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For thirty-eight years, I knew exactly what my mornings looked like.
Up at 5:30, coffee brewing while I checked the weather, out the door by 6:15.
Had my route to the supply house memorized, knew which counter guy would have my order ready, which jobs needed an early start before the homeowner left for work.
Now I wake up at the same time, make the same coffee, and stare at a calendar with nothing on it.
I thought this was what I wanted.
Hell, I’d been counting down to it since I was thirty.
Every tough job, every nightmare client, every invoice that went unpaid for three months, I’d tell myself: Just make it to retirement, then you can finally live.
Turns out I’d been planning for the wrong thing all along.
The dream that wasn’t
You know what I thought retirement would be? Freedom.
No more crawling through attics in July, no more emergency calls on Christmas Eve, and no more dealing with contractors who wanted everything done yesterday for half the price.
I had this whole picture in my head: Sleep in till whenever, coffee on the deck with the paper, and maybe some golf (even though I’d never played a round in my life).
Definitely some travel with my wife, all those trips we’d been putting off.
What nobody tells you is that when you spend four decades defining yourself by what you do, taking away the doing leaves a hell of a hole.
The first week was great as it felt like a vacation I’d earned.
The second week, I reorganized the garage.
By week three, I was following my wife around the house, asking if she needed help with things she’d been handling fine without me for forty years.
Week four, I found myself driving past job sites.
Just random construction sites, slowing down to see what kind of work they were doing, whether they were running proper gauge wire, if their panel work was clean.
That’s when it hit me: I’d spent all that time dreaming about not working, but I’d never thought about what I’d actually do instead.
When your identity walks out the door with you
I sold my business to my foreman right before I retired.
Good guy, worked for me fifteen years.
He deserved it, and I was ready to be done.
What I didn’t expect was how lost I’d feel without “Tommy’s Electrical” on the side of a van.
For twenty-two years, that’s who I was: The guy you called when your lights went out, the guy who showed up when the big storm knocked power to half the neighborhood, and the guy who knew exactly why your kitchen outlets kept tripping and how to fix it.
Without that, who was I? Some old guy with too much time on his hands and a garage full of tools I didn’t need anymore.
My wife bought me a journal, thinking it might help.
I laughed at first.
Guys like me don’t journal but, one morning, I just started writing about a job I remembered from 1987, the time I nearly got electrocuted because some idiot homeowner turned the breaker back on while I was working, and what it felt like to not have anywhere to be.
Turns out, I had a lot to say and I still do.
The lie we tell ourselves about later
Here’s what we do: We push everything off to “later.”
By “later,” I mean: When I retire, when I have time, and when I don’t have to worry about the business.
I did that for thirty-eight years as I told my wife we’d take that trip to Ireland later, told myself I’d learn to cook something besides eggs and bacon later, and told my kids I’d make it to their school stuff later, when things slowed down.
Except things never slow down when you’re working.
There’s always another job, another crisis, another payroll to meet.
So, you keep pushing life into this imaginary future where you’ll have all the time in the world.
Then you get there, and you realize you don’t know how to live that life because you never practiced.
I spent so many years thinking about what I wouldn’t have to do in retirement, wouldn’t have to deal with permits, wouldn’t have to chase payments, and wouldn’t have to wake up at 5:30.
Except I still wake up at 5:30.
Forty years of early job sites rewired my internal clock permanently as what I never thought about was what I would do, what I’d want to do, and what would make a day feel worthwhile when there wasn’t a job to complete, a problem to solve, a customer to satisfy.
Finding meaning in the absence
Took me about thirty-eight days to figure out that retirement is about the presence of everything else.
The problem was, I’d let everything else atrophy.
My friendships were mostly work relationships.
My hobbies were… what hobbies? My identity was so wrapped up in being an electrician that I didn’t know who I was without it.
So, I started small: I signed up to teach basic electrical safety at the community center.
I started helping out at the local trade school, showing kids how to bend conduit properly, how to read a meter, how to not kill themselves on their first job.
Old customers still call sometimes as they won’t let anyone else touch their wiring.
I take some of those calls because it feels good to still be the guy they trust, and started actually talking to my neighbors instead of just waving as I rushed off to work.
Turns out the guy three houses down restored classic cars, and I never knew that in the fifteen years we’d lived there!
Now, I help him rewire old ignition systems on Saturday mornings.
Bottom line
I spent thirty-eight years looking forward to stopping.
What I should have been doing was figuring out how to start, which was to start living and being a person.
Retirement is just another chapter, and if you haven’t been writing the story along the way, you’re going to be staring at a blank page wondering what the hell comes next.
The life I imagined was built on absence: No work, no stress, and no responsibilities.
However, absence is just empty space.
You’ve got to fill it with something, and if you wait until retirement to figure out what that something is, you’re going to spend a lot of mornings staring at that coffee cup wondering what the point is.
Take it from someone who learned the hard way: Don’t wait thirty-eight years to start living.
The work will always be there, but life won’t.
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