Life Transitions & Reinvention Archives - Beyond Retirement https://beyondretirement.ca/category/podcast/life-transitions-reinvention/ It's Your Life...Live It Mon, 08 Jun 2026 16:16:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://beyondretirement.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/cropped-Beyond-Retirement-Logo-32x32.jpg Life Transitions & Reinvention Archives - Beyond Retirement https://beyondretirement.ca/category/podcast/life-transitions-reinvention/ 32 32 🎙️ 298 – From Tourist to Local: Slow Travel After 55 – Andrew Motiwalla https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f-298-from-tourist-to-local-slow-travel-after-55-andrew-motiwalla/ https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f-298-from-tourist-to-local-slow-travel-after-55-andrew-motiwalla/#respond Sun, 21 Jun 2026 17:15:00 +0000 https://beyondretirement.ca/?p=7682 What if travel in retirement wasn’t about seeing more places, but about living more fully? Andrew Motiwalla is the founder ... Read more

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What if travel in retirement wasn’t about seeing more places, but about living more fully?

Andrew Motiwalla is the founder of The Good Life Abroad, which offers a style of retirement travel that’s changing how people 55+ experience the world: slow travel with built-in community.

Andrew’s Peace Corps experience in Honduras planted the seed for month-long stays that move you out of “tourist mode” and into real life; routines, local cafĂ©s, cultural events, and friendships that form naturally when you stay long enough to be recognized.

The Good Life Abroad is not a tour company but rather a short-term rental model in which like-minded individuals spend a month or more in apartments within a specific community, living like locals and learning together what life there is like. The local community managers create light, optional touchpoints (like cooking classes, walking tours, and local experiences) that help people feel supported without being scheduled to death.

Andrew believes that immersive travel can expand our “joyspan”, the years of joy, purpose, and connection in our lives.

For many retirees, identity shifts can feel disorienting. Andrew explains how immersive travel can help you grow through learning, connect through shared values, and adapt to new experiences, often leaving you with more confidence and a bigger sense of possibility than when you arrived.

The cost of immersive travel with The Good Life Abroad is surprisingly reasonable, ranging from $5K to $8K per person, depending on the destination and travel dates. The usual expenses of a vacation (food, hotel, entertainment) add up when you stretch the vacation over a month. By renting an apartment and having the kitchen facilities to reduce the restaurant costs, the overall cost of the vacation decreases.

 

CONNECT WITH ANDREW:

Via email: Andrew@thegoodlifeabroad.com

On the web: https://thegoodlifeabroad.com

Fans of Beyond Retirement can get a discount on their first booking with code BEYONDRETIREMENT at checkout.

LISTEN TO THE PODCAST

Themes:

  • Purpose & Meaning in Retirement
  • Identity After Work
  • Personal Growth & Lifelong Learning
  • Community & Connection
  • Health, Fitness & Aging Well
  • Creating a Fulfilling Routine
  • Courage, Confidence & Taking Action
  • Life Transitions & Reinvention

 

 

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Why Retirement Feels Empty—And What You Can Do About It https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/why-retirement-feels-empty-and-what-you-can-do-about-it/ https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/why-retirement-feels-empty-and-what-you-can-do-about-it/#respond Sat, 13 Jun 2026 16:00:00 +0000 https://beyondretirement.ca/?p=7772  Most people spend decades preparing financially for retirement. They save. They invest. They plan. But very few people prepare for ... Read more

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 Most people spend decades preparing financially for retirement.

They save. They invest. They plan.

But very few people prepare for what happens after the celebration dinner, after the farewell party, and after the novelty of having nowhere to be wears off.

What if the biggest challenge in retirement isn’t money? What if it’s purpose?

Clarity Before Action

One mistake many retirees make is rushing into activities before they’ve gained clarity.

They join clubs.

They volunteer.

They sign up for classes.

Sometimes those activities are wonderful.

Sometimes they aren’t.

The difference is whether the activity aligns with who they are becoming.

Your life is changing now; take some time to figure out where you stand.

Before deciding what to do, spend time understanding what matters.

What excites you?

What are you curious about?

What have you always wanted to explore?

What would you pursue if nobody else’s expectations mattered?

The answers don’t usually arrive overnight.

They emerge gradually through reflection, curiosity, and consistent attention.

The Hidden Transition Nobody Talks About

When we’re working, much of our life is structured for us.

Our calendars tell us where to be. Our careers provide goals. Our responsibilities create a sense of importance and contribution.

