience. From wisdom. From a lifetime of doing, learning, adapting.

That doesn’t disappear.

It just needs a new place to land.

So maybe the sentence doesn’t end with “I used to be…”

Maybe it simply pauses there… and begins again.

“I used to be… and now I’m discovering what’s next.”

And that’s not a loss.

That’s an opening.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Time Passages

Yesterday we talked about milestones, those moments we circle on the calendar and celebrate. But underneath every milestone is something quieter, something we don’t always notice.

Our relationship with time.

It may be the most important relationship we have. It shapes everything, our choices, our memories, our hopes. And yet, most of us move through time without ever really thinking about how we relate to it.

So, let’s slow it down for a moment.

Imagine a place where time stands still.

Nothing changes. Nothing ages. The happiest moments, holding a newborn, falling in love, laughing with friends, could be frozen and kept forever. It sounds tempting, doesn’t it? To hold on to what we love and never let it fade.

But then you realize… without time, nothing grows. Nothing deepens. Life loses its movement, its story. Even joy needs time to breathe.

Now imagine a different world, one where there is no future.

You can’t imagine tomorrow. You can’t plan, hope, or look ahead. Every goodbye feels final. Every lonely moment feels endless. Every laugh feels like the last one you’ll ever have.

In that world, the present becomes everything, but also a kind of cliff edge you’re always clinging to.

Then flip it again.

Imagine a world where the future is fixed. Completely mapped out. Every step, every choice, every moment already decided.

Life becomes a hallway of rooms. You walk from one to the next, opening each door, but you already know, you can’t change what’s inside. You’re not really living your life… you’re watching it unfold.

And then, one more twist.

Imagine if the past wasn’t fixed.

Imagine if the story you’ve been carrying, especially the painful parts, could shift. That old embarrassment, that regret, that moment you wish you could undo… what if it lost its grip? What if the meaning changed, and in doing so, changed you?

Because in some ways, that’s not imagination. That’s growth. That’s healing. That’s the quiet work we do over time, revisiting the past, not to erase it, but to see it differently.

So, what do all these “worlds” tell us?

They remind us that time is not just something that happens to us. It’s something we live in a relationship with.

We can cling to it, fear it, rush it, regret it…

Or we can learn to work with it.

We can allow the past to teach us, but not trap us.
We can look to the future with hope, but not surrender to it.
We can stand in the present, not clinging to it, not fearing its loss, but actually living it.

And here’s the quiet truth that ties it all together:

We can always begin again.

Not from scratch, not as different people, but as wiser ones. People who understand a little more, who carry a little less, who are willing to take one more step forward.

So yes, celebrate time.

Celebrate it with a wild weekend.
Celebrate it with a story.
Celebrate it with a laugh that comes a little easier, or maybe a little louder, because you’ve earned it.

And when the aches and pains try to take center stage, let them have their brief appearance… then gently remind them who’s running the show.

Because at the end of the day, time is still moving, and so are you.

Still learning.
Still laughing.
Still becoming.

And that is not something to fear.

That is something to honour… every single day.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Celebrate the Milestones

 My daughter and her friends packed their bags, left their routines behind, and headed off for what they proudly called a “wild weekend” to celebrate turning fifty. Now, I remember fifty. In fact, I remember thinking it sounded older than it felt, like wearing a coat that didn’t quite fit yet.

Thirty years later, I look at that milestone with a different kind of appreciation… and a slightly slower exit from a chair.

We are a funny society when it comes to milestones. We celebrate the obvious ones with balloons and cake, birthdays, anniversaries, and retirements. We mark them loudly, joyfully, sometimes even extravagantly. But the quieter milestones? The ones that come with creaky knees, mysterious aches, and the sudden realization that you make a small noise every time you sit down or stand up? Those we tend to greet with a sigh… or a heating pad.

And yet, maybe those are the milestones most worth celebrating.

Because here’s the truth, wrapped in a little humour and a lot of honesty: every ache, every wrinkle, every moment where you walk into a room and forget why you’re there… is also proof of something remarkable.

You’re still here.

Not in the ground.

Still standing. Still moving. Still part of the story.

Now, I won’t pretend growing older is all sunshine and smooth sailing. There are mornings when your body seems to hold a staff meeting before allowing you to get out of bed. “All in favour of standing up?” “Let’s take a few minutes to discuss that.” There are days when your back reminds you of things you did twenty years ago that seemed like a great idea at the time.

And let’s not even talk about reading glasses. Those things have developed legs. I’m convinced of it.

But alongside all of that comes something else, something that doesn’t get nearly enough attention.

Perspective.

At fifty, at sixty, at seventy and beyond, you begin to see life differently. Not because life has changed, but because you have. You’ve lived enough to know that not everything deserves your worry. You’ve experienced enough to understand that most storms pass. And perhaps most importantly, you’ve gathered enough moments to recognize what truly matters.

That’s why I hope my daughter and her friends, in the middle of their laughter and celebration, paused, just for a moment, to take that in.

They are now wiser than they’ve ever been.

Not the kind of wisdom you find in books, but the kind earned through living. Through mistakes, through triumphs, through days that didn’t go as planned and days that turned out better than expected. Wisdom that says, “I’ve been here before… and I know how to move forward.”

They are also younger than they will ever be.

That one can sneak up on you. It sounds obvious, but it carries a quiet urgency. This moment, right now, is as young as it gets from here. Which means this is not the time to wait for “someday.” It’s the time to take the trip, start the project, make the call, say the thing that’s been sitting on your heart.

Because if there’s one thing age teaches you, it’s that time is both generous and fleeting.

And then there’s this beautiful shift that happens, almost without you noticing.

You become less likely to wish without acting.

