Money Matters RetirementReady to Retire? It's Time to Simplify Your Life By Jane Farrell The time is now to get started on reaching your retirement goal (or dream) in 2016. Reboot Partners, four Boomer professionals, have written a practical guide, THE RETIREMENT BOOM: An All Inclusive Guide to Money, Life, and Health in Your Next Chapter (Career Press), to make the transition a bit easier. (You can order the book on Amazon or BN.com.)The first thing you should do, they say, is to start simplifying your life so you’ll have less to worry about and more time both to have fun and to keep track of the important matters in your life once you’ve retired. Here are some smart ways to start:FinancesPare down to three financial relationships – While consolidating to one institution may afford you certain discounts or services, diversifying protects your interests.Talk with experts – Consult people you trust. Choose a Certified Financial Planner who charges a fee and has no financial interest in where and how you invest. Read about financial matters and attend local or online seminars.Be organized – Compile critical information in a safe place, such as a fireproof safe. Keep paper copies of important documents, in case you lose the electronic.Keep your family informed – Be sure they know where your information is, in case you become incapacitated.At HomeSchedule – Consider a master paper calendar in the kitchen to help you stay connected and negotiate plans with family members. It also can be a vehicle for asking for help.Start cleaning – Set aside time each week to clean out a small space, such as a closet or dresser drawers.Share responsibility – Get family involved in cleaning, fixing up, and maintaining shared spaces. Sharing teaches value. You might even want to work with a friend at each other’s house.Detach from technology – This lets you focus on simple pleasures. Start at mealtime and extend to one evening, weekends, or during vacations with your whole family.Sell or change second homes – Rent a smaller house or change your condo for one where you’d like to retire. Trade homes during vacations through places like www.homeexchange.com, rather than own a second home.“Stuff”Reduce clutter – Pare down possessions. Involve family and have them take charge of their own possessions and spaces. Re-gift, give to charity, or hold a garage sale.Hire an expert— If you can afford one, hire a personal consultant to help you go through things, get things appraised, find places to sell and give away things you no longer want or need.Vacations Take a cruise – This lets you relax and enjoy the trip. You don’t have to go big; consider a smaller cruise.Travel with friends and family – Each person can organize a portion of the trip.Visit friends– Go see friends and let them do the planningEstablish a one-bag rule – Pack only what you can take in one bag, ideally to carry on the plane.Rent equipment – Instead of hauling your own sports equipment, consider renting at your destination.Have a staycation – Enjoy your home space, eat out or order in, visit area sites.RelationshipsFocus on good friends – Identify the people you trust and enjoy; ditch destructive relationships.Have small, non-stressful social events – Try smaller groups, such as a movie with a few friends.Pare down your gift list – Limit buying.OverallBe in the moments – Multitasking is the antithesis of enjoying the simple pleasures of life. Break up your efforts. Set a short goal and a timer. Reward yourself.Break the procrastination habit – If you are a procrastinator, find out why. You may learn something that sets you free in other ways.Ditch perfection – In doing that, we combat our feelings and become happier human beings.Overcome guilt – We don’t have to pack in every task offered to us. We can choose to live differently – one small choice at a time.REBOOT PARTNERS, LLC offers professional and corporate consulting and coaching on retirement planning and strategy, as well as planning for sabbaticals. Reboot Partners provide the vision, motivation, business case, community, and leadership to both individuals looking to “reboot their lives” and organizations working to become more innovative and resilient by managing their workforce planning strategies—which will include retirement planning for the Baby Boomer population and sabbatical programs to engaged and retain valued employees. For more about their work, visit www.rebootbreak.com. Share this: