You might be retired if you find yourself dashing to the bathroom after your first cup of morning coffee; giving thanks for the fact that you are retired. I can’t imagine managing the logistics of getting to the restroom – Stat! from a work-in-person day-job. If you wonder why grandparents are so understanding when their 2.5- year-old grand-daughter insists that she has to go potty so bad that she has to drop trou and do it in the lawn, it’s because they can relate. If the opportunity presents itself; you must act. Too much information? It may be, but the more you know ahead of time, the more prepared you can be when old age starts creeping up on you. Retirement planning isn’t all about financial planning.

Speaking of time; tomorrow is Scott’s 2nd post-BMT birthday. He’s feeling pretty good but tires easily and even two years later; that one week of extreme chemo has done a number on his brain cells. If I had a dollar for every time I’ve had to say “we already talked about this” I could buy a place in the Caribbean. I may be retired but I still feel the pressure of being a caregiver. I’m torn to let this cat out of the bag because I had a lot better attitude when I thought my role was temporary. By this time, I expected us to be doing all the things we had on our bucket lists and living the dream. I guess I was dreaming when I thought that things would be easy if we could just make it through that first year. Thankfully our calendar is filled with trips to our Canadian home-away-from-home but we still go to U of M in Ann Arbor every month for his check-ups, and the day-to-day stuff in between seems to be full of challenges.
Summer continued to feel like a never-ending delivery of lemons or maybe even raw sewage. In June I reported on a laundry list of problems I was trying to tackle. The rest of the summer was filled with more of the same. While from an aerial glance we are living the high life of one vacation after another, the real truth is that life remains full of challenges. I hit a roadblock in my adjustment to retirement; my attitude had soured and I was feeling defeated. I realize that it’s all about perspective and I AM thankful Scott is alive but for the most part well but our life is different than I imagined. Along with all the freedom, retirement means that with so little on your daily plate, things that pop up needing your time and attention always seem to be bad things; problems. And now you are out of practice with dealing with the daily grind and just want to sit back and relax. Add to that the amount of time you have available to let the news and social media consume your life and warp your sense of reality, retirement can be even more depressing than working! You might be retired if your schedule seems to revolve around doctor’s appointments, funerals and dealing with the insurance company. Constant problem solving when you thought that part of your life was over.

Thankfully, my health has remained good but my mind is not what it used to be and my patience has long left the building. I’ve been trying to do regular exercise and that has resulted in weight gain rather than loss. Portion control and boredom eating is a problem; every day seems to deliver an excuse to eat and worry about dieting tomorrow. Based on the amount of hair I find floating everywhere, I’m convinced that I’m losing my hair as well. My fear of going bald like my grandmother is real.
Rather than depress you with my all my depths of despair moments; I’ll try and share a few teaching moments instead. After spending three weeks together at the cabin in May, Scott was able to spend another ten days fishing with the guys in Canada. After a few days at home, he went back again with his mother and sister in early July. What should have been a couple of weeks of freedom for me, ended up being a string of disappointments. One after another, plans with friends fizzled out and I spent the time feeling sorry for myself. Thankfully I was also anxiously awaiting the birth of our second grandchild. I was scheduled to care for big sister while mom and dad were at the hospital. Unfortunately, we had all assumed that since baby #1 had come two weeks early, so would her little brother. When he still wasn’t here on his due date, I cancelled plans for the annual four-day camping/canoe trip with friends slated to start on that Thursday.
In our youth, we don’t take into consideration that disappointment exists whether you are six, sixty or probably even ninety-six. Even worse, back then our parents stepped up to smooth out that disappointment; maybe with ice cream or alternate plans. In adulthood, when real life slaps you in the face, many times no one is there to smooth it over for you. Sure, I was still very excited to be welcoming a new baby into the family but a string of cancelled plans still stings as much today as it did back in my youth. In the event that I have any young readers, keep that in mind before blowing off that dinner date with Grandma and Grandpa to go out bar hopping or just stay home glued to your electronic device. It might be the only thing they had to look forward to for the whole week.

Once he decided to come, grandbaby #2 came fast. Thankfully, I was already in the area when the texts started coming in. They went from “looks like things are starting to happen”, to “come now!”, to a panic filled “where are you at??” in less than 30 minutes. I was pretty concerned, knowing that my grand would wake in the morning to no mom and dad and Grandma instead. Surprise! Luckily, she was a champ. I had a wonderful time bonding with her and I wouldn’t trade it for the world. When your not-yet-three-year-old grandchild asks for your attention and responds with “Grama, …..you’re amazing”; I don’t know if it gets better than that. My long string of disappointments forgotten. Life is good again. Scott returned home late Saturday night, as did I. I missed him…. until he delivered the news that he had lost his cell phone some where between Canada and home. Ugh. I logged in to our account and reported the phone lost. He’s home for five minutes; and I’m back on duty.
Short lesson on the phone issue is that whatever you do; don’t get lax and not write down your Apple ID when you change it. It took over a week, but we (I – of course) managed to have the information sent to me so he could reset his password. His back-up to the Cloud was only a week old and almost nothing was lost. Somehow, before the week ended, we had gone from getting him a “pay as you go” old-style flip phone without internet access as punishment for his irresponsibility to us both getting new phones. With insurance. All that frustration behind us, we were ready to return to the cabin for a few days with Scott’s brothers and mother.
It turns out that vacationing with people outside of your household encompassing three generations requires patience and flexibility. One generation getting up at dawn while others sleep until noon. Meals at all times, naps for young and old alike, bedtimes fluctuating. Always waiting for someone to wake up, go to bed or get ready. We had a great time but learned that we are very much set in our ways and take our daily peace and quiet for granted. “Papa Scott” has a way to go before we can start vacationing with our own grandchildren!
We survived. The food and fellowship were great but the fishing was not. Everyone came up thinking that they held the secret to successful fishing only to find they did not. Another retirement realization; just because you have lots of time for fishing, doesn’t mean they will be biting. According to a google search on bass fishing and casting; it seems that the average bass fisherman (woman 😊) casts 3 times a minute. Assuming 27 days in the boat this year so far, fishing a minimum of say 3 hours a day, casting at 3 times a minute; it’s conceivable that I cast nearly 15,000 times and still haven’t landed but one baby pike. Sadly, the men haven’t out-fished me by much. Some call that crazy; I call it determined, and it’s still better than punching the timeclock.
