Saturday, January 17, 2026

Should you consider a rehearsal for Retirement

 It often begins without an announcement. No one marks it on the calendar. There are no balloons, no speeches, no crowd of colleagues gathered to celebrate. And yet, when it happens, it feels like a small but profound turning point.

Maybe it’s a Friday afternoon. Maybe it’s a long service leave you’ve been holding onto. Or maybe it’s something even quieter, a conscious choice to slow down, to leave behind the rush and intensity that has defined your working life for so long. You’re not calling it retirement yet, but for the first time, it feels like a rehearsal for what’s to come.

This is the day you give yourself permission to experiment.

You might drop a day from your schedule.
Or take a midweek trip to the park or the museum.
Or simply stop operating at full tilt, noticing what it feels like to have a little extra space in your day.

And the magic of this milestone is that it is quiet. Intimate. Personal.

It often begins with curiosity. What happens if I slow down? If I don’t check email for a few hours? If I take a morning for myself instead of racing to be everywhere? And then, sometimes unexpectedly, you realise that life doesn’t collapse without your constant attendance. The world keeps turning, and somehow, it keeps turning well.

That’s when relief starts to wash over you.

Years of structured responsibility, of calendars filled with obligations, begin to loosen. The tight grip you’ve held on every minute slowly eases. You notice the freedom to choose, not just in theory, but in real, tangible ways. This is the first time the idea of retirement stops being abstract and starts being practical.

There’s also a quiet joy in this trial. Maybe you linger over a cup of coffee in the morning sun. Maybe you explore a hobby you’ve neglected for years. Maybe you simply read a book without looking at the clock, letting your mind wander freely. These small actions are deceptively powerful. They remind you that the rhythm of your life can be different, that you can feel present without obligation driving every moment.

Some people feel a little nervous the first time they do this. Am I being lazy? Am I missing something? Will my work pile up? But that nervousness is part of the transition, a gentle nudge that you are stepping into uncharted territory. And each time you try it, the unease diminishes, replaced by confidence: I can do this. I can pace myself. I can shape my own life.

This milestone is less about achievement and more about awareness. It’s an acknowledgment that retirement isn’t a single day; it’s a process that can begin before the formal ending of work. You’re testing the waters, learning what feels right, discovering how your energy flows when the usual pressures are removed.

You might notice subtle changes in your mindset. Tasks that once seemed urgent lose their grip. Moments that felt fleeting before now expand, and you realize how much richness was hiding in the small spaces of your day. Your relationship with work begins to shift, not abruptly, but steadily. You are no longer solely defined by output, deadlines, or responsibilities.

And this is where the milestone gets its quiet brilliance: you begin to see that retirement can be joyful, flexible, and yours to define, long before the final day at the office.

Later, when you reflect on this trial, it often becomes a story you carry with you: the day you first tasted freedom without guilt, without panic, and without drama. It’s a secret celebration, a whispered acknowledgment that something important has begun.

This is a practice in patience, in noticing, and in trust. Trust in yourself to shape your next chapter. Trust in life to keep turning even as you step back. And trust that the days ahead can be lived with intention, not just as a continuation of habit.

The day you quietly trial your first version of retirement isn’t loud, and it doesn’t announce itself with ceremony. But it’s one of the most crucial milestones because it allows you to step forward gently, to explore what’s possible, and to give your future self a taste of the life you’ve earned.

It is the rehearsal that prepares you for the real performance, the life beyond work, and it is one of the first times you feel fully, quietly, and undeniably in control of your own time.

Friday, January 16, 2026

Imagining the possibilities

It never begins with a grand vision.

There’s no moment where you sit down with a notebook and map out your entire future. Instead, this milestone arrives softly, almost shyly, in the small corners of your days.

Maybe you’re standing by the window on a slow Saturday morning, coffee in hand, thinking about how nice it would be to have more mornings like this. Or maybe you’re inching through traffic after work, wishing you could trade the rush for something gentler. Or perhaps you’re chatting with a friend who has already retired, and they mention how their Tuesdays feel spacious now… and the idea lands somewhere deep inside you.

Whatever sparks it, you suddenly notice that you’re imagining the shape of your future weeks.

Not in a big, cinematic way.
Not with plans or schedules.
But with feelings.

The feeling of waking up without an alarm.
The feeling of making breakfast slowly instead of gulping something down on the go.
The feeling of afternoons that stretch instead of shrink.
The feeling of being unhurried, maybe for the first time in decades.

This milestone is not about retiring.
It’s about seeing yourself in retirement.

And that shift, that subtle internal pivot, changes everything.

