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7 Ways to Happiness! Baby Boomers Rock!

7 Ways to Happiness! Baby Boomers Rock!

Happy Life
Happy Life of Grand Kids

Ah, Happiness, that sometimes elusive emotion we all strive for.  Now that we Baby Boomers are in our 50’s and 60’s, retirement is on the horizon, Happiness can, but shouldn’t,  seem even more elusive.  After all, our bodies are changing, our minds are changing, we change jobs or retire and most of our kids have left the nest.  Hopefully, they haven’t had to come back, yet.

This is a lot of change happening in our personal universe all at the same time.  Some of us adapt to these changes easily and quickly.  “The good news is that with age comes happiness,” said study author Yang Yang, a University of Chicago sociologist. “Life gets better in one’s perception as one ages.”  And Duke University aging expert Linda George say, an older person may realize “it’s fine that I was a schoolteacher and not a Nobel prize winner.”  I believe we all have special talents and skills and we are perfect the way we are.

Others, maybe not so much.  Seriously, this is a lot for our brains, bodies, pride and egos to handle.

So, how do we deal with aging and continue to live life with zest and swagger? Here are some tips on how to become and stay a Happy Baby Boomer.

1.  Life is Simple.  don’t get bogged down with all the little details, keep loving yourself, happiness comes from acceptance-of yourself, your situation, your challenges  and “who” you are; remain true to yourself.

2.  Realize that life “is what it is“, in other words we’re gonna get older no matter what, we can’t stop aging.   “It’s all good“, meaning just deal with it, and make life a good experience.  We might as well, “enjoy life, there’s plenty of time to be dead.” (TEDX Pune, Aisha Chaudhari, Being Happy and Living in the Moment.).

3.  Realize Happiness is a chosen Attitude, it only comes from within our minds.  Choose to be happy, focus your thoughts on good things, be grateful for what we have, and control your thoughts.  You can say to yourself, “I Declare I am Happy”, or “I choose to be happy today”.  Block out the negative ones.  We must become the Master of Our Brains.  Our brains are just like the worlds’ best computers, they do what we tell them to do.  At least most of the time.  So, tell your Master Computer Brain to Be Happy.

4.  Be in the present and expect an awesome future.  Don’t get stuck in the past.  As the old  saying goes, “That was yesterday, today is TODAY!”  We enjoy life more when we focus on the moment, what we’re doing, right now, at this moment. Get lost in it, enjoy it and do your best.  However, it’s fine to remember and reminisce about past events and activities and accomplishments.  This can cheer you up at a sad time.  The key is not to dwell on past regrets.  Remember the good times, enjoy the present moment and have something to look forward to in the near future.

5.  As for our aging bodies, KEEP ACTIVE!  keep working on your Bucket List.  That’s the secret.  Take walks, alone, with your dog, with a friend or two, no matter how far you can walk.  Dance, move that body, all of it, even those hips.  Swim, exercise, or learn Tai chi.  Even the simplest Yoga stretches and movements help your body and mind be healthier.  The better we take care of our body now, the longer it will last.  Other ways to feel valuable and to feel satisfied is by volunteering and helping others.  There’s hundreds of ways to do this.

6.  Chill out.  Stop being so serious, relax, tell jokes, sing, get a hobby, Laugh Every Day! Be Social and you’ll keep the blues away.  In an ABC news article “81-year-old George O’Hare, a retired Sears manager in Willowbrook, Ill. He’s active with church, AARP and does motivational speaking, too. His wife is still living, and he’s close to his three sons and four grandchildren. “I’m very happy because I’ve made friends that are still living,” O’Hare said. “I like to go out and speak in schools about motivation.”  “Happiness is getting out and being with people, and that’s why I recommend it,” he said.

7.  Most important learn to Love Yourself and Be Your On Best Friend!  The voices in our heads can be very self critical.    When that happens tell the voices to go away, scat, and shut up, because they are wrong.  We can forgive ourselves for the past and mentally move on to the present.  Wake up each morning and count your blessings, own your potential and who you are.  Be proud of that and have confidence in it.  Imagine what it would be like to best your own best friend, what would you say, how would you act?  Now, go do it!  Start being your best friend TODAY!