When you’re younger, it’s easy to say, “One day I’ll…” Fill in the blank. Travel. Write. Learn something new. Reconnect. Start over. But as the years pass, “one day” starts to feel less like a plan and more like a question.

So, you begin to act.

Maybe not in big, dramatic ways. Maybe it’s small steps. Signing up for a class. Volunteering. Picking up an old hobby. Saying yes to something that once felt intimidating. But those small actions add up. They create momentum. And suddenly, life feels less like something happening to you and more like something you’re shaping again.

You also become less likely to pray without having faith.

Not necessarily in a formal sense, but in a deeper, quieter way. Faith in yourself. Faith that you can handle what comes. Faith that even when things are uncertain, you will find your footing. It’s a steadiness that comes from having made it through before.

And perhaps most importantly, you become less likely to hope without remembering the magic.

Ah, the magic.

It’s easy to think of magic as something reserved for youth, for firsts, for surprises, for wide-eyed wonder. But if you’re paying attention, magic doesn’t disappear with age. It just changes form.

It shows up in a grandchild’s laugh. In a conversation that goes deeper than expected. In the simple joy of a good cup of coffee shared with a friend. In the realization that even now, there are still new things to discover, new people to meet, and new stories to live.

Magic doesn’t require perfection. It requires presence.

And maybe that’s the real gift of growing older. Not the absence of aches and pains, those seem determined to stick around, but the presence of awareness.

Awareness that this moment matters.

Awareness that you’ve come a long way.

Awareness that while the body may slow down a little, the heart and mind have grown richer, deeper, more capable of seeing what truly counts.

So yes, celebrate the milestones. Celebrate fifty with a wild weekend. Celebrate sixty with a story. Celebrate seventy with a laugh that echoes a little louder because you’ve earned it.

And when the aches and pains try to steal the spotlight, let them have their moment… then gently remind them who’s in charge.

Because at the end of the day, you’re still here.

Still learning. Still laughing. Still becoming.

And that, my friends, is worth celebrating every single day.

 

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Worrying or Caring whch is the better choice?

 It was a small moment, easy to miss if you weren’t paying attention.

A woman stood at the edge of a room, watching a friend across the way. Her eyes followed every movement, not out of fear, but out of something deeper. She noticed the hesitation in the step, the pause before sitting, the way a smile came a second too late.

Someone beside her whispered, “You worry too much.”

She shook her head gently. “No,” she said, “I just care.”

And that changes everything.

Because caring and worrying often wear the same coat, but they come from very different places. Worry tightens. It holds the breath, narrows the view, and whispers all the things that might go wrong. Caring, on the other hand, expands. It opens the heart, sharpens awareness, and invites us to step closer rather than pull away.

When you begin to recognize that what you’re feeling is not anxiety but care, real, human, generous care, you stop trying to push it aside. Instead, you start to understand it as one of your greatest strengths.

Caring is a specialty.

Not everyone sees what you see. Not everyone notices the small shifts in tone, the quiet signals, the unspoken needs. But those who care deeply often do. They read between the lines of conversations. They sense when something is off before a word is spoken. They are the ones who check in, who follow up, who remember.

And in a world that can sometimes feel rushed and distracted, that kind of attention is rare and incredibly valuable.

But here’s where the balance comes in.

If you care deeply, you may also carry a quiet weight, the feeling that you should fix things, solve things, make everything right for everyone you notice. That’s where caring can slowly slip into worry.

So, we remind ourselves of something just as important:

Every life unfolds as it should.

That doesn’t mean life is always easy or fair. It means that each person is on their own path, shaped by choices, timing, and experiences that we cannot fully see or control. When we forget this, we start to take on responsibilities that were never ours to carry.

Caring doesn’t mean controlling outcomes.

It means being present.

It means offering support without taking away someone’s strength. It means listening without rushing to solve. It means trusting that even when things are uncertain, there is a bigger unfolding at work.

Not one second of eternity is ever revealed without a reason.

That thought can feel almost too big to hold. But when you sit with it, even for a moment, it brings a quiet kind of peace. The pause in a conversation, the unexpected change in plans, the person you happen to meet on an ordinary day, each moment carries something within it, even if we don’t understand it right away.

And caring is what allows us to notice those moments.

To be aware.

To respond.

To connect.

Think about the times when someone cared about you, not in a grand, dramatic way, but in the small, steady ways that truly matter. A call at the right time. A kind word. Someone remembering your name, your story, your struggle.

Those moments stay with us.

They shape how we see the world and how we see ourselves.

That’s the quiet power of caring; it ripples outward.

It strengthens communities. It builds trust. It reminds people they are not alone. In families, in friendships, in places like the Wilson Centre, caring is often the thread that holds everything together. It’s not always announced or recognized, but it is always felt.

And it starts with awareness.

Noticing when you care. Naming it. Respecting it.

Instead of saying, “I worry too much,” try saying, “I care deeply.”

Feel the difference.

One closes you in. The other opens you up.

From there, you can choose how to use that care. You can turn it into a conversation, a gesture, a moment of presence. You can also choose when to step back, to trust, to allow others their journey.

Because caring isn’t about carrying everything.

It’s about being part of something.

Part of a shared human experience where we look out for one another, where we show up, where we notice. It’s about being the kind of person who sees, who listens, who responds with kindness even when it would be easier not to.

And yes, sometimes it will feel like a lot.

But it’s also what makes life richer, deeper, more connected.

So the next time someone tells you that you worry too much, pause for a moment. Smile, perhaps, like that woman in the room.

And gently remind yourself:

It’s not that I worry.

It’s that I care.

And in a world that needs more understanding, more patience, more connection, that is not something to diminish.

That is something to live fully, wisely, and with quiet pride.