Even if we don’t always enjoy the pressure, it gives shape to our days.

Then retirement arrives.

Suddenly, the structure disappears.

At first, that can feel liberating. Sleeping in. No meetings. No deadlines.

But over time, many retirees discover something unexpected: freedom alone doesn’t automatically create fulfillment.

Without structure, it’s easy to drift.

Days blur together. Motivation fades. Activities that once sounded exciting lose their appeal.

Many retirees begin asking themselves questions they haven’t considered in years:

Who am I now?

What am I working toward?

What gets me out of bed in the morning?

Why Your Brain Needs a New Path

One of the most fascinating characteristics of our brains is neuroplasticity, the brain’s ability to form new neural pathways throughout life.

For decades, most of us are wired to pursue external goals:

  • Career advancement
  • Financial success
  • Recognition
  • Achievement
  • Family responsibilities

These pathways become deeply ingrained.

Retirement removes many of those external motivators, but the brain doesn’t automatically replace them.

That’s why so many people experience an identity gap.

The old path disappears.

The new one hasn’t been built yet.

So we have to take the time to create the new paths. We do this by trying different activities to see what interests us.

Instead of asking:

“What should I be doing?”

We begin asking:

“What truly energizes me?”

The Power of Small Steps

Remember, meaningful change rarely begins with dramatic action.

It begins with small steps.

A daily walk.

Ten minutes of journaling.

Exploring a new interest.

Attending a single event.

Having one conversation.

Many of the biggest transformations start as a simple “What if?”

What if I wrote a book?

What if I learned an instrument?

What if I started a small business?

What if I traveled?

What if I volunteered differently?

Over time, these small ideas grow into something larger.

Not because of one massive leap, but because of hundreds of small actions taken consistently.

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Schedule Your Spontaneity

One of my favourite quotes from a recent podcast interview was this seemingly contradictory statement:

“Schedule your spontaneity.”

At first, it sounds ridiculous.

Isn’t retirement supposed to be free? And if it’s “spontaneous”, how can I schedule it?

Yes, but complete freedom without structure often becomes chaos.

There are ways to add some structure without restricting your freedom, so you don’t feel confined, but still have something to fall back on when you need it:

  • A morning routine
  • An evening routine

And between those, make space for:

  • Responsibilities
  • Social time
  • Personal reflection and growth

When your day has shape, spontaneous opportunities become easier to enjoy because you’re no longer drifting through your time.

The structure supports the freedom.

Stop Comparing

Perhaps the most important message I can share is this:

Stop comparing yourself to other retirees.

There’s no correct retirement.

No universal checklist.

No required hobby.

No approved volunteer role.

No perfect version of what retirement should look like.

Your next chapter should reflect your values, your interests, your energy, and your goals.

The answers aren’t out there.

They’re in you.

Your Next Chapter

Retirement doesn’t have to mean that your life is winding down. You can easily turn this next phase into something bigger than you thought possible.

A new surge of growth, contribution, curiosity, and possibility.

That’s a powerful shift in perspective.

Retirement isn’t the end of becoming.

It’s another opportunity to become.

And perhaps the most important thing to remember is that you don’t need to have all the answers today.

Start small.

Create a little space.

Ask better questions.

Listen carefully.

Your next chapter may already be waiting.

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🎙️296 – Solve for X: Helping Men Find Purpose & Joy After A High-Performing Career – Michael F. Kay https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f296-solve-for-x-helping-men-find-purpose-joy-after-a-high-performing-career-michael-f-kay/ https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f296-solve-for-x-helping-men-find-purpose-joy-after-a-high-performing-career-michael-f-kay/#respond Sun, 07 Jun 2026 16:42:00 +0000 https://beyondretirement.ca/?p=7676 Who are you when your job is done? When your high-performance career comes to an end, what do you do? ... Read more

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Who are you when your job is done? When your high-performance career comes to an end, what do you do?

Michael F. Kay spent decades as a CPA and financial professional before transitioning into life coaching focused on the emotional and identity side of retirement. In this conversation, he explains the origin of “Chapter X” (Remember how you always had to “solve for X” in school?) and why many high-performing men reach retirement without a clear picture of what comes next.

Together, Jacquie and Michael unpack the universal fears that show up in retirement, namely relevance, vitality, and identity, and why the solution is never one-size-fits-all. Michael shares practical ways to reclaim curiosity, experiment without pressure, and let go of ego-driven competition that no longer serves you.