And as a reminder, Happiness leads to success, so why not Get Your Happy On right now!

Thanks for stopping by, I hope you enjoyed this chat,  thanks, John

Voices In My Head

Voices In My Head

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Be Quiet

Baby Boomers and almost everyone have those negative voices in your head that make you confused, frustrated and hold you back from living a full life.

We’re not talking about Intuition here, that’s another subject for later.

The pesky, negative voices in your head, often called Monkey Brain, can be too much to handle.  They can be destructive, wrong, annoying, and aren’t the real you.  Don’t listen too them unless they are warning you of danger ahead.  How do you deal with them and shut them up?  This article really hits the spot with 6 great tips..

From Psychology Today, Mridu Khullar Relph

6 Things You’re Saying To Yourself That Are Holding You Back

That loud voice in your head is setting you up to fail. Here’s how to ignore it.
Posted Sep 29, 2015

There’s an annoying voice in your head.

It says things that you would never say to your brother or your best friend or your spouse but that you say to yourself. Frequently.

The voice needs to be silenced because it’s making you feel things about yourself or your situation that simply aren’t true. It makes you doubt yourself, gets you confused about important life decisions, and makes bleak predictions about the future that it cannot possibly know.

Worse yet, you believe it and that’s holding you back.

I know because I have that annoying voice in my head, too, and some days it takes everything I have to not listen, and if I’ve listened, to not pay attention, and if I’ve paid attention, to not believe it (link is external). Or if I’ve believed it, to wake up the next day and try and ignore it anyway.

What are the things you say to yourself when no one’s listening? Recognize any of these?

“I don’t know how to [X].”

I’ve noticed that the reason a lot of us have for not trying something is that we feel we don’t have the necessary experience or expertise in X, Y, and Z.

And for any among you thinking that you don’t know anything about querying or researching or interviewing, here’s my solution: You can learn. It might take a bit of time and it might be a lot of hard work, but there are two things it won’t be: expensive and impossible.

Maybe you won’t be able to achieve your goal next month or three months from now or even six months from now. But a year from now? You’ll have learned something new. You’ll have experimented. You’ll have taken a risk.

So if all that’s stopping you from reaching your goals is the voice in your head that says, “I don’t know how” answer it with the simple declaration of “I’m going to learn.”

“What if I’m wrong?”

I hate being wrong. Seriously. Hate it.

Being wrong costs me time and money. It costs me assignments and respect from editors (or so I tell myself). It costs me respect from you, my readers, because you’re not here to read all about my failures, right? You want to read about what’s working, what makes money, and what techniques get success.

But here’s what I’m learning constantly: People want to know the process. If I succeed, you can go back and replicate everything I’ve done and if I don’t, we’ll all have learned what not to do without thousands of individual hours wasted.

So, what if it turns out that I’m wrong? What if you’re taking a risk right now and you turn out to be wrong? Then listen to this and repeat it to yourself however many times you need to: If you’re wrong, that’s okay because you’ve made a mistake. It doesn’t make you a bad person, an untalented hack, a fraud or a bad lover. All it does is make you wrong. In this particular instance.

It’s not a reflection on all the decisions in your life up to this point or on all the decisions you’re going to make from this point forward. It’s not a reflection on your decision-making abilities. It’s not a reflection on who you are as a writer or a person or as a mother. It is one mistake. You were wrong. And that’s okay.

“So-and-so tried that and failed.”

This is a common line used by people to hold themselves back. They (um, I) find excuses to not do something because someone else tried it and failed and so why reinvent the wheel, why repeat someone else’s mistakes, right? This excuse is particularly damning because it comes with such solid logic. But the truth is that many of us use “she tried and failed” as an excuse to not try ourselves.

The trick is not to give up trying but to ask the right questions about why someone else failed. What did they do wrong? And what can you do better?

“I don’t have enough experience…”

Like the “I don’t know how to X” line, when you tell yourself that you have no experience, you limit yourself because instead of going out and getting that experience, you stop trying.

You’re not limited because you can always make up for lack of experience and lack of knowledge by going out and getting it.

So instead of saying you don’t have experience, start thinking instead, about how you can go about getting it.

