PERSONAL DISCIPLINE: AS IMPORTANT AS TIME

For months I have been looking forward to my retirement date. For me, retirement equated to inheriting a lot of time that I didn’t own before. That time belonged to my employer. I still work part time, but the schedule is less than half the hours I worked pre-retirement, and even more if you count the commute time that has been taken out of the equation (I work primarily at home). AND the time is flexible – I don’t have to be working within specific time frames dictated by my employer.

And therein lies both the pleasure and the challenge.

First and foremost, I LOVE not getting up between 2:30 and 3:30 in the morning! I’m a morning person, so I still get up early (around 5:30 most mornings), but it is when my body wakes up naturally, not when an alarm jars me rudely from sleep or a wonderful dream.

I’m not tied to a desk for a defined number of hours per day. I work when there is work to be done. Doing my job is, relatively speaking, easy. Coordinating when I work with all of the other priorities I set for myself in retirement is the challenge I need to meet.

My priorities for retirement, as I may have mentioned at least once (or a thousand times) before, are (in addition to the part time work):

  1. Write – current novel in progress and all writing-related activities (including more frequent blog entries and updates to my website).
  2. Exercise – return my aging body to the well-oiled (and strong) machine it was as little as a year or so ago, using activities that are not as hard on the body as running (or at least mix and match).
  3. Collaborate with my husband on some projects in our house.
  4. Enjoy time and activities with my husband and the other people important to me.

I’m now nearly a week into my new lifestyle, and I’ve already learned one thing: a casual and unplanned approach may feel good but won’t leave me feeling accomplished at the end of the day.

I’m going easy on myself this month. After all, it’s my first month of relative freedom. And lots of activities have been jammed into the month in the way of celebrations and catch-up socializing that won’t happen as frequently after the initial surge. But I’ve already figured out that if I want October and all months going forward to fulfill my vision of semi-retirement, I need to add a bit more structure to my days.

I know, that’s the antithesis of what a lot of people see as the joy of retirement. But what will bring me the most joy in retirement is being able to look at each day and say I made progress on my goals. It doesn’t have to be milestones every day, just some progress.

I’m just not sure yet what that structure needs to look like.

So for now, I’m going to bask in the luxury of greater freedom, not stress too much about how much I accomplish this month, but take careful notes about what keeps me from doing what I need to do.

Then, in time for October, I will create my profile of personal discipline that will help me navigate the new freedom and gift of time I have productively and enjoyably.

Posted in Autumn Colors, In Her Mother's Shoes, Personal Discipline, Retirement, Time, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

RT @mtnwriter77: THE POWER OF DESCRIPTIO

RT @mtnwriter77: THE POWER OF DESCRIPTION http://t.co/0ujVbzTG2v

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THE POWER OF DESCRIPTION

I’ve just finished The Midwife of Hope River by Patricia Harman. I read hundreds of books in a year. I enjoy a lot of them, and finish others only because I have an obsession about finishing any book I start. Rarely am I so impressed that I feel compelled to share it.

That is exactly how I felt when I finished Ms. Harman’s story.

Her website describes the book as follows:
As a midwife working in the hardscrabble conditions of Appalachia during the Depression, Patience Murphy’s only solace is her gift: the chance to escort mothers through the challenges of childbirth. Just beginning, she takes on the jobs no one else wants: those most in need–and least likely to pay. Patience is willing to do what it takes to fulfill her mentor’s wishes, but starting a midwife practice means gaining trust, and Patience’s secrets are too fragile to let anyone in.

A stirring piece of Americana, The Midwife of Hope River beats with authenticity as Patience faces seemingly insurmountable conditions: disease, poverty, and prejudices threaten at every turn. From the dangerous mines of West Virginia to the terrifying attentions of the Ku Klux Klan, Patience must strive to bring new light, and life, into an otherwise cruel world.

It’s a book that would appeal to a fairly wide audience, although probably less so to men. But male or female, anyone who aspires to write a novel that captures the reader should reserve the time to read this one. Aside from being a compelling story that made me want to read on, it was the way she wove description into every paragraph that drew me in and included me in the experiences of this midwife and all of the characters her descriptive skill brought to life like I was there. The description immerses us not only in the immediate surroundings and characters of the story, but bit by bit shares her life before she “became” Patience Murphy, when she was Elizabeth Snyder.

Here is an example:
“Katherine. . .” I straighten my rumpled flowered shift, embarrassed by the impropriety of sleeping with a patient, and put on my glasses. “Let’s go to the toilet. I’ll listen for a heartbeat again after you’ve relieved yourself, but don’t get your hopes up. Your baby’s spirit has gone back to Heaven.” I talk like this, as if I’m a believer, but in truth I haven’t been to church, except for funerals and weddings, since my husband, Ruben, died on Blair Mountain along with 150 other union men. This was back in ’21, a bad time.”

