Retirement and Writing

August 13, 2018 | By | 8 Replies More

The thought of retirement is an anxious and exciting proposition. The end of a career can leave us wondering who we are and who we will become without our job description. Visions of unscheduled and endless expanses of time offer contradictory images of boredom and fulfillment.

What will we do to fill the hours that suddenly reappear before us each day? Time appears vast, unscheduled, and waiting to be filled. We speak to everyone we know about the approaching change. Depending upon their experiences, we hear stories of babysitting grandchildren, over fifty communities, downsizing, and warmer climates.

We hear of new opportunities for exploring long forgotten past times like painting or golf. We envision new occasions to travel, read, exercise, and explore. We consider resuming hobbies left languishing for years as we focused time on our jobs.

Bucket lists resurface or move to the forefront as we realize that while our time may be running out, what remains seems to appear empty before us. We are living longer than ever. Magazines, TV, and other media encourage us to stay active and vital – reminding us that age is only a number.

For many of us, writing becomes an option. After all, we have a lifetime of experiences and wisdom, or a dream that’s been on the back burner. Finally, we now possess the time to sit down and tell that story. Writing seems to be exciting and exhilarating. The creative process is fulfilling and rewarding. The idea of putting words on paper and serving them to an audience becomes appealing and seems straightforward and easy to fulfill. I am one of many who chose that option, and I would like to share some of what I have learned.

Writing is a fulfilling way to spend one’s time. Playing with words, shaping a story, conveying a message is creative. It is an outlet that allows our voices to be heard and our ideas to be visible. If you are like me, you may have always journaled – writing your experiences for years and making you feel capable of the next step. But be forewarned, at least from this writer’s perspective, the retirement pastime soon develops a life of its own. The creative process quickly becomes not just a hobby but a full-time job. So be prepared.

It is exciting and stimulating to expand our minds and experiences. But journaling is one thing. Getting a story down on paper is another. You will awaken in the night with ideas that must be put to paper or thoughts which need to be reworked. If you decide to publish you will likely soon discover how little you know about the process. Publication and marketing are a beast of a different sort.  You will learn how much you are expected to grasp and the letters OJT – on the job training – will be resurrected from your working life. They will take on an urgency unimagined as you deal with publishers, editors, rewrites, blogs, and layouts.

Even in the most supportive and encouraging of environments – of which I was fortunate to land – it is easy to become overwhelmed and experience a level of stress never imagined since walking away from the celebration of your retirement party.

As you diligently struggle to accomplish every task on the seemingly endless list placed in front of you prior to publication, there is a new phenomenon that appears in your path. It presents itself before you have finished reviewing “second pages,” seen an ARC of your upcoming project, scheduled a “launch party,” or held your final book in your hands. It is there before you can master the tweet, track the hits to your website, or learn to successfully boost your posts.

It begins slowly and randomly. Yet increases in speed, regularity, and power. It reappears as you are beginning to enjoy your accomplishments, see the light at the end of the tunnel, breathe regularly, and sleep. It happens when you begin to believe the process is winding down. Yet, before you can confirm a venue for your celebration, envision what you will wear, or begin to practice your “author signature,” the question is there.

“When will your next book be available?”

Unless you plan to turn out a book on a regular basis, here is my advice for how to best handle that situation. “Take a deep breath, smile, and forgive them, they know not what they ask!”


Kathryn Taylor was born at the Great Lakes Naval Station near Chicago, Illinois and spent much of her life in the Chicagoland area. She is a retired teacher and had taught in the schools of Illinois, California, and Virginia before her retirement and relocation to South Carolina. It was there where she wrote her book, Two Minus One: A Memoir following the unexpected abandonment by her second husband (due out Nov 6, 2018). An avid reader, enthusiastic traveler, and incurable beach lover, she resides outside of Charleston, SC, which affords her the opportunity to enjoy all three of her favorite past times.

About TWO MINUS ONE

“You can quit waiting for the other shoe to drop: I’m in it for life.” Those are the fateful, repeated words that help convince Kathryn Taylor to remarry, retire from her thirty-year profession, sell her home, and relocate in support of her new husband’s career. But five years later, in a car packed with food she has carefully prepared to nourish her husband’s dying brother, the other shoe does drop. Taylor’s husband unexpectedly proclaims he is, “done with the marriage and doesn’t want to talk about it.”

With this, the life Taylor has come to know is over. Relying on the strength of a lifelong friend who refuses to let her succumb to the intense waves of grief, she slowly begins to find her way out of the shadows of grief. Over the course of two years, through appointments with attorneys and therapists, purging shared belongings, and pushing herself to meet new people and do new things, Taylor not only regains a sense of control in her life, she also learns to enjoy the new life she has built, the friendships she’s formed―and to savor her newfound strength.

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Category: Contemporary Women Writers, How To and Tips

Comments (8)

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  1. Bethany Reid says:

    Love this topic and Kathryn’s thoughts. I find that I’m busier than ever now that I’m retired from teaching — and freaked out about not having an income (I retired early because my mother was ill and my teenager was a handful). I had a fantasy that I would write novels and be famous. Ha! (Not that I’ll ever give up!)

    • Bethany,
      I, too, am a retired teacher who retired early! The first thing I did to help cover the loss of income was use the library to cover my reading “habit.”
      If you are interested in writing and committed to the story you want to tell, do not give up your dream!
      Thanks for your interest,
      Kathryn

  2. Pamela says:

    It made me chuckle when you listed all the things you have to do even when the writing is finished (phew). No one could say writing is the easy bit – heaven forfend – but finding an agent, a publisher, preparing for publication, promotion;yes you’re right; it’s an exhausting adventure with a steep learning curve. Congratulations on sticking to it and best of luck with publication!

  3. Lynn Assimacopoulos says:

    Kathryn–I so enjoyed your words about retirement and writing. I am a retired Registered Nurse who spent more than 35 years working in various areas of Nursing. In 2005 at the age of 66 my 71 year old husband’s health was deteriorating and I had to retire to care for him 24 hours a day. During that time I questioned as to what I could still do as I also was getting older and at home all the time. The answer came to me rather quickly as I thought about what hobby I had enjoyed since I was 8 years old. It was writing. For years I had written poetry and stories just for fun, in school, in college and in my adult life for Nursing Journals. Eventually in 2000 when I was in my 60s I had actually written a devotional book called “I Thought There Was a Road There…..”. Several years later my husband passed away and I also began to have some health problems. I now could not do many physical activities at that point; however, I could still write and since then I have written and published another non-fiction book called “Separated Lives”. I would urge interested senior citizens to explore this opportunity. This was a Godsend to me as I explored and truly enjoyed this path!

    • Kathryn says:

      Lynn,
      Your story sounds like mine in many ways! I retired unexpectedly, and although I didn’t get to writing immediately, it was the direct result of a devastating personal loss. It certainly brought closer and healing to me as well!
      Thanks for your kind words, interest, and support! I will look for your books as well.
      Keep writing,
      Kathryn

  4. Great post! As someone who just retired four months ago, I can relate. How did I manage to write two books while working full-time and now that I’m retired, find myself dragging my feet to get book #3 down on paper?

    We go from such a rigid, full (stressful!) schedule to a vast expanse of freedom when we retire! We also go from a “purposeful” life to one with a list of a hundred things we’ve been waiting to do and now wonder what to do next.

    I’m still trying to find a balance between writing and relaxing. And yes, now that people know I’m retired, I hear “when is your next book coming out?” even more!

    All we can do is enjoy the ride, the freedom, and take it one day at a time. 🙂

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