Retirement Needs Stimulation

Cracking Retirement Header REtirement needs stimulation

The impact of Covid-19 has made me realise that a primary need in Retirement is stimulation. I have spoken of what are essentials for retirement before but this time I have particularly used the word Needs, not Wants. The two are quite different. Over 65’s have been dis-proportionally affected by Covid. This figure is skewed, because sadly the vast majority of those who lost their lives in most countries were already in poor health, and indeed often living in Care Homes or supported living facilities. Money becomes less of a differentiator than it might have been earlier in retirement. So in a pandemic, when you are not relying on employment income, Money may become a Want, not necessarily a Need.

A very important Need, is Health. Many of those who died had one or more underlying health conditions. This Need is a subject for another post. However, many people’s health deteriorates more quickly if they are not adequately stimulated, hence my decision to focus on Stimulation for this first post.

How Lockdown affected us (or rather didn’t!)

I am married to someone who is 70+. At the start of the pandemic, all people over 70, and/or those with severe underlying health conditions were advised that the best thing they could do to protect themselves was Stay Home, take daily exercise locally away from other people once a day, and minimise your interaction with other people. That has been our life for more than 100 days. It sounds OK doesn’t it? We have a comfortable home with a fair sized garden. We live on the edge of open fields where we can walk safely, away from others, and the 2m distance recommendation is not a problem to comply with.

But, that’s it! Apart from a few ‘socially distanced’ conversations with our neighbours, we have seen virtually nobody. Up until two weeks ago, we hadn’t even been allowed to share a coffee with friends in our garden, even at 2m. So for 90 days, we were in our own ‘closed bubble’. In 3 months, I have not ventured more than 1 mile north, and 3 miles south. We have used less than 1/4 tank of petrol. Yes, we were safe, we had all our essential needs met and we weren’t affected by the economic fallout in the same way younger people. They were taking the major impacts, losing their jobs, being furloughed, working from home etc.

But We Were Missing Stimulation

Life wasn’t the same. Not in many ways. All the things that add to life and give you stimulation had all vanished….

Cracking Reirement - Forbidden things in Lockdown

A New Line in Covid Essentials

Given all the panic buying at the start of pandemic, we are still lacking essentials such as flour. All our shops opened the other day, but the rules have changed – we are not allowed to enter a shop without a face covering. So now, even if something you want is available, everything takes thought, A checklist is needed before you go out. Got a facemask? (I’ve been making plenty of those…) Where’s the hand gel, the disposable gloves, the anti-bac wipes?

Cracking REtirement Covid essentials
Our Covid essentials….

The Impact of a Lack of Stimulation

How has the lack of stimulation affected me? At the highest level, not really, but when I dig down, I have picked up on a few things

  • My creativity has vanished. I have had 3 whole months to make things and write blog posts etc. I have made virtually nothing, and not posted anything on my blog for over a month. The lack of stimulation has taken away my inspiration. Now that was unexpected!!
  • I’ve lost some of my ‘get up and go’. We get up later. No urgency, nothing special to do. No appointments, no schedule.
  • We have eaten more rubbish, and had more wine than we have in ages. Normally, I wouldn’t consider putting potato chips, biscuits and sweets etc into my shopping basket, but it is amazing how much ‘comfort’ food sneaks into my online order. In my preparations for lockdown, I treated it a bit like Christmas – a time when all the forbidden things are allowed in the house for a week or two, but this was a 13 week holiday, and my waistline is showing it. I really admire those who have used lockdown as an opportunity to change their lifestyle for the better….

For others it has been so much worse. Many retirees who are in residential care or hospital, have effectively been cut off from family members. Their needs for food, heat & medication have been cared for, but they have been cut off from people they love for 3 or 4 months. Some have literally ‘given up’, and died. Family members have not been allowed to go and hold their hands as they passed. That must have been so hard.

The Real Importance of Stimulation

I start to feel myself coming back to life, as we start to have more social interaction. So I have taken time to analyse why I have had so little interest in what has been going on. I have felt quite oppressed by all the bad news of Covid. Although it has not really affected me personally, it still felt like a weight on my shoulders oppressing me.

Years ago, I couldn’t understand why my Mum who lived on her own, was always, as she said, ‘ready for the road’. Want to go to the supermarket – Yes. Want to go for a drive – Yes. Want to go out for dinner – Yes. Some of the outings I offered, I viewed as chores, but now, looking through different glasses, she needed those trips to boost her. She mainly lived in her own space, much as we have been doing in lockdown, and she welcomed every opportunity to do something different, no matter how mundane.

If we don’t get opportunities to do different things, we get stale. Every day is the same as the one before, and the one tomorrow. We cease to grow, both in mind and spirit. As humans, we are group animals, we like company, we revel in it.