They also talk about the value of remembering past transitions (your first day at work, your first promotion) as proof you already have the tools to navigate change. Michael describes exercises from his book, including writing a multi-perspective eulogy, to clarify values and live intentionally now.

The episode closes with a powerful reminder: retirement is your chance to curate your days around meaning and joy, not “shoulds,” deadlines, or status.

What We Covered:

  • Michael’s path: musician → CPA → financial life planner → life coach
  • Why retirement questions start with: “What does that mean to you?”
  • The origin of “Chapter X” and the idea of “solve for X”
  • What “X” really is: what gets you out of bed, meaning, purpose, curiosity
  • Why high-performing men often struggle more with the transition
  • Identity beyond the job title: “Who are you when you’re no longer your job?”
  • The danger of “waiting to die” and the sadness of purposeless later years
  • Depression in seniors and the pull of living in the past
  • Retirement as a new transition: reclaiming a beginner’s mind
  • No one dies from being uncomfortable: normalizing transition anxiety
  • Unlearning: ego, competition, ladder-climbing, and “should”
  • Go-go / slow-go / no-go stages and using vitality wisely
  • Contribution doesn’t have to be big: small acts that lift others
  • Joy as a filter: if it isn’t joyful, don’t do it
  • Curating your day: energy, sleep, priorities, and flexibility
  • The book’s process: progressive exercises + expert chapters (gerontology, psychology, exercise, couples)
  • The eulogy exercise: clarifying values and living them now

Action steps: 

  1. Define your X: Write down what you want to get out of bed for in this season of life.
  2. Try a beginner’s mind experiment: Pick one new activity and commit to 3 tries—no pressure to “be good.”
  3. Audit your “shoulds”: List the things you do out of obligation; cross out one this week.
  4. Recall a past transition: Write about your first day at your first real job—what did you learn about adapting?
  5. Create a 2–3 item day: Put only 2–3 priorities on your calendar, leaving space for joy.

Connect with Michael: https://michaelfkay.com

Grab Michael’s book on Amazon

Listen to the podcast

 

Themes:

  • Purpose & Meaning in Retirement
  • Personal Growth & Lifelong Learning
  • Mindset & Self-Talk
  • Resilience & Emotional Strength
  • Creating a Fulfilling Routine
  • Courage, Confidence & Taking Action
  • Life Transitions & Reinvention

 

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🎙️ 294 – What Is “Enough”? Culture, Comparison, and a Life Well Designed – Jermaine Ee https://beyondretirement.ca/podcast/mindset-self-talk/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f-294-what-is-enough-culture-comparison-and-a-life-well-designed/ https://beyondretirement.ca/podcast/mindset-self-talk/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f-294-what-is-enough-culture-comparison-and-a-life-well-designed/#respond Sun, 24 May 2026 17:15:36 +0000 https://beyondretirement.ca/?p=7664 What if the goal of retirement isn’t just “more free time”… but a life you’re not trying to escape from? ... Read more

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What if the goal of retirement isn’t just “more free time”… but a life you’re not trying to escape from?

In this episode, Jacquie talks with Jermaine Ee, founder of HeirLight, about the pressure to postpone life for a promised future, and how clarity often arrives quickly once avoidance ends.

You’ll hear Jermaine’s perspective on defining what is enough (and whose voices shape that definition), why the best days aren’t always the big adventures, and how one conversation with his mom led to a dream trip that changed everything.

We also touch on estate planning in a refreshingly human way: not as a fear-based task, but as a way to reduce confusion, protect dignity, and care for the people you love.

What We Covered:

  • Why so many people trade their present for a promised future
  • How culture shapes our definition of “enough”
  • Living for the weekend vs. designing a good Tuesday
  • The “small paper” exercise: whose opinions actually matter
  • Choosing relationships that add energy (and reducing time with draining ones)
  • Busy vs. meaningful: saying no more often
  • A powerful reminder: ask your parents about their dreams
  • Estate planning as clarity (not fear): will, health care directive, power of attorney

Key Takeaways:

  • Clarity arrives quickly once avoidance ends.
  • A meaningful life is built on ordinary days, not just big moments.
  • Comparison steals joy, especially when you’re comparing to people you don’t really know.
  • The opinions that matter should fit on a small piece of paper.
  • Clarity is love in practical form, especially for families.