“Why should so-and-so speak to me? I’m a nobody.”

This is one I say to myself often. In one of my writing groups recently, we were talking about how to network, make contacts, and push ourselves beyond our capabilities. I hesitate to contact people for meetings, I feel uncomfortable asking a CEO of a major company out to lunch because I feel like I’m imposing on his or her time, even if I’ve managed to make myself known to them. I asked my writing group about this and the amazing Susan Weiner (link is external) (author of Financial Blogging: How to Write Powerful Posts That Attract Clients) wrote: “Don’t assume that you have nothing to offer. In fact, you could say, ‘In return, I’d be happy to act as a sounding board for you’ or something like that.”

Words that I, and you, should tape up on our walls. Just ask. Don’t make up their minds for them. At least give them a chance to say yes.

“I just don’t know what to do any more.”

Sometimes, this is true. In fact, it was true for me not too long ago. There’s no easy answer to this. All the pep talks in the world won’t help if you’re stuck and simply haven’t reached a point of clarity that will help you decide on a next step.

I have learned, from experience, that the best thing—the only thing—to do when you don’t know what to do is to do something. Anything. Don’t sit idle and don’t obsess. Do what feels good, what comes naturally. Then do something else. Until you’ve figured out your course of action, keep moving and keep doing. The worst thing you can do is to become paralyzed and stop moving at all.

In time, your course will become clear and the momentum you’ve built by staying on the course will help propel you forward.

What’s the voice in your head telling you? How is it holding you back?

(from https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/culturally-incorrect/201509/6-things-you-re-saying-yourself-are-holding-you-back)

Thanks for stopping by and reading this post, Enjoy Your Day, Live Life Well, John

Memories Keep Special People In Our Hearts

Memories Keep Special People In Our Hearts

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Memories of good times and special people from our past create very strong emotions.  Sometimes it’s great happiness and feelings of being blessed by that special person, other times it creates regret towards what could of been or what you wished had happened.  It’s different for everyone and each situation.  Regardless, we can’t change the past.  It is what it is and it’s all good!  We must enjoy our good memories with positive thoughts and feelings, and learn a lesson from them.  Then, we can file them away for later and move forward, not getting stuck in them and we then create new memories out of our bright future. As I like to say, our thoughts become our reality.

Live Life Well, John

Growing Up In The Shade of The Maple Tree

Growing Up In The Shade of The Maple Tree

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Our Family Maple Tree

When we were young lovers and just married we planted a tiny maple tree in our back yard.  Over the years, it has grown strong and tall.  Our kids have done the same.

This is a short story about our family’s connection and love for our Family Maple Tree.  Hope you feel it and enjoy it.

Maybe you will plant a Family Tree for your family.  Enjoy!

Growing Up In
 The Shade of The Maple Tree

The term Tree of Life comes to mind as I relax under our beautiful, tall and wide-spread maple tree.

It began it’s awesome life as a “start”.   It’s roots and legacy go back to grandma Ida’s yard, who knows where it was before that.

We planted it when we started having our kids some 30 years ago. It’s seen them, and us, go through all stages of life, with the good times and difficult times.  That’s why I call our maple tree The Kids’ Tree or The Family Tree.

All the kids, including our son’s best friend Jason love our tree. Somehow it just makes them happy. Just being around it gives everyone pleasure, comfort, and peace of mind.
Really, it’s given much pleasure to all.  It’s protected us from harsh summer temps. We take hot summer naps in it’s shade and dream of what could be.  There have been large family Bar BQs and plenty of games and family discussions around it.  We feel safe, protected, magical and invincible as it stands over us, so tall.  It encourages us to go outside and sit quietly while we appreciate all we have and the blessings of mother nature.

The Family Maple Tree sheds its leaves in winter, and lets in the crisp blue sky between snow storms. We watch inside from the dinning room as the cold of winter comes and lays down a white blanket of snow all around it.  The mood gets quiet and we listen to the sounds of winter. Every morning we rush to peer out the window to check if there are and animal or bird tracks in the new snow.

The tree has watched us grow into our married, adult roles and watched our babies grow up and have their babies.