Or this one, turning a simple scene into a 3-D movie:
“It’s three miles on rocky dirt roads to King Coal, and we move right along, although burros are not much for hurrying. Three vehicles overtake us, and we have to get down into the ditch while they pass: a Pontiac roadster, a Ford Model T, and a John Deere tractor, moving just a little faster than we are….
At last we arrive at the mining village. The King Coal camp is a ramshackle community set up along King Lick. Though the camp has been here only five years, the water in the creek is already brown and the rocks have turned yellow from the mine’s acid runoff.”

You can see and feel the poverty and hard life.

Other descriptions are more uplifting, but the story really is about struggles and triumphs that you live and feel right along with the main character.

Even in and around dialogue – maybe even especially around dialogue, to avoid the “talking heads” syndrome, the physical and behavioral surroundings can bring a scene to life or leave the reader patting her yawning mouth.

Ms. Harman inspires me to take another look at my writing, to draw and color the scenes surrounding my characters and their stories instead of relying too heavily on the reader’s imagination.

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RT @mtnwriter77: COUNTDOWN TO RETIREMENT

RT @mtnwriter77: COUNTDOWN TO RETIREMENT http://t.co/YxixhEGARW

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RT @mtnwriter77: COUNTDOWN TO RETIREMENT

RT @mtnwriter77: COUNTDOWN TO RETIREMENT http://t.co/YxixhEGARW

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RT @mtnwriter77: COUNTDOWN TO RETIREMENT

RT @mtnwriter77: COUNTDOWN TO RETIREMENT http://t.co/YxixhEGARW

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RT @mtnwriter77: COUNTDOWN TO RETIREMENT

RT @mtnwriter77: COUNTDOWN TO RETIREMENT http://t.co/YxixhEGARW

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COUNTDOWN TO RETIREMENT

Everybody does retirement in their own way. With mine bearing down on me in less than a month, I’ve been giving this a lot of thought.

In the “old days”, that is for the Depression-era generation and before, most people were so “old” in body and mind by the time they hit retirement age, their primary goal was leisure. Lots of golf, maybe, for men and some women. Rocking on the front porch with knitting or crochet needles or a continuous supply of library books (because they were too frugal to buy them when they could borrow them).  Maybe doing some traveling, if they were fortunate enough to retire with comfortable finances.

Okay, so maybe a bit cliché. But you get the idea. Dozens, maybe hundreds of articles have been written over the years.

But it has been mostly the baby boomers who have changed that picture. Granted, some still look toward retirement as an opportunity for a more leisurely lifestyle, untethered to anyone else’s scheduling dictates. Some, as grandparents by retirement age, offer to provide greater support to their children and grandchildren in the form of babysitting and transporting while the young parents are working.

What stands out among baby boomers is the drive to take their lives in new directions. For some that just means moving to a new location, most often south. For many others, it is an opportunity to launch or expand a second career and take the reins of how their daily life proceeds.

On August 28th I will be retiring from my full time job. I likely will do something very part time because, frankly, my retirement income will not be all that generous and because I happen to enjoy a part of what I currently do on the job. But my new full time job will be first and foremost about writing and the research required to do it well. I envision full days with writing, exercise (which I have sorely neglected in the last year), and the 10-15 hours/week with a fragment of my pre-retirement work. Rather than retiring, I guess you might say I’m changing careers.

And yes, I will factor in time to enjoy some leisure. I have a sweater I started knitting a few years ago that nags at me. So maybe some of my time will be spent on the porch, knitting. I see my husband and me getting out on our boat more regularly, and taking our canoe to those places we’ve talked about for so many years. I see enjoying walks and hikes with Nala, my now-aging Border Terrier, while we still can do that together. We have some trips planned – to locations within the country. And if we ever get around to getting the enhanced licenses, to Canada. Lots to see on our own continent.

And always, woven solidly into every day, is the luxury and pleasure of time for writing that isn’t limited to an hour here or there. That’s my idea of leisure. Maybe I’ll “make it” with a series of books that do decently. In the publishing world it is a bit of a crap shoot. But what I know for sure is it is much more of a challenge to make it if you can’t devote the time to provide depth and continuity to your writing. It is that opportunity that calls loudest to me.

As I wind down in my current full time career, people ask me if I will miss working, if I will be bored. That possibility never crossed my mind – in fact, the one thing I fear most about retirement is not having enough time to do everything I want to do. But rest assured, I tell myself, I will make room every day for the luxury of writing time that has eluded me all of my adult life.

Posted in Autumn Colors, Books, In Her Mother's Shoes, Publishing, Retirement, Writing | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

RT @mtnwriter77: The Oregon Experiment:

RT @mtnwriter77: The Oregon Experiment: Health Insurance, Health Care and Health – why doesn’t 1 + 2 equal 3? http://t.co/ucHwVnzv1E

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RT @mtnwriter77: The Oregon Experiment:

RT @mtnwriter77: The Oregon Experiment: Health Insurance, Health Care and Health – why doesn’t 1 + 2 equal 3? http://t.co/ucHwVnzv1E

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