If one or more of the following characteristics describe you, you may be at risk for suffering unpleasant mood swings and depression after retirement.• You work long hours and are successful in your career.• You are highly focused and motivated.• You enjoy competition and winning.• You have an aggressive or assertive personality.• You enjoy achieving difficult and challenging goals.• You have few outside interests not connected with your work.This book, based upon the author’s own personal experiences, leads readers on a journey of psychological and spiritual insights designed to help them cope with the challenges of this often difficult passage. It takes them through a series of self-analytical processes that identify their unique personality types, and offers guidelines, tailored to each type, for making a successful transition to retirement. Robert Delamontagne Ph.D. is the President of Fairview Imprints LLC and a leading expert on the psychological dynamics of retirement. He is the author of The Retiring Mind® Series, which are books dedicated to helping retirees manage the negative psychological effects often experienced after retirement. He is the founder and past chairman of EduNeering, Inc. (now UL). He obtained a Ph.D in educational psychology from Georgia State University and currently lives in New Hope, Pennsylvania and Marco Island, Florida with his wife Sherrilyn. He may be reached at www.theretiringmind.com. www.theretiringmind.com
Overall I very much appreciated the personality type specific advice this book provides to help readers consider the inner aspects of shifting from a career of full time work to their next phase in life. The book is based on the Enneagram personality model which I personally have found to be a bit different from other personality type assessment approaches and so it took some time for me to align my Myers-Briggs "INTJ" type with the Enneagram types in the book. However once I did this the type Five "Solitary Mystic" description and associated case story (and advice) was truly helpful (and in some ways "eerily" specific). The later portion of the book lays out additional inner guidelines which provide meaningful and helpful guidance for all types.
There is more than the money when planning to retire. There is what are you going to do? Where and how do you want to live? Life is better when you are prepared.
After having daughter-in-laws tell you how much their parents are looking forward to retirement it’s refreshing to hear the author say, “when I was in the midst of my somewhat painful retirement transition…I felt lost and lacked direction.” HA, I’m not the only one!!! “Happiness in your life means being real, authentic and connected to divine ground. It requires removing all that is not genuine to reveal all that is beautiful and pristine. Divine ground is your base camp, a place where you are nurtured and gain strength. It is connected to an inexhaustible energy source that transcends the world as we know it.”
“Your most important responsibility after liberating yourself from the daily grind is to experience happiness and fulfillment, not distress and emotional turmoil.”
“The quality and texture of our lives are greatly determined by the challenges that occupy our minds and confiscate our thinking.” “Retirement often causes major emotional upheaval on the same scale as the death of a loved one, loss of a job, or a financial crisis caused by bad investment…resulting in excessively controlling or hypercritical behavior.” In retirement - You wake up one day and you don’t feel happy. You left one life behind but don’t have a new life to live. The self worth of high achievers is diminished, because it is personally threatening to be idle for any length of time.
Getting to a fulfilling retirement is built on an individual’s makeup. Enneagram Types (personality types) knowledge might enable one to find a retirement that results in increased joy and satisfaction.
A friend who retires this year recommended this book, so I got it from Kindle Unlimited. It fits into my research about aging, but it's more spiritual than the books I usually read. I took the quiz to see what my enneagram type is. I think I know, but I still have to fill out the answer grid to be sure. He is mainly writing for people who struggle with the transition to retirement, and that is not me. I am glad I didn't pay for the book, and I am glad it was such a fast read--I read it in one day. As with everything I read, I found a nugget or two of insight, but I wouldn't call it life-changing.