Looking Forward

Just now I am looking forward to getting back to Slow Travel, a couple of months in a different place, does wonder for individual stimulation. Going to see my younger son and family in New Zealand, or going travelling in the Western Isles with my older son.

However, as I look forward to my later stages of retirement, when I am less healthy, less able to get about, I have decided that I need to include in my plan things that will continue to stimulate me. What sort of things are they? My immediate thoughts are…

Cracking Retirement Stimulation ideas...

Any Other Suggestions?

Please let me know…

If you have enjoyed this post, and would like to pin it, please do – just click the image below.

Cracking Retirement Pinterest Retirement needs stimulation

18 comments

  1. I know what you mean about those little treats in the shopping basket. I just have to look at them in the kitchen cupboard and an inch adds itself to my waistline! I’ve also been amazed by how much I “enjoyed” three visits for very uncomfortable tests in outpatients. At first, I thought it was because of the social interaction, but then realised the stimulation from a novel experience also ranked highly. Not that I’m advocating the addition of hospital ordeals to your list but new experiences definitely. My mother, at 86, learnt to drive (she’s never mastered a car on a road) a ride-on lawn mower in lockdown and it gave her a terrific boost.

  2. What a very wise blog and although I am younger than many retirees I too felt much of what you have. We all do need to plan, and write it down, for the future. Thanks

    1. Thanks Physician On Fire. My stats have gone up with your recommendation – thank you!!

      Seriously though, as a young retiree, I can do many things to improve my retirement (aged 64, after 9 years retired), but by the time you get to 80+ your options become so much more limited. However, if in advance of that, you have already built a strong support network, they will support you for many years to come.

  3. Move to N.Z.! I would love to but their immigration rules would make Trump ecstatic. You OTOH appear to have family there so i think you can do it without losing 3/4 of your assets. Once Biden gets in it will be much more $$. Consider it at least…

    1. Hi Bill,
      Yes, I have family there, and I would love to consider a move so I can see my wee grandson regularly. We satisfy the NZ requirements, but the deep question is – Do I really want to move, given my other son is in the UK? Answer – the best is 6 months in either place, I think…

  4. This is an amazing article, i have learned lot about retirement from this article. I will try to incorporate all these methods as well.

  5. My wife and I are both mid sixties and we haven’t had any change in our lives. We run in the mornings with our friends. We play tennis outside almost daily. We trailer our boat to area lakes and rivers to fish. We off road with friends, these are all socially distanced activities by nature. We cook together which we enjoy, especially with fresh produce from our garden and those of our friends. We’ve had some get togethers at a friend’s lake house and I just got back from an 800 mile road trip to ocean fish. Nobody I know has tested positive here in the rural southern US and our area has had few cases. Yesterday I drove halfway across our state to play seniors team tennis. We might be over stimulated here by so far it’s been a very normal summer.

    1. I’m so glad to hear it! You have been more fortunate than us.

      Our lockdown has been a lot stricter. We have only just been released from a 5 mile restriction for leisure activities after nearly 4 months. Our shops within shopping malls just opened last week. We are still restricted in the number of people who can meet up, even outside. Our bars and restaurants are still not open for inside eating!

  6. Isn’t it weird how creativity just vanishes for some of us in times like these? I had a whole list of things I was going to accomplish now that we are prevented from doing much of anything. Pretty much none of it has gotten done. Oh well…. At least we seemed to have over-binged on the junk food and are turning to slightly more healthy options these days. (Sadly, I’m only talking about giving up Cheetos and Doritos for popcorn, but baby steps….right?)

    1. Hi Lisa and Robert
      Thanks for stopping by. I’m glad I’m not alone. I suppose we all go into a sort of limbo.
      Like you I’m now easing up on the junk.
      Erith

  7. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and experiences.

    In some ways, lockdown has been a bit of a ‘retirement’ practice for me and I’ve found that I’m fine being at home for long periods of time.

    However, I realise that it’s not very realistic as I still have work to stimulate my mind – in retirement, something else entirely would need to be found as a replacement.

    Travel did feature quite highly on my things to do in retirement but now, I’m not so sure.

    1. Hi Weenie
      Good to hear from you.
      Travel has always been a big part of my retirement plan. Husband’s brother is getting married in a very small ceremony in September in SW England, and my husband is saying I don’t think we should go. I was originally – yes, I agree, but more and more, we have to start living and take a little risk. If we drive there, we have just 1 toilet stop, then stay in a hotel where they have cleaned it before we arrive, then there has to be limited risk. We can’t always hide!!! If we are sensible, we should be OK.
      I take comfort from one of the early graphs, where just washing your hands reduced the risk by two thirds!
      For me Retirement in Lockdown is a very small fraction of our retirement over the previous 9 years!!

Comments are closed.