It’s girth is bigger now, with yellowish green moss and other signs of aging, just like my wife and I.   I guess that makes it a Grand Tree, just like we are now Grand Parents.

As the bible says, there is a season for everything. Now is the “planting season” for the next generation of kids and Maple Trees. So, I think it’s time for our grand kids to have their own Maple Tree so they too can play in it’s shade and to grow up under it while making memories and Kodak moments of their own.

Today, I think back to seeing that scrawny start of a tree sticking out of the ground, tied to a post for support, not realizing the pleasure it would bring our family through out our lifetime.

Thanks Family Maple Tree and our to kids and their friends for enjoying each other and making a happy family and happy life.
Love, Dad

© John McFadden 2015

 

19 Tips to Making a Positive Impression

19 Tips to Making a Positive Impression

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You’re at a party for work or a social occasion and you know maybe one person.  How do you get through it without hiding in the corner or embarrassing yourself or feeling awkward?  How do you network and meet new people?  This applies during any time of life, including when you’re a Baby Boomer Grandpa or retired.

There’s some great advice here, in what I call, 19 Tips to Making a Positive Impression, on how to meet people and make a positive impression, so they’ll want to talk to you or work with you in the future.  I specially like numbers 1,2,6,7 and 12.

Here it is (http://www.buzzfeed.com/carolynkylstra/impress-literally-everyone-you-meet?bftw=main):

Thank you Carolyn Kylstra for great advice.

19 Tips To Impress Literally Everyone You Meet

It takes between 34 and 100 milliseconds to make a first impression. Here’s how to make it a good one!

1. First things first: Remember that most people you’re about to meet are just as uncomfortable as you are.

19 Tips To Impress Literally Everyone You Meet

Tons of people self-identify as shy — in fact, the numbers of shy people have grown in the past 20 years (58% in 2007, up from 40% in 1995). “According to the shyness research, most of us feel uncomfortable walking into a room where we don’t know many people,” Susan RoAne, keynote speaker and author of How to Work a Room: The Ultimate Guide to Making Lasting Connections—In Person and Online (William Morrow, 2013), told BuzzFeed Life.

Bottom line: You’re definitely not the only one dreading this cocktail party, and that should hopefully help take the edge off. And with that in mind…

2. Shift your attitude before you walk into the room to focus on others and not on yourself.

19 Tips To Impress Literally Everyone You Meet

“A lot of the time we go into a social situation thinking, How can I make myself more comfortable?” RoAne says. “Your attitude shift should be, What can I do to make other people comfortable around me?” See that first tip again for a reminder about why this attitude adjustment matters. Bonus points: “The person you’re talking to will become more comfortable,” RoAne says, “which makes you more comfortable!”

3. Smile!

People make snap judgments about whether or not you’re a “trustworthy” person after only 34 milliseconds of looking at your face, according to research from Princeton University. And further research found that your facial expressions can influence those judgments.

Simply put: “People judge smiling faces as trustworthy, and angry-looking faces as untrustworthy,” Peter Mende-Siedlecki, Ph.D., a postdoctoral researcher in the psychology department at NYU, told BuzzFeed Life. Mende-Siedlecki is also one of the co-creators of a TED lesson called “Should You Trust Your First Impression?”

4. Before you go somewhere new, know what you’re getting yourself into.

Before you go somewhere new, know what you're getting yourself into.

Flicker: benjamin sTone / Creative Commons / Via Flickr: benchilada

Before you go do something where you know you’ll meet new people — whether that’s a job interview or your partner’s office holiday party — do your research. “Figure out who’s going to be there, what the theme of the event will be,” RoAne said. “That helps you customize your approach, dress for the occasion, and prepare for potential conversation starters.”

Mende-Siedlecki agrees: “It’s a matter of knowing the context that you’re walking into, and knowing the norms for the environment.” Mental preparation can put you on the right wavelength before you even walk in the door — and will minimize how much spur-of-the-moment thinking you have to do. And dressing as formally or informally as other people are will make you feel more comfortable and less self-conscious. This allows you to focus more on the conversations you’re having, rather than wonder if people are judging you for wearing a T-shirt to a formal event.

5. Prepare a seven- to nine-second introduction about yourself.

Prepare a seven- to nine-second introduction about yourself.

