E-Book, Englisch, 243 Seiten
Reihe: Retirement
Scanlan How to Retire
1. Auflage 2025
ISBN: 978-1-989681-42-8
Verlag: PublishDrive
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
Retire knowing you can enjoy every day
E-Book, Englisch, 243 Seiten
Reihe: Retirement
ISBN: 978-1-989681-42-8
Verlag: PublishDrive
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
Retirement isn't the end; it's the beginning of your next great chapter.
Whether you're planning to travel the world, settle in a charming overseas village, or simply enjoy slower mornings, How to Retire is your essential guide to building a fulfilling, financially secure life after work.
Inside, you'll discover how to:
Take Charge of Your Finances - Create a smart income plan using savings, pensions, Social Security, and passive income strategies.
Travel More - Learn how to enjoy travel as a retiree, whether its short term or longer.
Retire Abroad - Learn the best places to live, how to navigate visas and healthcare, and build a community in a new culture.
Create a Purposeful Life - Find meaning through hobbies, volunteering, part-time work, and a daily routine you love.
Filled with real stories, expert advice, and practical solutions, How to Retire will inspire and equip you to embrace this exciting stage with confidence.
Live smart. Travel well. Retire on your terms.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Retirement Isn’t a Destination, It’s a Transition
For generations, we were taught to view retirement as a finish line: the golden years, the end of work, the reward for decades of effort. But retirement isn’t an end. It’s a massive life transition. One that reshapes not just your finances, but your identity, your daily structure, your relationships, your health, and your sense of purpose.
Imagine it. For 30 or 40 years, your life has revolved around work. You’ve had goals tied to promotions, salaries, projects, and deadlines. You’ve measured your time in meetings, vacations, and paydays. And then, suddenly, all that changes. You have time. But do you have direction? You have freedom. But do you have a plan?
Retirement is not a permanent vacation. It’s the start of a new chapter, one that requires its own blueprint. Without a clear vision and strategy, that new chapter can become one of uncertainty, regret, or even financial stress. But with the right tools and mindset, retirement can be your most fulfilling and empowered season of life.
Retirement Planning Is a Skill
The idea of retirement planning can seem overwhelming. Investments, insurance, taxes, healthcare, these are big, complicated topics. But here’s the truth: Retirement planning isn’t magic. It’s strategy. And like any good strategy, it can be broken down into understandable parts, learned at your own pace, and customised to your needs.
You don’t need to be a financial wizard to retire well. You just need clarity, intention, and action.
The Five Pillars of Retirement Planning
Over the course of this book, we’ll explore five foundational pillars that support a successful retirement:
1. Vision – What does your ideal retirement look like? (Hint: It’s different for everyone.)
2. Money – How much will you need, and where will it come from?
3. Health – How will you prepare for medical costs, aging, and maintaining quality of life?
4. Purpose – What will give your life meaning once the office, job title, and routine are gone?
5. Legacy – What do you want to leave behind, financially, emotionally, and ethically?
Each pillar matters. Each one influences the others. Focus only on the money, and you may find yourself financially secure but emotionally adrift. Focus only on purpose, and you may have rich days but strained resources. Retirement isn’t about extremes, it’s about balance.
A Real Story: Why Planning Matters
I met a man named Bill in my wife’s small shop on Vancouver Island. Bill was 64, cheerful, energetic, and gearing up to retire within a year. When I asked if he had a retirement plan, he gave me a confident grin. “Of course,” he said. “I’ll golf, travel, maybe fix up the old car.”
It sounded great. But when we looked closer, the gaps were obvious. He hadn’t budgeted for healthcare costs beyond age 65. He underestimated the tax burden on his pension income. He hadn’t considered inflation, and he had no plan for long-term care.
What Bill had, wasn’t a plan, it was a dream. A good dream, but one that lacked structure.
Fortunately, Bill faced reality in time. He postponed retirement for a few years, adjusted his savings, and educated himself. By the time he turned 67, he had what he needed: a workable plan, a solid income stream, and peace of mind. He even sent me a photo of that beautifully restored car.
Planning didn’t make Bill wealthy. It gave him options. It gave him confidence. And that’s the true power of your retirement strategy.
The Emotional Shift
Retirement is often described in numbers. But beneath those numbers is something more human: identity.
For many people, especially those with long careers, work becomes a core part of who they are. When that ends, it can create a crisis of identity. “Who am I now?” is a question many new retirees face, sometimes with more fear than freedom.
