I’ve recently been invited to become a guest contributor by the good people on a blog called Make It Ultra. This is a great place to go to if you’re in need of some inspiration and I recommend it to you – and not just for my posts there! This is the second post they have done with me, and hopefully there will be more. They have featured it today in their top five recent posts, so hopefully I’ll be asked back again sometime!
This is what they posted for me:
A Few Tips On Life
I’m a little bit older than other contributors here, and while that doesn’t bestow on me any extra wisdom it does mean that I’ve experienced more years of life and what it can throw at us. Life is a series of phases: school, college, university, relationships, job changes, and then retirement. But just because parts of our life are ending this doesn’t have to be negative. Here are a few tips I’ve picked up along the way.
1. Recognize the good things in every life stage, and try to hold onto them.
Often, as in education and work, this can mean the people you have as friends. If you move on, you don’t have to leave them behind. So keep what is good – for you. You must recognise what works for you. Who do you value in your life? Would you miss them if they were no longer there? Would your life be poorer without them? Answer ’yes’ to these and you’ll know who to stay in touch with, and who were the ones who you can part with. It sounds harsh – but it’s realistic. We don’t have unlimited time, and we need to use it wisely.
2. Let the past go
You will be wasting energy if you try to recreate something which has gone, that existed in another part of your life. As we get older, we move out of education into work, and it is likely that we will have several job changes. You may well get a lot of fun from your job, but don’t expect that to be the same if you move on. You’ve changed your circumstances for a reason, so be positive and find the good in your new situation: embrace that change and make as much as you can out of it. A new job, new friends, maybe a new location – these can be very exciting. Remember Don Henley, in The Boys Of Summer? – “A little voice inside my head said, “Don’t look back. You can never look back.” Grasp what you have, not what your mind is telling you that you used to have!
3. Look ahead
Plan for your future. What you are doing now is part of your whole life plan, so do you know how it fits into that? Do you have a plan for where you want to be? That can mean job or personal ambitions, and it can be a huge benefit to us to have a sense of where we are going, of how we want our little place in the world to be. We all need a sense of purpose – it can keep us grounded and can help us when times get hard. If we know that we have goals to achieve we are better placed to overcome the obstacles that life can put in our way.
4. As you move through life, the ‘R’ word approaches: Retirement. Think of retirement as an opportunity to do new things in your life.
When we are younger, this can be something we dread. “We’ll be old! Our useful life will be over! We’ll be a burden!” Be honest, have you ever thought something like that? I guess your retirement could be like that: if you choose it to be. I retired three years ago and it doesn’t feel like that to me, honest! I started blogging in my final year at work, and am still going strong with it. I’m going to more live sporting and music events than I ever could while work got in the way. I can visit galleries and museums. I can see family and friends whenever I want to. Or I can spend my days at home with my books, music and movies. I’m even thinking of learning to play guitar, and to develop apps, though both of these are ideas at this stage! It doesn’t sound that bad, does it? It’s a beginning, not an end! In fact, it’s just the next phase in our life.
5. Be Prepared for the Unexpected
I said earlier that we should plan ahead. I know the old saying that if you want to make God laugh you should tell Him your plans. Things don’t always turn out the way we expected or planned. In my case, this meant getting divorced six years before I retired. I hadn’t been expecting at that point in my life to be making a new home for myself, and embarking on a changed relationship with my daughters, who I no longer lived with. But I – and they – worked our way through this. My life is now very different from the one I had been expecting and aiming for. But that isn’t a bad thing. It isn’t a failure. It just proved the point for me that we need to be flexible and need to adapt to being hit by the unexpected.
Life is for living. Don’t waste it!
And if you’d like to see this on the Make It Ultra site you can find it here.
I, for one, will buy any app you develop, Clive. And I’m taking every piece of advice you give, even though i’ older than you! Your friend, Clare
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Just don’t hold your breath, but thank you! Glad to have your support and friendship 😊
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😀
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I will heed your advice, #5 especially. Life threw that same situation at me, just as I was retiring. And I got through it as well!
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Thanks Diane, I’m glad you managed to get through it too 😊
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My husband retired early 18 months and it’s the best decision we ever made. He’s so busy he tells everyone he doesn’t know how he ever had tme to go to work!
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That’s how I feel about it too, it’s a shame we can’t always be retired! 😊
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Great advice, Clive!
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Thanks Jo 😊
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Gosh these are fabulous Clive!
I have to agree and I’m so glad I’m older now, because most of these things I recognize and realize. The angst of being younger is far behind me and I realize how life is short, so we should enjoy every day!
jodie
http://www.jtouchofstyle.com
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Thank you Jodie. The phrase that always comes to me is ‘enjoy every sandwich.’ The late, great Warren Zevon said that – you may need to Google him 😊
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So good advice you give here Clive. Thank you. I sometimes feel it’s easier for me to look back than forward so it’s a good reminder. Even today I got the thought that I should write everything down for the occasion that I should have to continue on my own.
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Thank you Maria. Planning ahead is never a bad thing, even if the unexpected can sometimes get in the way.
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Great advice, Clive! Thanks for sharing it with all of us. I love Don Henley by the way! 😉
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Thanks Lisa, that’s kind of you. I have all Don’s albums, and the Eagles too. Never tire of hearing them.
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Sound advice Clive. Great to see you doing guest blog.
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Thank you, very kind of you to say so 😊
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Extremely good advice particularly, as Stevie says above, binning the rear view mirror … you can’t fix the past so why waste time dwelling on it. And friends? What an overused word that is. Knowing who is of value to you and knowing who the time bandits and drains are is essential for us all. Really well written and really wise – but that is no surprise at all
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Thank you, your opinion is always welcome and trusted. Glad you agree with me!
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Reblogged this on Stevie Turner, Indie Author. and commented:
Clive’s giving some good advice here!
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All very wise advice, Clive, especially the bit about not looking back. It really doesn’t help, does it?
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Thanks Stevie. It really doesn’t help, and Don Henley said it so well 😊
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