Categories
Blogs

UPDATE APRIL 2026

Life After Retirement: Redefining Purpose and Aging Gracefully

In 2022, I launched my website, Retirementisabeginning.com, not realizing how profoundly life was about to change.

I created this site to explore a question many retirees wrestle with: What do I do now? As a lifelong workaholic, retirement was both a challenge and an opportunity. At the same time, I was recovering from a broken femur and struggling to listen to what my body was telling me.

Between 2023 and early 2026, I’ve made major progress—and learned a great deal about healthy aging, resilience, and redefining purpose after retirement.


Accepting the Realities of Aging

Healing takes time, and so does accepting change. In 2025, I stopped coloring my hair—a decision driven by rising costs and practicality. Still, seeing my naturally white (not gray!) hair in the mirror was a shock.

Last month, I turned 80. My mind doesn’t feel 80, even though I keep reminding myself that age is just a number. I once believed the hardest parts of growing older were about mindset and choice. Now, I understand that aging gracefully is also about accepting the long-term effects of choices made years ago.


Celebrating Progress and Health Improvements

Although I didn’t update my website as frequently as planned, I’ve learned to acknowledge the progress I’ve made—physically, emotionally, and mentally.

Over the past three years, I have:

  • Lost over 80 pounds through consistent habits and lifestyle changes
  • Reduced my diabetes from uncontrolled to pre-diabetic levels
  • Regained mobility after being told I might never walk again

Recently, I walked more than a quarter mile, climbed four flights of stairs, and conquered a hill I thought impossible. My daily mantra reminds me how far I’ve come: I can. I will. I did. I am.


Lifelong Learning in Retirement

One of the best parts of retirement is rediscovering the joy of learning. I’ve taught myself the fundamentals of artificial intelligenceweb design, and digital marketing.

I’ve written grants for a nonprofit, started my memoir, and completed three years of therapy after a femur fracture and a separate pelvic fracture. I launched a Shopify store and now work with a marketing firm and local college students to strengthen my online business skills.

Even with these achievements, I still face the familiar internal voice filled with “shoulds.” If there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s that self-doubt doesn’t retire when you do—but you can keep moving forward anyway.


Caring for Loved Ones With Dementia

My husband is living with mid-stage dementia, which brings both heartache and gratitude. I’m thankful that his condition is progressing slowly and that I have the ability and flexibility to care for him.

Sometimes, I try to live as if everything is normal. I know this worries our children, but I’m simply not wired to give up. Life looks different now—but it’s not over. Resilience in retirement means adapting, loving, and continuing to grow.


Looking Ahead: Exploring the Next Chapter

As I continue this journey, I aim to update the blog more regularly and explore topics that matter to retirees—healthy agingfinancial balancelifelong learningrelationships in later life, and finding purpose beyond work.

If there’s an issue you’d like me to research or discuss, please email me at BScobey@gmail.com. Mention that you’re a blog reader and include your contact information—I’d love to hear your ideas.

Together, we can keep proving that retirement isn’t the end—it’s the beginning of living life on new terms.

571 words