You start noticing the life beneath your life.
Small delights you never had time to indulge.
Walks you’ve rushed through.
Hobbies you paused “just for now” and never returned to.
People you want to spend more than a tired hour with.

Your imagination begins filling in these gaps, almost like tracing the edges of a new map.

You picture weekday afternoons spent reading in a favourite chair.
You see yourself exploring trails you used to love.
You imagine spontaneous lunches with friends because you aren’t limited to weekends anymore.
You envision grocery stores without crowds, a surprising luxury all on its own.

You’re not planning yet.
You’re dreaming.

This milestone often arrives during the transition from obligation to choice. You’re still working. You’re still showing up. But something fundamental is shifting inside you.

The cadence of your future life is beginning to reveal itself.

And while it might feel quiet, this is one of the most soothing and hopeful milestones people experience. Because it’s the first time you start visualising your days not as empty or undefined, but as full of possibility, full of you.

You may find yourself noticing what you won’t miss.

The rushed mornings.
The constant clock-watching.
The sense that your time belongs to everyone else.

At the same time, you start noticing what you want more of.

Slower starts.
Time in nature.
Unhurried meals.
Connection.
Learning.
Joy in small things.

This is the moment when the idea of retirement stops feeling like an end and starts feeling like a shape, a new rhythm that fits the person you are becoming.

You might share these early imaginings with someone you trust:
“I can see myself spending more time in the garden.”
“I think I’d like quieter weeks, not so scheduled.”
“I’m starting to picture what life might feel like once I’m done.”

Saying it out loud makes the dream feel more real, more reachable.

People often describe a gentle emotional shift during this milestone. A softening. A sense of coming home to yourself. You begin to measure life not by productivity or deadlines, but by ease. By joy. By the way your days feel rather than the way they function.

You’re not rushing toward retirement, you’re easing into it, the way the tide eases onto the shore. Quietly. Naturally. Inevitably.

This is one of the milestones that prepares your heart for what’s ahead.
Because before you can build a fulfilling retirement, you have to be able to imagine one.

And that imagination begins here, in these small, everyday moments where you glimpse the version of yourself who will soon have time to breathe, explore, wander, and savour.

It’s not a loud milestone.
It’s not one you celebrate with cake or a countdown calendar.

But it’s one of the most beautiful ones because it marks the beginning of emotional readiness. 

The moment when your future self steps out from the background and takes your hand, gently guiding you into a life that is waiting patiently for you.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Letting go at work

 There’s a particular kind of moment that sneaks up on people in the years leading toward retirement, a moment most don’t expect, and almost no one prepares for.

It happens the day you hand over a project, a responsibility, or a role you’ve carried for years… and instead of feeling protective, anxious, or wistful, you feel something completely different:

Relief.

Not the “I’m glad that’s over” relief of finishing a difficult week.
Not the “thank goodness” relief of escaping a crisis.

No, this relief feels deep. Gentle.
Like your shoulders finally remember how to drop.

And it’s in that moment you realise something has shifted.

For most of your working life, you held on tightly.
Tightly to deadlines.
Tightly to leadership.
Tightly to the quiet pride of being the one people could rely on.

You built a reputation on being capable, steady and invested. When something needed doing, your name inevitably found its way into the conversation. You were the person who could carry things to the finish line.

And because of that, handing something over usually came with a sting, a feeling that someone else might not care as deeply or understand the details as well. A small fear that you were losing a piece of your identity as the reliable one.

Which is why this milestone often takes people by complete surprise.

You hand over a project, maybe something you’ve run for years, maybe something that once felt central to your role, and instead of clinging to it, you feel… free.

You walk out of the meeting or close the email thread and notice it immediately.
A spaciousness you didn’t expect.
A lighter step.
A surprising sense of peace.

This is the moment your inner life catches up with your outer reality.

The part of you that once built meaning around responsibility begins shifting that meaning toward something else, something slower, more spacious, more reflective. It’s not indifference. It’s expansion.

You’re not letting go because you don’t care.
You’re letting go because you finally understand that caring doesn’t require carrying.

There’s a difference.

And recognising that difference is one of the clearest signs that your next stage of life is approaching.

You might notice that when someone younger or newer steps in, you feel gratitude instead of worry. You feel glad that someone else will bring fresh energy, fresh ideas, a different kind of investment. You feel the satisfaction of knowing you built something sturdy enough that it can live on without you.

There is a quiet dignity in that.

Sometimes, this milestone is sparked by the simplest internal whisper:
It doesn’t need to be me anymore.

Those words don’t come from exhaustion.
They come from maturity, from knowing yourself well enough to recognise when it’s time to lighten the load.

And with that recognition comes a new kind of self-respect.
A softer kind.
A kinder kind.

