Thursday, March 5, 2026

The Enabling Pillar: Financial Security for the Life You Want

Financial planning for the New Retirement requires a shift in mindset. It’s not just about accumulating the largest nest egg; it’s about creating a secure, sustainable income strategy that empowers the life you’ve designed across the other three pillars. In Canada, this traditionally rests on a three-legged stool:

  1. Government Programs (CPP/QPP, OAS)
  2. Workplace Pensions (Defined Benefit or Contribution plans)
  3. Personal Savings (RRSPs, TFSAs, non-registered investments)

A robust plan optimizes all three sources. However, managing money in retirement can be more complex than saving for it. Your greatest financial worries are likely no longer market volatility alone, but unexpected expenses and the potentially staggering costs of healthcare and long-term care.

Finances: The Interconnected Pillar
This is where the holistic “Four Pillars” approach proves essential. Your finances don’t exist in a vacuum:

  • Health & Wealth: Good health protects your savings from medical costs, while financial resources allow you to invest in better care, nutrition, and fitness. Stress over money can also negatively impact your physical health.
  • Family & Finances: Generational generosity means your financial plan must account for potential support to family members, while also preparing for the possibility of needing care yourself.
  • Purpose & Finances: Your sense of purpose, whether it involves travel, hobbies, or volunteering, has a budget. Your finances should enable your passions, not restrict them.

The key is to plan holistically. Start by asking: “How do I want to live?” Then, build your financial strategy to support that vision, accounting for:

  • Long-Term Care: With many facing years of needed care, consider how you might fund it (savings, insurance, home equity).
  • Family Support: Have clear, communicated boundaries for financial help to protect your own security.
  • Inflation & Longevity: Ensure your income streams are designed to last 30+ years and keep pace with rising costs.

The goal of financial security in the New Retirement is freedom, the freedom to focus on your health, nurture your relationships, and pursue your purpose without constant money anxiety. It’s the pillar that supports the entire structure, making the life you’ve imagined not just possible, but sustainable.

Next: My conclusion will tie all Four Pillars together and share the final takeaway from the research.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Your Retirement Engine: Cultivating a Sense of Purpose

 You’ve saved, planned, and dreamed of freedom. But when you finally retire, a surprising question can arise: “What’s it all for?” This is the domain of the Purpose pillar, the engine that drives a fulfilling retirement, transforming time from something to fill into something to savour.

Retirees with a strong sense of purpose are happier, healthier, more socially engaged, and even live longer. They reject the outdated notion of retirement as decline, instead viewing it as the most meaningful chapter of their lives. As author Marc Freedman puts it, purpose is “feeling like the world needs you as much as you need it.”

Purpose is personal, and I found my purpose in contributing to my community. Purpose often falls into three overlapping categories:

  1. Giving: Contributing to your community, mentoring, volunteering, using your hard-earned skills and experience to make a difference.
  2. Growing: Learning a new language, mastering an art, taking on a physical challenge, or deepening your spiritual life. It’s about continued development.
  3. Enjoying: Deliberately savouring life through hobbies, travel, recreation, and cherished time with friends and family.

For most, the greatest sense of purpose comes from spending time with loved ones, an activity that wonderfully blends all three categories.

The transition from a structured career can be jarring. Overnight, you shift from being time-constrained to having significant “time affluence.” This blank canvas, as author Tanja Hester notes, “can be a lot scarier than people imagine.” A third of retirees admit they’ve struggled to find purpose. What do you miss most about work? For 39%, it’s the people and social stimulation; only 22% cite the paycheck.

This reveals a societal and personal opportunity. While 89% of Canadians believe there should be more ways for retirees to help their communities, only one-third of retirees currently volunteer. Meanwhile, the average retiree watches double the amount of TV as those under 55. There’s a clear gap between potential and action.

One powerful pathway to purpose is generativity, nurturing and guiding younger people. Half of Canadians over 50 would like to be mentors. This taps into a deep desire to put life experience to good use while forging meaningful intergenerational connections. And purpose isn’t just about teaching; it’s about staying curious. Nearly all retirees agree that “it’s important to keep learning and growing at every age.”

Cultivating purpose requires intention. It might mean starting a small consulting gig, committing to a weekly volunteer shift, joining a book club, or finally writing that family history. The key is to identify activities that make you feel useful, connected, and excited about the day ahead. Purpose is what turns a lengthy retirement into a richly lived one.

Next: I will solidify the plan by looking at the pillar that enables the others: Finances.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

The Heart of Retirement: Family & Evolving Relationships

 If Health is the foundational pillar, then Family and deep social connections are the heart of a fulfilling retirement. Retirees consistently report that family is their greatest source of satisfaction, support, and joy. But in the New Retirement, the very definition of “family” is beautifully expanding.