Getty Images/iStockphoto Carosch

“This is NOT the 15- to 30-second networking thing,” RoAne says. Rather, it’s a warm introduction, followed by one or two statements about yourself. The idea is to give the other person something that they can comment on to get the conversation going. RoAne suggests explaining your relationship to the host, and making an observation that the other person can ask questions about or add their own observations to.

For instance, something I could have said at my brother’s recent graduation: “Hi, it’s so nice to meet you! I’m Carolyn, Jimmy’s sister. I’m from New York, and it’s been great to explore Chicago this weekend.”

6. Find a more interesting way to talk about what you do.

19 Tips To Impress Literally Everyone You Meet

The standard go-to when meeting people is to introduce yourself by saying your name and your job. The problem with that is unless you do something utterly fascinating, it’s not going to drive conversation forward. You need to give the person you’re talking to more to work with.

RoAne suggests that instead of stating your job title and company, give a more general and even mysterious statement about what you do — like by stating the benefit of your job. “When you give them the benefit of what you do, you give them the opportunity to ask questions,” she says. For example: If you’re a realtor you can say you help put a roof over peoples’ heads. If you’re a textbook salesperson you can say you give kids the tools they need to learn.

And if this sounds too cheesy or embarrassing, you can always stick with your job title and company as long as you add an extra line in there describing some unusual element of your day-to-day. For example: “I’m a health editor at BuzzFeed, and I spend as much time talking to doctors as I do hunting for the perfect GIF.”

7. Learn these four little magic words: “And how about you?”

19 Tips To Impress Literally Everyone You Meet
Emily Fleischaker / BuzzFeed

So you’ve just explained the benefit of your job, and that elicited some good chit-chat for a minute or so. Instead of turning to the person and saying, “And what do you do?” RoAne suggests leaving it a lot more open-ended. “The four magic words are: And how about you? That invites them to tell you about themselves, and to go in the direction they’re most excited to go in,” she says.

The beauty of this language is that it helps you avoid potential awkwardness — like if you’re talking to someone who’s unemployed, or who hates their job but would love to talk about their hobbies, or who works in an unpaid capacity as a stay-at-home-parent or caregiver. Asking them to talk about themselves is much kinder than pigeonholing them into a conversation about how they currently make money (or don’t).

8. Wear something that makes you feel awesome — it’ll make you more approachable.

19 Tips To Impress Literally Everyone You Meet

“Wear clothes that make you feel good, because you’ll have more confidence,” RoAne says. Along those lines, comfort is key! “If I’m wearing shoes that hurt my feet, I’ll be wincing — that’s unapproachable.”

9. Give compliments that encourage conversation.

Give compliments that encourage conversation.

Vadmary / The Wire

Don’t just tell someone you love her shoes. Instead, say that you love them, they’re fantastic, and you’ve been looking for a pair just like them — where’d she get them? “When you’re making an observation, accompany your observation with a question or a statement that invites them to give you a bit more,” RoAne says.

10. Read more. Read everything!

Read more. Read everything!

Flickr: Patrick Gage Kelley / Creative Commons / Via Flickr: patrickgage

“In order to be a good conversationalist, you have to be well-read,” RoAne says. And that doesn’t mean you should stick to the high-brow stuff, either. “I know a couple people who run associations, and they have their staff read People magazine before they go to an event with their members,” RoAne says. “That guarantees they know what’s going on and can talk about it!”

So maybe you don’t care at all about the fact that Taylor Swift just released the most perfect album of all time. But you should at least know that it happened, because chances are someone else will care about it and will be interested in chatting about it.

11. When in doubt, talk about food.

When in doubt, talk about food.

After all, everyone eats. And most people like talking about it, RoAne says. “They talk about recipes, they talk about diets, they talk about restaurants.” An easy way to talk about food? Strike up conversations with people at the buffet table. Nom nom nom.

Along those lines, may I recommend the BuzzFeed Food newsletter? Food for thought, straight in your inbox.

12. Don’t wait for people to approach you.

Don't wait for people to approach you.

