Saturday, March 7, 2026

Its all in the timing

Lately I’ve been thinking about time, not in a grim, counting-down way, but with a quiet sense of wonder. Each additional year now feels like a bonus round, an unexpected gift. I love living, and I find myself glorying in how super-rich these years have become. I share my days with a loving partner, a beautiful family, and good friends. I’m healthy. I volunteer with organizations filled with generous, caring people. I still do fun things, laugh often, and wake up curious about what the day might hold.

Every day, I pause to give thanks for this quite extraordinary experience we call living. How lucky we are to be able to do that at all, and to do it in a place that feels, in so many ways, like paradise.

At the same time, there’s no pretending that the circle is thinning. Many of my oldest friends are already gone. More recent friends are beginning to struggle with the realities of aging, memory loss, neurological challenges, and bodies that no longer cooperate. Lately, it feels as if departures are coming in a rush. I’m not counting years exactly, but I’m very aware that I’m sliding farther along the curve of life expectancy.

I find myself hoping for five or six more good, healthy years. Maybe that’s optimistic. Maybe four is more likely. Either way, I’ve made my peace with not knowing. I’ve always liked uncertainty, the right amount of it. For me, uncertainty has never felt frightening; it’s felt fascinating. Even as a child, I carried a quiet confidence that whatever I did, I’d land safely. That belief hasn’t left me.

Most of my life still looks much the same: family gatherings, friendships, meaningful work, shared meals, small routines that anchor the days. Yet I also sense I’m in an in-between place, no longer fully where I was, not quite where I’m going next. And oddly enough, that feels less like loss and more like anticipation. I’m still expecting good times.

My wife helps me navigate this season. She listens, reflects, steadies me when my thoughts wander too far ahead. She’s a wonderful sounding board, and her presence makes these transitions gentler, warmer, more human.

I’ve noticed something else, too. I catch myself reading obituaries and noting ages. As if there’s a formula hidden there. Of course, there isn’t. None of us knows whether we’ll live longer or shorter than “normal,” whatever that means. Time doesn’t negotiate. But knowing that doesn’t drain the color from my days, it sharpens it.

These years feel precious not because they are numbered, but because they are full. And as long as I’m here, I plan to keep noticing, contributing, loving, laughing, and saying thank you. Right to the end.

Friday, March 6, 2026

Conclusion: Thriving in Your New Retirement – The Four Pillars United

As you and I have explored the Four Pillars, Health, Family, Purpose, and Finances, a central theme emerges: they are inextricably interconnected and mutually reinforcing. You cannot robustly address one without touching the others. This holistic view, grounded in research from Edward Jones and updated is the blueprint for the New Retirement.

The research offers both encouragement and a caution. The encouraging news is that most retirees are thriving, reporting good mental health, strong family satisfaction, and finding meaningful purpose. However, not everyone has the same chance at a high-quality life. 28% of retirees rate their quality of life as only fair or poor. What separates the two groups?

Consistently, those who thrive grade themselves highly across all four pillars. Conversely, those struggling report challenges in multiple areas. Life circumstances, like a serious health diagnosis or lack of family support, can be difficult to control, but the pillar framework empowers us to focus on what we can influence.

Your Actionable Takeaway: Conduct a Personal “Pillar Audit.”
Take a moment to honestly assess your retirement plan through this four-part lens:

  1. Health: Are you proactively managing your physical and cognitive health? Have you discussed your care preferences with family?
  2. Family: Have you nurtured your key relationships and defined your “family of affinity”? Have you had conversations about future care and financial generosity?
  3. Purpose: Do you have engaging activities and goals that provide structure and meaning? Have you explored ways to give back or connect with younger generations?
  4. Finances: Does your income plan support your desired lifestyle across the other three pillars? Is it resilient to shocks like health events or family needs?

The goal isn’t perfection in every area, but balance and awareness. Strengthening one pillar can help support another that may be wobbling. Investing in your health protects your finances. Nurturing family deepens your purpose. Solid finances give you the peace of mind to enjoy it all.

Retirement is no longer a single event; it’s a dynamic, evolving stage of life. By intentionally building and maintaining these Four Pillars, you’re not just planning for retirement, you’re designing a life of engagement, connection, and well-being. You are building the foundation not just to live longer, but to live better.

Here’s to your thriving New Retirement and I hope you join me as I explore new topics and have some fun.

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.