Connect with Jermaine:

Themes:

  • Purpose & Meaning in Retirement
  • Personal Growth & Lifelong Learning
  • Mindset & Self-Talk
  • Resilience & Emotional Strength
  • Creating a Fulfilling Routine
  • Courage, Confidence & Taking Action
  • Life Transitions & Reinvention

The post 🎙️ 294 – What Is “Enough”? Culture, Comparison, and a Life Well Designed – Jermaine Ee appeared first on Beyond Retirement.

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🎙️ 292 – When Caregiving Changes Retirement: Planning Before the Crisis – Raymond Levine https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f-292-when-caregiving-changes-retirement-planning-before-the-crisis-raymond-levine/ https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f-292-when-caregiving-changes-retirement-planning-before-the-crisis-raymond-levine/#respond Sun, 10 May 2026 15:00:02 +0000 https://beyondretirement.ca/?p=7583 What happens to your retirement freedom when caregiving suddenly becomes part of the plan? Retirement is often imagined as a ... Read more

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What happens to your retirement freedom when caregiving suddenly becomes part of the plan?

Retirement is often imagined as a time of freedom, but when caregiving enters the picture, everything changes. In this episode, Jacquie speaks with Raymond Lavine about how planning ahead can protect your choices, reduce family stress, and help you maintain dignity and independence as you age.

What We Cover:

  • Caregiving changes everything — Retirement routines, finances, and relationships are all impacted when care is needed
  • The true cost of long-term care — Why even financially stable families can struggle without a plan
  • Planning before crisis hits — How early decisions preserve freedom and reduce pressure later
  • The reality of family caregiving — Emotional strain, logistics, and the hidden burden on loved ones
  • Staying independent with support — How the right care can actually increase mobility, travel, and social life
  • Practical steps you can take now — Small, incremental actions to reduce future stress and risk

TL;DR

Caregiving is one of the most underestimated parts of retirement. Planning ahead doesn’t just reduce financial strain; it preserves your choices, protects your relationships, and allows you to maintain independence even if your health changes.

What Nobody Tells You About Caregiving in Retirement

What happens to your retirement freedom when caregiving suddenly becomes part of the plan?

Retirement is often imagined as a time of freedom—but when caregiving enters the picture, everything changes. In this episode, Jacquie speaks with Raymond Lavine about how planning ahead can protect your choices, reduce family stress, and help you maintain dignity and independence as you age.

The Retirement Reality Few People Plan For

Most retirement conversations revolve around money.

Do you have enough saved?
Will your investments last?
Can you maintain your lifestyle?

But there’s a quieter, far more disruptive reality that often gets ignored:

At some point, many people will need care.

Not briefly. Not occasionally.
But consistently—and sometimes for years.

And the problem isn’t just the need for care.
It’s that most families don’t think about it until they have no choice.

As Raymond points out, caregiving is often invisible until it isn’t. You don’t plan for it the way you plan a vacation or even retirement itself. Instead, it shows up suddenly—after a fall, a diagnosis, or a slow decline that finally reaches a tipping point.

By then, the decisions are no longer thoughtful.

They’re urgent.

When Caregiving Enters the Picture, Everything Changes

One of the clearest takeaways from this conversation is simple:

Caregiving doesn’t change one part of your life—it changes all of it.

If you’re the one needing care:

  • Your independence shifts
  • Your daily routines change
  • Your environment may no longer work for you


If you’re the caregiver:

  • Your time disappears
  • Your mental energy is constantly drained
  • Your life becomes structured around someone else’s needs

And often, it’s not just one person affected.

It’s:

  • A spouse who now manages everything
  • Adult children juggling careers and caregiving
  • Friends trying to help—but unsure how

Raymond describes caregiving as relentless. It’s not a one-time task. It’s daily, ongoing, and often unpredictable.

Medication. Appointments. Mobility. Safety.
Even something as simple as getting dressed or preparing a meal can become a coordinated effort.

And underlying all of it?

Worry. Constant worry.

The Hidden Cost Isn’t Just Financial

Yes, caregiving is expensive. That part is obvious.

But what many people underestimate is how the financial impact actually works.

Even families who feel “financially secure” can struggle because:

  • Care requires ongoing income, not just assets
  • Costs can extend for years, not months
  • Expenses stack on top of an existing lifestyle

In the transcript, Raymond shares a real example: long-term care that lasted 18 years.  

That’s not a short-term disruption.

That’s a complete financial shift.

And when care costs rise high enough, something has to give:

  • Savings get depleted
  • Assets get sold
  • Inheritance plans disappear

But the financial cost is only part of the story.


