This morning, I waited in the car at the Dermatologist's office where John had an appointment. It was a lovely and revelatory hour spent writing.
At first, I was thinking about my 'retirement' which honestly wasn't much of a retirement. It hardly felt like retirement. I rather resented anyone saying I was 'retired' since I was, at that time, working harder than I'd worked in years and years. But in September of this past year, I came to the conclusion that indeed it was time to retire.
But what does it mean to retire? Do you just quit doing everything you've been doing and start having fun, traveling and playing as you feel like it? Well, you don't. Do you stop working, putting away all responsibilities? No, you don't, at least not in the way you think you will. Meals need to be made, clothes need to be washed, groceries must be bought, bills come due, you may still end up caring for a parent, spouse, grandchild, or family member...All the usual responsibilities are still there. That is just part of living.
But in September, I consciously made some decisions about what retirement should look like for myself.
I decided to retire from carrying heavy responsibilities all on my own. To retire from worrying about how others would manage life without my input. I retired from thinking I had to work all of the time. I retired from carrying dreams that are not going to come to fruition. And from long-term plans for what I will accomplish in life. I retired from raking up the past with its myriad regrets and recriminations and endless sorrow.
Not one of those things are a must in any life, but I'd made them part of my life for too many years. I was ready to quit something and that seemed to me to be the most beneficial things to retire from.
I relaxed. A lot. I learned how to add things I enjoyed into my life. I felt I'd had no room for play and time to just sit with who I've become and who I hope I will be. I learned to make the time to do the things I was always wanting to do but too busy or too grown-up to do such as swimming, walking about the property, watching a movie, sitting on the porch and gazing at the day...
As I sat soaking up the sun on this chilly morning, I realized with another birthday looming that at most I've likely got 30 years of life left before me. There is no guarantee I've that much or even the next hour, I know. But being optimistic as I am, I'll possibly have 30 years.
I saw my life as a pie chart, divided into thirds. For the majority of the first third of life, I was depressed and miserable, full of unmet longings and unrealized dream. For the second third, I've been with John. Frankly this last 30 years feels like no time at all. But it too has been full of things. We experienced some really tough places during our time together, heartbreaking times for our children, struggles with finances, a season of life where I carried the burdens of three households and then a season of life where time turned back and we were actively raising a child, albeit with his Mama's help, but we were the caregivers. There were marriages and divorces, deaths and births, illnesses and injuries to be worked through and all the sorts of things most every life produces.
Well, that was the first and second portions of my life chart. I thought about what I want the last third of my life to look like.
This is it, the Grand Finale so to speak, the last portion of days on this earth.
So, for the woman I shall become, I choose these things:
I choose the creative side of life. I choose to play. I choose to read and write. To travel where I can, as I can. I choose to be grateful for what comes my way. I choose to stop longing for the things that can't be and the doors that just would not open. I choose to stop worrying about money. Heavens! I've not one penny to show for all the years of worry behind me. I choose to buy the flowers every other week. There's nourishment for the soul and there's nourishment for the body and you can't starve either one.
I choose the appreciation of each now as I'm given it. I choose slowing down and allowing life to flow easily. I choose time with family. I choose to face challenges with a smile and deep pray rather than gnashing of teeth, wailing and dropping into a fetal position.
I choose letting go of the regrets and letting them lie where they are, making the journey ahead lighter and happier. I choose to stop thinking the past will change with any further recitations of all its hurts. The past has done me all the harm it can. It has also done me all the good it can. It made me who I am. It's of no more use to me now. It was what it was. It too can lie right there and be left behind.
I choose to accept family time as I can have it. Now the grandchildren have time in their lives for me and I for them. Quite possibly I'll see the day when my children begin to slow down and have time for me as their children move into their own busy phase of life.
I choose to spend time enjoying the natural world about me and thanking God at the beginning and end of every single day.
I choose slow mornings with coffee, talking with John, and quietly appreciating my life before I start to do a thing more. I choose to to watch the sunrise and the sunset every day that I can.
I choose no matter how difficult things get, to remember that my now is not my forever and always. It's just one more segment of time to be lived. Period.
I choose to speak love, and to speak truth when it's necessary but never without love and prayer first. I choose to remember that my wisdom is not the greater wisdom. I choose to be quiet and wait. I choose to listen before I speak. I choose not to offer advice that isn't asked for. I choose to offer the comfort of a hug when words are of no use.
I am well aware that many things I haven't planned will happen. There will be losses and hurts. There will be joys and sorrows. There will a lot of life lived...That's the way it ought to be. But I can try to choose who I am through it all.
At the end, before I slip away, I want to look backwards and see this last part of life and nod with satisfaction.
The rest doesn't matter. Not at all. Very little of what we think is important actually is.
And I find that thought something I can lean back into and get very comfortable with.









