Retirement Talk

WHAT to do with the rest of your life?

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Episode 587 Moving to be close to children



This is Retirement Talk. I’m Del Lowery.

The topic for this is podcast is retiring and then moving to be closer to children. It is a thought that runs through many folks mind. It deserves a some thought.

My mother never drove a car – except way back before they required a driver’s license. She was dependent on one of her children to take her to the grocery store, the doctor, or to see her relatives. She was lucky in that she lived in a small town and could walk to her pharmacy, her church, and her friend’s houses. She was a pretty independent woman but as she grew older the need for some assistance was clear. One or more of her children provided that help. She was fortunate. Fortunate in more ways than one: she celebrated holidays, birthdays, times of trouble, and moments of joy with her family –at least part of it.

Brenda and I both drive wherever and whenever we choose. We bike, lift weights, practice Tai Chi and walk where we will. We are not in need of assistance at the present. But we are feeling the need or desire for family more each day. My wife constantly talks of trips to see the grandchildren. She has a compulsive drive to always check in and see how the little ones are doing. She calls them. She makes them gifts; buys them gifts. She makes them cards. She sends them pictures. She asks for pictures. As one grows older the family ties seem to be ever more valuable. We have achieved the life dreams of house, car, furniture, trips to foreign lands, etc. Now we start to realize that they really no longer draw us like they once did. The desire for family grows stronger each day. There is something about blood. We want a chance to sit down with our own son, and daughter, and to share in their lives and the lives of the grandchildren. We want to help and we want to celebrate.

The dilemma is starting to become personal in my own life. What’s a person to do? Move? Leave the community that you know and follow your children across the country? Or, perhaps encourage your children to move back to your community. That doesn’t seem like a very wise nor fair thing to do.

All moves are fraught with problems. For our kids to move families in our direction it would mean finding new jobs; not the easiest thing in the world. They have established careers and homes where they are. It is not an easy task to pick up and move an entire family over a thousand miles. As for us moving, that is much easier. We are retired. We could easily sellout and hit the road. The problem there is that we chose this place to live after our working careers ended because it was such a desirable place to live. We would have to give that up. That could be done. It would just require a mental adjustment to fit the physical move. At this point in time, that is starting to look like a very likely possibility.

We are lucky in that one of our children has already decided to make a move. Our daughter wants her kids to have grandparents close to share in their lives. She has put her home up for sale and is ready to move our direction.  Her decision to put the house on the market coincides with a housing market downturn in her area. Her house remains unsold. The move remains only wishful thinking. As a matter of fact I wrote this ten years ago. Her plans to move to have children and grandparents to liver closer never worked out

I recall a story I heard from my brother who was on a bike trip in the Rockies. He said he struck up a conversation with another fellow traveler in a small Wyoming town up in the mountains. They were all retired. The stranger told of having moved to be close to her children. Then the job transfer came and the children moved. She followed. Then it happened again. Her advice, “Never move to follow your children. There lives are young and may yet move them in many directions. It is a loosing cause.”

I’m reluctant to make a change. Her argument makes sense to me. So, the dilemma remains. Modern life demands mobility for education and employment. The family is uprooted. The extended family is a casualty. It all seems pretty academic until it happens to you. Suddenly, one day, it all becomes very personal.

I have heard of instances where this has worked out. I've heard of one. No more. I'm sure there are more but …

Let me know if you have faced this dilemma. I will be glad to pass your comments along to listeners. Maybe there is a solution that many of you have already discovered.

For Retirement Talk, this is Del Lowery.



If you have questions, comments or suggestions contact del@retirementtalk.org

 

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