Dee Cascio, LPC, LMFT, ACC
Change in life and in relationships is inevitable. You cannot avoid change but you can, out of respect for the union that you made many years ago, protect the viability of your relationship as you move forward in planning this next life stage.
Read more...
Lin Schreiber
Don’t worry. Being stuck doesn’t have to be terminal. The first step is acknowledging that you’re stuck. Then, admit to yourself that you want to get unstuck. Then, begin taking even the tiniest step to break your log jam.
Read more...
Dee Cascio, LPC, LMFT, ACC
If you think about it, one of the most important constants in our lives is a sense of family, friends, and community. As you ponder your retirement decision, are you considering the significance that family and friends play in your life?
Read more...
Lin Schreiber
Spring has definitely sprung: the weather is warming, days are longer, and it’s time for a fresh start. Have your encore career plans been hibernating too long? Are you ready for a new approach to moving forward? Consider these spring resolutions.
Read more...
Lin Schreiber
When you talk about retiring, do you say you plan to retire in five years? Have you been saying this for longer than five years? You’re not alone. One of the primary reasons for keeping retirement a moving target is not knowing when it’s the right time.
Read more...
Lin Schreiber
A lot of the US working population can’t wait to retire. But if you’re looking forward to having no timetables, and have nothing definite planned, you could be headed for real trouble. You need to thrive, not merely survive, this next stage of life.
Read more...
Lin Schreiber
You yearn to be free of old constraints and to do work that makes a difference in people’s lives. You long to uncover the parts of yourself that have been long buried. You’re hungry for more balance. And, you want it all yesterday. Right? Slow down.
Read more...
Lin Schreiber
You’ve probably heard most of them before. They seem like well-meaning retirement advice, but beware: these illusions, delusions and downright lies about retirement can be dangerous to your retirement well-being.
Read more...
Donald C. Strauss and Diane B. Burman
Found in: Mental Health
Men often see retirement as an end goal, a sort of “holy grail.” Once there, whether attained at a specified time, for example at age 65, or thrust upon them through forced termination at an earlier unplanned stage, the result is the same—“Now what?”
Read more...
Lin Schreiber
While a retirement coach isn't absolutely, positively necessary to a successful and enjoyable retirement, having one can help you ease into your new life more smoothly. Since when is help a bad thing?
Read more...