This emotional shift is real. That’s why retirement planning must include more than RRSPs, IRAs, or pensions. It must include your values, your goals, your personal development.
- What do you want your mornings to look like?
- What passions or hobbies have you put on hold?
- What contributions do you still want to make, to your family, your community, or the world?
Beyond the Basics
Let’s expand the scope of your planning with a few often-overlooked components:
1. Longevity Planning
People are living longer than ever. If you retire at 65, you may need income for 25-30 more years. That makes retirement a decades-long financial phase, not a short break. Plan accordingly.
2. Housing Decisions
Will you downsize, age in place, move closer to family, or relocate for climate and cost? Housing is one of the most significant decisions that affects both lifestyle and budget.
3. Flexible Work or Entrepreneurship
Many retirees work part-time, consult, or start small businesses. Not out of necessity, but for purpose and connection. Flexible work can boost your income and your sense of identity.
4. Technology and Digital Literacy
Technology isn’t just for the young. Mastering online banking, telehealth, and social media can keep you connected, safe, and independent.
5. Social Connection Planning
Isolation is a major risk in retirement. Build and maintain a network. Friendships, clubs, volunteering, and family ties help ensure your emotional well-being.
Your Retirement Planning Starts Today
By picking up this book, you’ve already taken the first step: awareness. Whether you’re 30 or 60, whether you earn six figures or you’re just getting by, retirement planning starts the moment you commit to making it a priority.
Think of it like building a house. You need a vision, a blueprint, the right tools, and the willingness to do the work. But the reward is worth it: stability, freedom, fulfilment, and peace of mind.
In the pages ahead, we’ll dive deeper. We’ll talk numbers, timelines, accounts, and strategies. But we’ll also explore meaning, passion, and how to design a retirement that feels as good as it looks on paper.
So, take a deep breath, grab a pen, and let’s begin building your next chapter, on your terms, and with purpose.
Our Story - Our Retirement Planning
For most of our working lives, retirement felt like a distant, almost abstract concept. My wife and I were in our late 50s, 58 to be exact, before we seriously considered what retirement might actually look like. Until then, we had always assumed there would be time. But time, as we learned, has a way of sneaking up on you.
It wasn’t until we took a hard look at our financial situation that reality set in. The mortgage still had years left on it, and we had a handful of credit cards with balances we’d been meaning to pay down “one of these days.” Suddenly, “one of these days” had a deadline. With less than a decade left before I turned 67, the age we initially targeted for retirement, we realised we had to act, and quickly.
So we got to work. We approached the challenge with renewed energy, reviewing every aspect of our financial life. We mapped out our income, trimmed our expenses, and created a plan with the goal of entering retirement debt-free. It felt good to take control. We set clear milestones: eliminate credit card debt, reduce discretionary spending, and most critically, chip away at that mortgage.
But, as I mentioned in the previous chapter, life has a way of surprising you. Circumstances, some expected ,others not, shifted our plans. In the end, we chose to retire earlier than we’d intended, before all our financial goals were fully met. And here’s the truth: we don’t regret it.
Sure, we still carry a small mortgage, and no, the plan didn’t unfold exactly as we had envisioned. But the decision to retire when we did felt right. It was right. Retirement, we learned, is not just about numbers, it’s also about timing, health, opportunity, and the courage to say, “This is the Time.”
We didn’t just plan for finances; we planned for life. Our revised retirement plans included long-delayed dreams: taking an extended vacation, finishing the basement (a project always shelved for “next year”), and even returning to university, something I’d long wanted but never prioritised.
Now, we find ourselves living a slightly altered version of the plan, and truthfully, it’s working. It’s not perfect, and we had to let go of some ideals, but it suits us. We’re learning, traveling, and finally doing the things we put off during our working years.
If there’s one lesson I can share from this journey, it’s this: start planning earlier than we did. It’s never too late to take control and redefine what your retirement can be.
Retirement Transition Checklist
Use this checklist to assess your readiness for the emotional, financial, and lifestyle shifts retirement brings. Put a tick in the corresponding box, if you agree with the statement.
Vision & Lifestyle
I have a clear picture of what my ideal retirement looks like (daily routines, hobbies, travel, etc.).
I’ve discussed my retirement plans with my partner or family.
I know where I want to live during retirement and have explored housing options.
I have a plan...