People often describe feeling a surprising absence where old emotions used to be, no guilt, no resistance, no second-guessing. Just clarity.

You realise that by letting go, you are creating space for what comes next.

More time for your own interests.
More room to rest.
More energy for the people and experiences that will shape your life beyond work.

Letting go becomes a practice, one that prepares you for the even bigger letting go that retirement requires.

This milestone also carries a symbolic weight. It marks the moment you begin shifting from contribution to completion, from doing to transitioning. It’s a sign that you’re emotionally ready for the change you once imagined would feel frightening. Instead, it feels natural. Human. Right.

You begin to understand that stepping back isn’t a loss, it’s evolution.

There is a tenderness to this milestone that deserves acknowledgement. A moment of appreciation for the years you gave, the knowledge you built, the steadiness you offered. A moment to recognise that someone else now carries the work forward, and that is as it should be.

And maybe later, when you’re walking to your car or making dinner at home, the feeling sinks in fully:

You’re not sad.
You’re relieved.
And that relief is telling you something important —
You’re ready for the next part of your journey.

This is the milestone where your heart begins letting go long before your body leaves the workplace. And it is one of the most compassionate gifts you can give yourself on the road to retirement.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Work is Optional

It often arrives on an ordinary Tuesday, not a dramatic one, not a breaking-point kind of day. Just a day where the pace of life slows long enough for you to notice a subtle but unmistakable shift inside yourself. You’re getting ready for work, slipping into the familiar rhythm of your morning routine, when you realise something, you haven’t felt before:

You could step back if you wanted to becaouse you don't have to work anylonger.

Not because you’re burnt out. Burnout feels heavy, like dragging a tired body through a world that keeps moving too fast. This feels different. Lighter. Steadier. Almost like someone quietly slid a new option across the table for you to consider.

For years, work was non-negotiable. You showed up because you had to. Bills needed paying, responsibilities needed attention, and there were people depending on you. Work wasn’t just something you did, it was woven into the structure of your days, your weeks, your identity.

But on this day, something softens in your relationship with it.
You realise, with a mixture of surprise and calm, that you don’t need work in the same way anymore.

You start imagining small things at first.
What would life look like with one less day on the schedule?
Would mornings feel different if they belonged to you instead of your calendar?
Could you spend a long weekend somewhere quiet… on a Thursday?

There’s a shift in the power dynamic, a quiet reclaiming of agency. Work is no longer the anchor that holds everything in place. It becomes one part of your life rather than the defining centre of it.

Sometimes this realisation hits in unexpected ways.

Maybe you’re sitting in a meeting that feels strangely long, and you catch yourself thinking:
I don’t have to be here forever.

Maybe you watch younger colleagues take on the frantic pace you once carried, and instead of feeling pressure, you feel distance, like you’re stepping back from a storm you no longer need to stand in.

Or maybe you’re driving home one evening and the sunset looks particularly beautiful, brushing soft colours across the sky, and something inside you whispers:
You could have more moments like this if you wanted.

It’s not resignation.
It’s permission.

And that makes this milestone one of the most quietly powerful ones on the path to retirement.

Because this is often the first time you allow yourself to think of work as a choice, something you could modify, reduce, or reshape on your own terms. You begin to imagine not just the end of work, but a different relationship with time. Your time.

You might notice a new feeling settling into your chest, curiosity.
What would your days look like if you weren’t racing through them?
What would it feel like to protect your energy instead of constantly spending it?
What might open up if you created space instead of filling it?

This milestone often sparks conversations you didn’t think you were ready for.
You start talking with a partner, a friend, or even yourself about possibilities:
“Maybe I’ll ask about part-time.”
“Maybe I’ll try a trial break.”
“Maybe it’s time to think about what comes next.”

And these conversations aren’t filled with fear. They’re filled with steadiness.
A sense that something is unfolding just as it should.

A surprising thing happens once you reach this point:
You carry yourself differently at work.

Not arrogantly. Not dismissively.
Just… with ease.

You become clearer about boundaries.
You say no more comfortably.
You let urgency belong to other people.
You stop equating your worth with your workload.

It is the beginning of emotional detachment, not from purpose, not from skill, but from obligation.

You have stepped into a new stage of life, even if you haven’t announced it yet.
Work is now a chapter you are choosing how to close, not a book that owns you.

This milestone reveals something essential:
Retirement isn’t an end, it’s an expansion.
And the first signs of that expansion appear long before you ever walk out the door.

When work starts feeling optional, you haven’t retired yet.
But you’ve crossed a threshold.

You’ve entered the season where your next chapter begins to take shape quietly in the background, waiting for you to step fully into it when you’re ready.