“A major roadblock that people have is that we’ve all learned to wait to be approached,” RoAne says. “But good things come to those who initiate.” When you approach anyone, smile warmly, stand up straight, and make good eye contact — “People who do those three things make the other person feel immediately at ease,” she says.

13. Talk to the person who isn’t talking to anyone.

19 Tips To Impress Literally Everyone You Meet
Focus Features / Via mrwgifs.com

“The one person that’s very easy to talk to is the person standing alone,” RoAne says. “They might be shyer than you. And they’re most likely going to be so relieved that someone’s found them. When you approach someone to talk to, what you’re inherently saying is, ‘You look interesting, you look smart.’” And that’ll make them feel great and appreciate your kindness.

14. Join groups of three or more, especially if they look like they’re having fun.

“A group of three or more people is typically more open to a new person than just two people having a conversation,” RoAne says. When it’s three or more people, they’re not necessarily talking about something personal. When it’s just two people, an unexpected third can feel like a crowd.

15. Find an equal balance between making observations, asking questions, and revealing things about yourself.

19 Tips To Impress Literally Everyone You Meet
HBO / Via poorexcuses.com

This balance is the key to being a great conversationalist, RoAne says. “If you’re always observing, you’re probably pontificating,” she says. “If you’re always asking questions, you can come across as a busybody, or nosy. And if you’re always revealing things about yourself, you’re going to share TMI. The magic’s in the mix.”

Here are examples of each type of statement, in case it helps:
Observation: Wow, this hotel has recently been renovated and it looks gorgeous!
Question: Do you remember what this place used to look like?
Revelation: I was last here a year ago, before they fixed it up.

16. When you’re standing in a circle of people, notice if someone is trying to join in — take a half-step backward to open the circle up.

When you’re standing in a circle of people, notice if someone is trying to join in — take a half-step backward to open the circle up.

Flickr: Ari Helminen / Creative Commons / Via Flickr: picsoflife

“If you include someone that’s in on the periphery, it’s a smart thing to do, it’s savvy, and it’s nice,” RoAne says. “You’ll make a great impression on that person, and on the other people in the circle.”

17. Be nice to everyone.

19 Tips To Impress Literally Everyone You Meet
Paramount Pictures / Via youtube.com

Let’s say you’re at a work or networking event, and a lot of people brought their spouses or children or guests. Your ultimate motive might be to rub shoulders with people who could be good connections at work, but it’s important to pay attention to everyone. “Be nice to the guests, the spouses, and the children of the people who might be in the room with you,” RoAne says. Think about it: “If I work with this woman and her spouse is standing there and I’m ignoring that person, that’s not smart, that’s not nice, and that doesn’t make a good first impression.” Quite the opposite, in fact.

18. When you’re talking to someone, give them your full attention.

“The key to making a great impression is really listening when you’re talking to someone,” RoAne says. That means don’t zone out, check your phone, or look over their shoulder or past their head to see if you can find someone else in the room who you might prefer talking to.

Paying attention and being fully involved in the conversation has benefits beyond not being a jerk. For starters, it might help make the conversation flow more easily. “People tell you what they want to talk about, if you listen,” RoAne says. “But if you’re planning your grocery list in your head, you’re going to miss picking up on small cues that they’re excited, or bored.”

19. Learn to make a graceful exit from a conversation.

RoAne offers this game plan for when you’re ready to mingle elsewhere:

1. Interrupt yourself, not them.

2. Smile warmly, tell them what a pleasure it’s been to talk to them about [fill in the blank… whatever it was you were talking about], and that you could just monopolize their time all night.

3. Say, “But if you’ll excuse me, I need to…” And then offer an excuse. Try: Catch up with my friend from college over there. Grab a bite to eat; those cookies are calling my name. Go help my husband take care of the kid. Go thank the hostess.

You may also want to offer your hand for a handshake, which most people understand to mean, “It was nice meeting you, good-bye.”

“The point is to leave a conversation knowing that you made someone feel better because they’ve talked to you,” RoAne says. Making it clear that you were paying attention, enjoyed the conversation, and are leaving for a reason (rather than because the person is boring) all help.