There’s also:

  • Lost income when a spouse stops working
  • Emotional strain that affects decision-making
  • Relationship tension within families

In many cases, the real cost is freedom.

The Illusion of Choice

One of the most important ideas in this conversation is this:

People believe they’ll have choices later, but without planning, those choices disappear.

Many assume:

  • “My family will help”
  • “We’ll figure it out”
  • “We have enough money”

And sometimes those things are partially true.

But without a clear plan:

  • Care becomes reactive instead of intentional
  • Family members become overwhelmed
  • Decisions are made under pressure, not clarity

Instead of choosing:

  • Where you receive care
  • Who provides it
  • How it’s paid for

You end up accepting whatever is available.

Planning doesn’t guarantee perfection.

But it preserves options.

Caregiving Doesn’t Have to Mean Losing Your Life

One of the more surprising insights from this episode is that caregiving doesn’t automatically eliminate freedom.

In fact, with the right support, it can actually restore it.

Raymond shares examples of people who:

  • Continue to travel
  • Stay socially active
  • Maintain routines and relationships

The difference isn’t health.

It’s support.

When care is structured and reliable:

  • You’re not stuck at home
  • You’re not constantly searching for help
  • You’re not relying entirely on family

Instead, you can:

  • Go out
  • Host people
  • Maintain a sense of normalcy

Without that support?

That’s when isolation, frustration, and depression tend to take over.

Why People Avoid Planning (Even When They Know Better)

This isn’t a knowledge problem.

Most people understand, at least intellectually, that aging brings change.

So why don’t they plan?

Because caregiving falls into a category that’s easy to delay:

  • It’s uncomfortable
  • It’s uncertain
  • It doesn’t feel urgent

There’s no immediate reward.

No instant gratification.

And as Raymond puts it, this is a delayed gratification decision, which makes it easy to push aside.

Even people who have witnessed caregiving firsthand often fail to act.

They think:

  • “That won’t be me”
  • “I’ll deal with it later”


But later is exactly when options start to shrink.

What You Can Do Now (Without Overwhelm)

The most practical part of this conversation is this:

You don’t have to solve everything today.

You just need to start.

Here are some of the most actionable steps discussed:

1. Think About Your Preferences Early

You don’t need a full plan, but you do need clarity.

Ask yourself:

  • Do I want care at home or in a facility?
  • Who would I trust to help manage decisions?
  • What level of independence matters most to me?

These are not easy questions, but they are powerful ones.

2. Organize Your Essentials

One of the biggest stress points in caregiving situations is missing information.

Start simple:

  • Keep key documents in one place
  • List important contacts
  • Track medical information

This alone can remove a significant burden from your family later.

3. Look at Your Home Differently

Your home may work perfectly today—but will it work later?

Small changes make a big difference:

  • Better lighting
  • Safer bathrooms
  • Easier-to-use fixtures

You don’t need a full renovation.

Just awareness.

4. Improve What You Can Control

Not all health outcomes are preventable, but some are influenced by daily habits.

Focus on:

  • Movement
  • Nutrition
  • Mental engagement

Even small improvements can affect how long—and how well—you maintain independence.

5. Accept That This Is a Process

The biggest mistake people make is thinking this needs to be solved all at once.

It doesn’t.

Planning for care is like planning for retirement:

  • It happens gradually
  • It evolves over time
  • It gets better the earlier you start

The Real Goal Isn’t Control—It’s Freedom

At the core of this conversation is a shift in perspective.

Planning for caregiving isn’t about:

  • Expecting the worst
  • Over-preparing
  • Losing optimism

It’s about something much more practical:

Maintaining control over your life, even when circumstances change.

Because the reality is:

You may need care.
You may not.
You don’t know when.

But what you can control is this:

  • Whether your family is prepared
  • Whether your options remain open
  • Whether your independence is supported, or restricted


And that’s the real definition of retirement freedom.

Final Thought

Most people think planning for care is about protecting their future.

But in reality, it’s also about protecting:

  • Their relationships
  • Their dignity
  • Their ability to live life on their own terms

You don’t need to do everything today.

But doing nothing?

That’s a decision too.

About the Guest:

Raymond Lavine is a long-term care planning advocate who helps families prepare for caregiving realities before a crisis forces difficult decisions. His work is shaped by deeply personal experience—watching both of his parents navigate extended periods of care, including nearly two decades of in-home support for his mother. Through his professional practice and his podcast, Planning with Purpose: The Caregiver’s Blueprint, Raymond focuses on preserving dignity, choice, and family stability during some of life’s most vulnerable seasons.

