“Dying at your desk is not a retirement plan”

‘Dying at your desk is not a retirement plan,’” by Thomas Heath, The Washington Post

“Fritz Gilbert knew in his 20s that he did not want to die at his desk. Gilbert, 55, who retired last week, started saving decades ago for what could be one of our most fraught decisions: When to retire? The question is deeply personal. It requires a brutal look at your life. Some people get a pit in the stomach when they think about saying goodbye to that paycheck. Or at the prospect of deconstructing a nest egg they spent decades building. They might worry about feeling irrelevant or bored without the stimulation of work. For most people, retirement won’t be carefree. They will replace whatever worries they have now with a new set of concerns: health (and their mortality), money, humankind’s future.”

LTC Comment (from Damon V. Moses, Administrative Coordinator, Center for Long-Term Care Reform):

The title says it all.

Dying at your desk is not a retirement plan

#retirement
#goldencareagent