6 Great Activities For Retirement

6 Great Activities For Retirement

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Follow Your Retirement Dreams

Baby Boomers, Grandpas and Retirees, we all find ourselves with the true blessing of more time to do what we’ve always wanted to do!  What do we want to do with this time?  I’m re-inventing myself as what I call a Free Range Explorer.

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Until now,  I’ve always been a right brain creative type in left brain logical type jobs and careers.  I did what I had to do to support my wife and children.  No regrets, it is what it is and it’s all good! We all turned out pretty well.

Now, my life has changed dramatically for the better.  I’ve decided to focus my time on things I love.  Here are the 6 Great Activities For Retirement that I enjoy.  There are Many More, but these make me happy and are on top of my list.

They aren’t in order of preference, just random.

Photography – I remember my Dad taking lots of photos while on our “summer trips”. It was something he enjoyed along with the “slide shows” we all endeared after we got home.  Reliving those memories got me interested enough to get a 35mm SLR(I’m dating myself) and take a few photography classes during school.  My interest continued and is still strong today.  Now I have the time to take outings and trips and get more serious about making photographs.  Our house is filled with various 8×10 and 16×20 museum quality canvas prints of scenes from the South of France, Amsterdam. Norway, England and all over America and of course, children and grandchildren. It’s nice to have part of “me” hanging on the wall to enjoy.

Travel – Along with photography, my Dad taught me the love a worldwide travel when I was young.  So much so, that I’ve had careers with an international airline and elite travel agency. Now we travel to visit our children who are spread out.  And we travel mostly America and Europe learning from the locals, and experiencing their sites, nature and cuisine.

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Cooking – Cooking is fun and satisfying and has a nice reward at the end, Eating!  For fun, get your kids and grand kids involved with the planning, preparation, cooking and serving, and, oh yeah, the eating.  This makes for a nice bonding time and they might even learn something about getting along, planning and life.  I plan on adding Cooking classes in some of the cities I visit.

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Writing – Now that you have more time in retirement, you can write the block buster, all American book.  Write stories for your grand kids. Write your biography. A romance novel,  or a cookbook or a How To book.  Those last 3 happen to be the biggest selling niche’s on Amazon Kindle books.  After all these years you’re probably an expert at something.  Share that knowledge with the world on a blog or ebook.  The options are endless.  If you don’t think you can write a book, outsource it, based on your knowledge, to a professional writer on Fiverr.com for a small fee.  They can make your cover, do all the layout and get it ready for you to upload to Kindle.

Friends and Family – Your friends and family always need your attention and nurturing.  Try finding your roots by studying genealogy. Spend time with your family and friends, do things with them and have fun connecting.  Ride bikes, go to a movie, take a hike, learn a craft, restore an old car, or learn to knit or play cards together or play musical instruments together.  If your relationships are strained, now’s the time to reconnect.  Be the brave one and reach out to them, in the long run they’ll appreciate it.

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This is only 6 possibilities out of hundreds.  It might take some time to figure out what is most important to you but it’s worth the effort. Now that I’m moving into retirement I’ve been reinventing myself.  I’ve had to do some deep soul searching.  Even now, I’m still not done.  It will be an evolving mission with lots of change of route a long the way.  That can make life even more exciting.

Thank goodness we have the time and resources (more than ever before) to do what we want and become our best and happiest selves.   So how do you REALLY want to spend your time?  Go ahead, create your dreams and Live Life Well, everyday!

Thanks for stopping by today, John

A Free Range Explorer

 

Purpose of your life

Purpose of your life

Quiz, what is your Purpose in Life and what’s most important, working hard, being a good employee, and earning a lot of money and buying lots of stuff for you and your family?

Or spending time with your family, laughing and having fun with them and living your purpose?

Here’s a question to ask yourself:

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Mark was a good guy.  He worked hard, seldom took sick leave, could always be counted on.  When he went home he faithfully cared for his wife with her medical conditions. He spent a lot of time at church, always taking on responsibility.  The people at work and some a church didn’t know he had two kids waiting for him a home because he always focused on work and his duties and didn’t talk about them very often.

Eventually, he couldn’t take care of himself and his wife due to aging.  They moved closer to the kids so they could take care of their parents.  Their kids opened their hearts to make sure Mom and Dad had everything they needed and wanted.  They took them to church every Sunday and visited them often.  In Mark’s 90’s, he finally turned to one of his sons and said, “I’m sorry I never had time for you.”  But, it was too late, his time was coming to the end.  His wife died a few months later, and he passed soon after that.

