In this Chapter we will discuss the importance of recognizing that the better your reason for getting out of bed in the morning, the more likely you are to keep getting up
and moving forward.
“Confused by all of this?”
“That’s ok, we were at first too.”
Welcome to The Third Journey – your life awaits… or at least it will when you wake up and realize that your old life is gone.
One of the New Age theories of existence focuses on the notion that the biggest problem people face when they get to “heaven” is realizing that they have arrived,
because heaven initially looks exactly like the world they just left. In some respects the start of your Third Journey is frequently a lot like this. You go to sleep one night a
member of the “work force” and wake up the next morning in a new and foreign land. Yes, you know you have “retired” because your daily schedule has changed, but in
all other respects life seems to be pretty much the same and so you assume it is and go about your daily activities in the same way.
Big mistake.
Ironically, modern society places significant emphasis on the constant changes that take place during the first third of our lives (our bodies grow, we learn, we develop
personalities, we form relationships and a sense of ourselves) but also encourages us to believe that very few changes take place during the last third of our lives. This is far
from the case.
People joke about having a “second childhood” but very few people appreciate just how appropriate this term is for the phase that everyone goes through when they first
pass through the “retirement threshold”. Your first days at home are often quite euphoric and it is not unusual to feel a rush of exhilaration unlike anything you have
experienced in years, making you prone to silly, giggly actions – you eat ice cream in the middle of the day, you go around with your shirt on backwards, you color at the
kitchen table with the grandkids, you buy yourself a shiny new toy.
The early days are also the stage for some remarkable temper tantrums over seemingly small things as you dust off and release some of your pent-up “work world”
frustration. You chop down trees that block your view, you shred boxes of documents no longer needed, you throw all your business suits in a heap in the middle of the
floor and stomp on them, you pick a fight with the family dog for stealing your spot on the sofa – good times indeed.
To say you are acting out is an understatement, but no one addresses it. Instead, there are hushed voices in the corridor …
“Now just give him a little time to get his bearings … make sure you play quietly outside, Grandpa is trying to rest …”
Perfect. You have just been released from forty years of hard labor, and now your parole officer (aka your spouse) is sentencing you to a nap. To keep the peace you
grudgingly comply, but just when you are getting settled she will stick her head through the doorway to verify that you have in fact stayed where she put you, and attempt
to justify this by demanding to know whether you want a cup of tea. There is no right answer to this of course; if you decline, she’ll be back in ten minutes to ask if you are
sure, and if you accept she will be back in seventeen minutes with coffee – she wasn’t in the mood for tea.
That’s ok though, you have a secret way of getting even … next time she announces that she is going to do the grocery shopping, wait until she picks up the car keys and
then leap off the sofa ask “Can I come?”. This will drive her completely insane because she is still struggling to work out why this mundane errand that she used to loathe I
s suddenly feeling like a refuge from a life sentence of togetherness.
If you really want to see your spouse go nuts, when you get to the store, stroll up and down the aisles and make random comments regarding where you would stock the
toilet paper, and start little debates regarding which brand of peas should be purchased for that yummy tuna casserole she insists on making again. You don’t need to worry
about offending or annoying each other – there won’t be any conversation in the car on the way home anyway because you each cannot tolerate the way the other one
drives.
Don’t worry if you don’t win the battle today, the best part about your “post work” life is that there is absolutely nothing to prevent you both from getting up tomorrow
and doing the same thing all over again.
Still sure that there is no such thing as a second childhood? Don’t kid yourself – there is a naughty selfish 7 year old inside you who has been waiting for years for an
opportunity to act out, and your lack of planning has given him plenty of free time to invent nasty new games for you to play.