While traditional family ties remain central, more than half of older Canadians now embrace a broader, Gen-Z-influenced definition: family is “anyone they love and care for,” related or not. This includes close friends, neighbours, and the community, our “family of affinity.” For those who are single or live alone, these chosen families are especially vital lifelines, providing the deep, core social connections that inspire and sustain us.

At the core of these relationships is a powerful sense of intergenerational commitment. This often manifests as “generational generosity.” Many retirees are willing to provide significant financial and personal support to adult children and grandchildren, sometimes even at the potential cost to their own financial security. This generosity flows both ways, as families increasingly expect to provide care for aging relatives.

This interdependence brings a common anxiety: the fear of “becoming a burden.” Yet, paradoxically, few have concrete conversations about end-of-life care preferences with their loved ones. Proactively discussing care wishes and financial plans is one of the most loving gifts you can give your family.

Alongside this is the risk of social isolation. As we age, social circles can shrink due to life changes. Sadly, one in four adults over 65 is socially isolated, which is linked to increased risks for heart disease, dementia, and mortality. The remedy is intentional connection: staying in touch, making new friends (which can be a challenge, particularly for single men), and engaging in group activities.

It’s important to separate social isolation (objective lack of contact) from loneliness (the subjective feeling of being disconnected). Interestingly, while older adults are more isolated, they often report less loneliness than younger generations, drawing on a lifetime of resilience and self-sufficiency. The goal is to combat both by nurturing your relational network.

When retirees think about their legacy, three-fourths believe that memories, values, and life lessons are the most important things to pass on, far more than money or property. An even higher percentage of the next generation agrees; they crave this emotional and ethical inheritance.

Nurturing your Family pillar means tending to all these relationships, biological and chosen. It means having courageous conversations about care, being mindful of the boundaries of generosity, and actively fighting isolation. In doing so, you secure the emotional infrastructure that will support and enrich every day of your retirement.

Next: I will examine the pillar that gives shape to all those days: Purpose.

Monday, March 2, 2026

The Foundational Pillar: Health in the New Retirement

 When my buddies and I sit down for lunch once a week, we talk about our health. All of us agree that the most critical for living well in retirement is our Health. We are not alone,  according to research by Edward Jones, an overwhelming 97% of us say health trumps wealth. This sentiment grows even stronger with age. But “health” in the New Retirement isn’t just the absence of disease; it’s the vitality to live life on your terms.

Thanks to medical advances, life expectancy continues to rise. However, our healthspan, the number of years we live in good health, hasn’t kept pace. Today, the average Canadian can expect to live over 80 years, but may spend nearly a decade of that in declining health, often managing chronic conditions like heart disease, diabetes, or arthritis.

This gap highlights a crucial goal: to not just live longer, but to live better longer. Proactive health management is the key to compressing those years of decline and expanding our active, vibrant years.

Our perception of health evolves. For those ouf over 50, being “healthy” is increasingly defined adaptively. This is about the ability to do the things you want to do. Importantly, most of us believe one can be healthy while managing a chronic condition. It’s about function, resilience, and quality of life, not perfection.

As you may know, I lost two friends to Early-onset Alzheimers, and one of my close friends has Dementia and he is holding his own, but every week he loses some sense of who he is. He knows who he was, and that helps a lot. The condition most of those who are retired fear most isn’t cancer or heart attack; it’s Alzheimer’s and other dementias. This fear is understandable, but it’s also a powerful motivator. The great news? We have more control over our cognitive health than we once thought. The Alzheimer’s Association promotes “10 Ways to Love Your Brain,” emphasizing lifelong learning, cardiovascular exercise, social engagement, and a healthy diet. These aren’t just good habits; they’re investments in your cognitive reserve.

"The majority of retirees believe it’s never too late to improve their health, but many struggle to act. Only half exercise regularly, and a third don’t maintain a healthy diet. The trick is to start small and make it social. Having a partner or friend to walk with, for example, significantly increases exercise consistency.

Here’s uplifting news: while physical health may naturally require more maintenance, mental and emotional health often improves with age. With experience comes emotional maturity, resilience, and for many, a welcome reduction in daily stressors. This strong psychological foundation is what allows retirees to cope with physical challenges and savour their later years.

Your health is the bedrock of your retirement experience. It influences where you can live, how you engage with family, what purposeful activities you can pursue, and how your finances are spent. Investing in it, physically, mentally, and cognitively, is the most important step in building a retirement you can truly enjoy.

Next: I will explore the pillar that provides our greatest joy and support: Family & Relationships.