Links & Resources: 

 

Beyond Retirement themes discussed:

Purpose & Meaning in Retirement
Community & Connection
Health, Fitness & Aging Well
Creating a Fulfilling Routine
Life Transitions & Reinvention

Topics:

caregiving and retirement, long-term care planning, aging with dignity, retirement lifestyle changes, caregiving costs, family caregiving stress, planning for aging, independence in retirement, aging in place, retirement health planning

 

The post 🎙️ 292 – When Caregiving Changes Retirement: Planning Before the Crisis – Raymond Levine appeared first on Beyond Retirement.

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🎙️288 – Living Intentionally After Retirement: From Striving to Thriving – Denise Taylor https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f288-living-intentionally-after-retirement-from-striving-to-thriving-denise-taylor/ https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f288-living-intentionally-after-retirement-from-striving-to-thriving-denise-taylor/#respond Sun, 12 Apr 2026 15:00:50 +0000 https://beyondretirement.ca/?p=7551 In this episode of Beyond Retirement, Denise Taylor joins Jacquie Doucette to discuss the transition from just getting by to enjoying retirement. Discover how to explore your identity beyond work, embrace curiosity for healthy aging, and build a more intentional daily routine. This conversation offers insights on the changing nature of retirement and the importance of having purpose, providing helpful tips for anyone facing this life transition. Join us to create a meaningful routine focused on presence and personal growth.

The post 🎙️288 – Living Intentionally After Retirement: From Striving to Thriving – Denise Taylor appeared first on Beyond Retirement.

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In this episode of Beyond Retirement, Jacquie Doucette talks with Denise Taylor about rethinking life after full-time work. They discuss how to shift from striving to thriving, why curiosity is essential for aging well, and how to create a more intentional rhythm in your life.

What’s Covered:

  • The evolution of retirement — From rest and recovery to reinvention and choice
  • Identity beyond work — Who you are when your title disappears
  • Being vs doing — Why constant productivity may be holding you back
  • Curiosity and aging — How staying curious supports wellbeing
  • Intentional living — Choosing rhythm, meaning, and presence over pressure

About the Guest:
Denise Taylor is a chartered psychologist and later-life specialist who has spent decades helping people navigate retirement and midlife transitions. After years of coaching others, she is now focusing on writing and exploring what she calls “conscious aging”—a more thoughtful, intentional approach to later life grounded in both research and lived experience.

Links & Resources:

Website: https://denisetaylor.co.uk/

Substack: https://ageingreimagined.substack.com/

Beyond Retirement themes discussed:

  • Purpose & Meaning in Retirement
  • Identity After Work
  • Personal Growth & Lifelong Learning
  • Mindset & Self-Talk
  • Resilience & Emotional Strength
  • Community & Connection
  • Health, Fitness & Aging Well
  • Creating a Fulfilling Routine
  • Courage, Confidence & Taking Action
  • Life Transitions & Reinvention

Topics:
living intentionally after retirement, identity after work, purpose after retirement, aging well, curiosity and aging, retirement mindset, life after full-time work

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🎙️286 – Reconnecting Through Music After Retirement – Scott Walker & Lutefish https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f286-reconnecting-through-music-after-retirement-scott-walker-lutefish/ https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f286-reconnecting-through-music-after-retirement-scott-walker-lutefish/#respond Sun, 29 Mar 2026 15:00:01 +0000 https://beyondretirement.ca/?p=7515 In this episode of Beyond Retirement, Jacquie Doucette talks with Scott Walker, a newly retired executive turned musician, along with ... Read more

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In this episode of Beyond Retirement, Jacquie Doucette talks with Scott Walker, a newly retired executive turned musician, along with the team behind Lutefish, about reconnecting with passion and friendships after retirement. You’ll learn how to rediscover old interests, rebuild meaningful connections, and create a fulfilling post-career life.

What We Cover:

  • Rediscovering identity after retirement — Returning to passions that were set aside during career years
  • The power of music and shared experiences — How creative outlets strengthen connection and fulfillment
  • Technology enabling connection — How Lutefish allows musicians to collaborate remotely in real time
  • Rebuilding long-term friendships — Staying connected through consistent shared activity
  • Creating a meaningful retirement event — Turning a retirement party into a milestone experience

About the Guests:

Scott Walker is a recently retired executive who returned to his early passion for music after stepping away from a 35-year career. By reconnecting with his former bandmates and performing again, he has redefined what retirement can look like.