Think about it.  What’s more important in life?  What’s your real purpose in life?  Maybe you should think about it and start working on what’s most important now rather than later.

Thanks for stopping by, John

Secret to Success

Secret to Success

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A Thought For Life

We all have dreams of Success in many areas of life.  We want Success in our careers, relationships, love, with and for our kids, and to get what we want in life.

In my life, I’ve had a lot of struggles and disappointments in school, relationships and career.  My negative thinking made it harder than it really was and harder than it had to be.  I could of eliminated a lot of physical and mental stress had I know two simple “facts of life”.  Now that I’ve realized this and am using these facts of life, I’m much happier.  Life is good!

So, what are those two vital facts of life?

First,  I learned that our brains are the most powerful computers known to mankind.  What we think about the most becomes our reality.  Thinking and seeing in a positive, optimistic way and speaking positively will turn your life around.

The second fact of life, and there are many more you’ll read about here soon, is there’s only so much thinking and planning you can do.  Ultimately, you have to start Doing.  You must take Action.  When I did this things starting falling in place, I was happier, I learned what I like and experienced life and became happier.

Today, I’m focused on taking action and doing.  Each task or action I DO brings me closer to my dream life.  Go ahead, try it!

Thanks for stopping by, John

Your Passion Is ? Wanna find out ?

Your Passion Is ? Wanna find out ?

What the heck do I want to be when I grow up?  Yes, recently I was still asking myself that question, even though retirement is right around the corner.

Currently, I’m on a medical leave of absence from my career.  Because I have a lot of down time, and I’m nearing traditional retirement age, like most Baby Boomers are, I’ve been searching for my true passion hoping to pursue it, whatever it is, when I reinvent myself for the next chapter in my life, “Retirement”. I may retire from “work” but never from life.  I’ll always be learning, traveling, spending fun time with my kids and grand kids and experiencing new activities that I like rather then what others tell me to do. As Steve McQueen has said, “I live for myself and I answer to nobody.”

During this search I’ve taken online tests such as the one from Dr. Gary Smalley to help me find my illusive passion. He say’s I’m like a Golden Retriever, ok, that’s good.  Myers Briggs is a traditional test used by student counselors.  I’ve found advice on YouTube, some good, some not so good.  TED talks are inspiring. I discovered Marie Forleo and like her short videos.  Enjoy the one below.  I’ve toyed with Horoscopes and Numerology and done way too much online “research”.  Then there’s making a list of what you’re good at and what talents and skills you have, compare lists and find what’s common.  Sound familiar?

None of these really did the job for me.  Something was always lacking.  That’s because the true answer is inside you and you have to find it there, and feel it and see it. Ultimately, I found two easy activities helpful.  Quiet Time or Meditation and Doing are the best for me.

Just sitting quietly, clearing your mind, and focusing on one thing, such as your breath are very calming.  After a few tries, you’ll be amazed at the ideas, feelings and inspiration that come up.  They are Hints from your soul as to what is good for you.

During my quiet time I got a few hints and ideas as to what I want to do or work on.  In the past, I’ve been stuck here, wondering which one I want to do the most, what’s best for me, which one can I help the most people by doing it.  I hate being stuck not being able to decide.

Then, last week, I found this video.  In it Marie Forleo says, “stop thinking and start doing…”  It makes sense to me.  Choice one activity you’re most inspired by and start DOING IT.  Another time work on the other one.  Then notice how you and your body react to each of them.  Which is most exciting, which can you spend hours at and not get bored or tired.  Which do you think about the most.  Very soon, you will notice how to react to each and which feels the best.  There it is, that’s what your passion it right now.  Finally!!!  I’ll let Marie explain it better.  Watch her video now.

So, what do you think of that?  This was a big eye opener for me!  I honestly feel like I’m on the best path, for me, I’ve ever been on.

I hope this inspires you and helps you, my Baby Boomer friend, find your passion in this new chapter of life.

Thanks for stopping by, John

Live Life Well!