#040 08/24/2013 Floors,Ceilings and Zero Gravity in Retirement
What I realize, is that while there is no ceiling to the possibilities of what you may do in your retirement, there also is no floor.
In a 'conventional' life pattern (ie. working), both of these barriers exist, such that you do not stray too much either way. I wouldn't call these hard barriers, but I wouldn't call them soft either.
The Workers FLOOR Example- Going out drinking on that Thursday night after work? You got to be at work the next day. There are consequences to being hungover the next day or calling in sick the next day..
The Retirement FLOORLESS Example-Zero consequences day after day if you decide to drink.
The workers CEILING Example- Got a brilliant/ambitious idea that improve process productivity at work? You are a threat, you are doing your managers job, are too keen, you are stepping out of bounds. If you decide to go it on your own, start a startup, you can loose your shirt before you even begin, plus you still need to have a job or find a VC unless you want to potentially financially destroy yourself. Your ambition has a ceiling, only edible in bits and bites. The ceiling kills most (NOT ALL) persons ambitions before they even start due to the realities of life.
The Retirement CEILINGLESS Example- Do whatever you want if you are retired. See @jacob and @mmm. This is the optimal zone (ie. the FU money life).
Zero Gravity in Retirement
Being retired, without much obligation or responsibility (ie. being single), and with significant doses of solitude and growing unruly independent thought, one can get plugged out of what keeps one in check,in both a good and bad way, and perhaps they can also be one in the same.
One also can get quite disoriented, i.e lose a sense of what is up and what is down.
There really is no gravity in retirement.
What is good and what is bad, what is growth and what is not, can become blurry because you make up your own measurements and evaluations of yourself and you no longer judge yourself against society. It is you vs yourself. No one tells you what to do, but you.
You can then fall prey to an
Introspective Illusion http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introspection_illusion that convinces yourself of one thing (UP), when in fact it is the another (DOWN).
Under the auspices of a YOLO delusion, I can convince myself to do something really really stupid, and have no doubt in my mind that it is the most brilliant and exact thing I must do.
I love, love, LOVED the book
"Into the Wild" , probably too much (Thank you @GPMagnus for the
book referral!).
And I probably admire
Chiristopher McCandless more than I should. Despite his tragic flaws, I loved how he lived his life. People can call me an idiot for saying such a thing, and I really wouldn't put up an argument against it. But I loved how he lived his life because he lived his life exactly how he wanted on his own terms with his own sense of integrity. Despite his early, naive and irresponsible death, he in those years that he was living the life he wanted, he lived a very full, genuine, vividly real life. He walked the talk and he uncompromisingly did everything in his power to persue his calling. Everything in his nuture said he should have lived a life of materialism, but his nature won out, and he lived a life of rugged simplicity, ambivalent to weath and money.
But for his life, what was up, and what was down?
His ambitions and calling brought him to a head on collision course with death. Even before his downfall he had several close calls. It seems death was unavoidable, only a matter of time, given the way he was living his life and what he defined as up. His freedom became his deathbed.
He treated the ones who loved him the most (his parents and his best friend sister) atrociously at the sake of his own reality made up of his introspective illusions.
At the same time as he became increasingly disconnected from society, unable to even hold down a job at McDonalds or function in a main stream society, to those whom he did end up befriending, he left a scarring impression of a man like none they have ever met (in a very good way).
So was his life really based on introspective illusions? To him I am sure they weren't.
The lines are blurred. Up and down become grey.
He lived an unreal full life, but he died at 24.
Devil's Advocate and Epilogue
I want to stress that I write these words as an exercise to release some thoughts in my head.
None of these thoughts will prevent me from retiring or make me want to do it any less.
I also want to stress that what I describe specifically applies more so to someone more in a situation without much obligation to others(or little), but only to oneself. If I had a significant other or a child, it would most definitely be enough gravity to have a definition of up and down, as their well being would be central to my existence.
Thank you
@chad,
@JoThomas and
@spoonman for your feedback and thoughts as always. Most definitely I agree acknowledging these things and putting them into words has already helped me to address it beforehand, and I do see it is the possible beginnings of a form of inoculation.