Alongside him, Patrick Finn and Whitney Winkles are part of Lutefish, a company focused on helping musicians collaborate remotely through low-latency technology, enabling real-time online music.

Beyond Retirement themes discussed:

  • Purpose & Meaning in Retirement
  • Identity After Work
  • Personal Growth & Lifelong Learning
  • Resilience & Emotional Strength
  • Community & Connection
  • Creating a Fulfilling Routine
  • Courage, Confidence & Taking Action
  • Life Transitions & Reinvention
 
Topics:
retirement identity, life after retirement, reconnecting with old friends, hobbies after retirement, music and aging, creative outlets in retirement, building community, remote collaboration, staying connected after retirement, meaningful retirement activities

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🎙️284 – Are You Living in Your Wheel House – with Kim Costa https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/284-are-you-living-in-your-wheel-house-with-kim-costa/ https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/284-are-you-living-in-your-wheel-house-with-kim-costa/#respond Sun, 15 Mar 2026 15:00:06 +0000 https://beyondretirement.ca/?p=7477 In this episode of Beyond Retirement, Jacquie Doucette talks with Kim Costa about finding the right place to live in ... Read more

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In this episode of Beyond Retirement, Jacquie Doucette talks with Kim Costa about finding the right place to live in retirement.

You’ll learn why retirement is a “third life”, not an ending, how life changes can cause your “perfect home” not to fit anymore, and practical ways to stay put, if that’s what you want, plus how to clarify what’s working for you.

What we cover

  • Why retirement is a “third life,” not an ending
  • The Wheelhouse Method: using eight life areas to clarify what’s working and what isn’t
  • How life changes (empty nest, health shifts, career ending, family moving) can make a once-perfect home stop fitting
  • Downsizing options: lock-and-leave living, reducing maintenance, and freeing up equity
  • Practical ways to stay put: “shut down” unused floors, adjust thermostats, and reduce cleaning/expenses
  • Repurposing rooms for who you are now (hobbies, writing, yoga, podcasting)
  • The most neglected area on the wheel: spirituality (connection to nature, grounding, sunlight)
  • Avoiding “should” decisions (e.g., moving somewhere because it’s what people do)
  • Try-it-first strategies: house-sitting, seasonal stays, and inviting family to test a destination home
  • Biggest regret drivers: moving too fast, not thinking it through, and market pressure

Key takeaways

  • Your home should match your current life stage. What worked at 25 may not work at 60.
  • Fix the pain point—but don’t create a new problem. Consider health care access, finances, and connection before you leap.
  • Enjoyment is allowed. Retirement is a season to reclaim what you loved—and design your space to support it.
  • Small changes count. You can often improve fit by repurposing rooms and reducing unused space.
Kim Costa, a top 5% Realtor with Atlanta Fine Homes & Sotheby’s International Realty and creator of the Wheel House Method, shares how to use a Wheel-of-Life approach to decide whether to stay, go, or renovate in retirement. You’ll hear why “home” is more than square footage, how life changes create a “void” your current space may no longer fill, and how to make choices that support enjoyment and personal growth in your next chapter.
 

Her new book, Live in Your Wheel House, is available now for preorder and ships March 24th! https://amazon.com/dp/B0GKTB5Z7C

Connect with Kim:

 

This episode explores:

    • Life-change triggers for moving (career end, empty nest, health shifts, grandkids geography)
    • Home fit vs life-stage fit (“forever home” meaning changes from 20 to 60)
    • Lock-and-leave downsizing and maintenance reduction (yard, shoveling, taxes, upkeep)
    • Eight-area “wheel of life” scoring to identify a “flat tire” driving a move
    • Mobility-proofing and aging-in-place considerations (primary bedroom location, stairs, access)
    • Repurposing unused rooms for second-act interests (writing, yoga, podcasting, hobbies)

Themes:

    • Identity After Work
    • Personal Growth & Lifelong Learning
    • Community & Connection
    • Health, Fitness & Aging Well
    • Creating a Fulfilling Routine
    • Life Transitions & Reinvention

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🎙️280 – Retirement Interrupted: Reclaiming the Plan when it Changes – with Tony & Soozie Cisneros https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/280-retirement-interrupted-reclaiming-the-plan-when-it-changes-with-tony-soozie-cisneros/ https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/280-retirement-interrupted-reclaiming-the-plan-when-it-changes-with-tony-soozie-cisneros/#respond Sun, 15 Feb 2026 15:00:04 +0000 https://beyondretirement.ca/?p=7496 On this episode of Beyond Retirement, Jacquie Doucette welcomes Soozie and Tony Cisneros, a couple whose retirement dreams took an ... Read more

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On this episode of Beyond Retirement, Jacquie Doucette welcomes Soozie and Tony Cisneros, a couple whose retirement dreams took an unexpected turn. Just as they prepared to embark on new adventures together, both received life-changing cancer diagnoses—on the very same day.

In this candid conversation, Soozie and Tony share the shock and uncertainty of facing treatment, the ways their family and community rallied around them, and the powerful role faith played in their journey. From setbacks to milestones, and finally reclaiming their freedom, their story is one of resilience, hope, and finding new meaning in life after the unimaginable.

Whether you’re approaching retirement or already there, this episode offers inspiration and wisdom on facing the unexpected and supporting one another along the way.

Key Topics Covered:

Retirement Expectations vs Reality

  • Planning a life of travel and freedom
  • Receiving simultaneous cancer diagnoses

Navigating Treatment as a Couple

  • Different journeys: radiation vs non-surgical care
  • Emotional and logistical challenges of supporting each other

The Role of Family and Faith

  • Support from kids, including shaving their heads
  • How spiritual grounding helped them persevere

Redefining Retirement After Illness

  • Embracing each day with intention
  • Reframing ‘lost time’ as a second chance

Lessons in Resilience

  • What they’ve learned about strength and partnership
  • Advice for others facing unexpected setbacks

Listen to the podcast here

Beyond Retirement themes discussed:

  • Purpose & Meaning in Retirement
  • Mindset & Self-Talk
  • Resilience & Emotional Strength
  • Community & Connection
  • Health, Fitness & Aging Well
  • Life Transitions & Reinvention

READY TO RAMP UP YOUR RETIREMENT JOURNEY?

Start here: https://beyondretirement.ca/start-here/

Book a FREE call with Jacquie: https://calendly.com/jacquiedoucette/discovery

Check out the Beyond Retirement Library: https://placeforbooks.com

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🎙️278 – Retirement Reimagined – with Lynn Katz https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f278-retirement-reimagined-with-lynn-katz/ https://beyondretirement.ca/retirement/%f0%9f%8e%99%ef%b8%8f278-retirement-reimagined-with-lynn-katz/#respond Sun, 01 Feb 2026 15:00:17 +0000 https://beyondretirement.ca/?p=7521 In this episode of Beyond Retirement, Jacquie Doucette talks with Lynn Katz, retired school principal, author, and Board of Education ... Read more

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In this episode of Beyond Retirement, Jacquie Doucette talks with Lynn Katz, retired school principal, author, and Board of Education member, about redefining life after retirement. You’ll learn how to transition from a demanding career into a more intentional lifestyle, how creativity can emerge in unexpected ways, and how to stay open to growth, plus a simple mindset shift you can try this week.

What We Cover:

  • Why retirement is not an ending but a shift in energy and priorities — moving from constant urgency to intentional living
  • How Lynn transitioned from school principal to published author — discovering creativity after a full career
  • The difference between schedules and goals in retirement — why structure doesn’t have to disappear
  • Staying open to new experiences — from writing to painting to playing the ukulele
  • Why you don’t need a perfect retirement plan — and how figuring it out as you go can work

About the Guest:
Lynn Katz is a retired school principal, author, and Board of Education member who has embraced retirement as a time for growth, creativity, and contribution. After decades in a high-demand leadership role, she transitioned into writing fiction and exploring new creative outlets. Her work reflects her deep experience in education and her belief that retirement can be one of the most fulfilling and expansive stages of life.

Links & Resources:
• Website: https://www.lynnkatzauthor.com

• Books: The Surrogate, Chester and the Magic 8 Ball

• Newsletter/Blog: Available through her website

Beyond Retirement Themes Discussed:

  • Personal growth after retirement
  • Identity and lifestyle shifts
  • Creative reinvention
  • Learning and exploration

Topics:
life after retirement, personal growth in retirement, retirement lifestyle design, retirement routines, finding purpose after retirement, creative life after work, retirement transition, identity after career, retirement planning mindset, meaningful retirement

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