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Architecture on my mind.

 

I have always been interested in architecture, even so far as getting a degree but somehow a career in architecture was not in the cards. Nothing keeps me

http://www.flickr.com/photos/terrydonagher

from appraising architecture wherever I go and making a judgement. This pops up from time to time in my blog posts. From my love for Saairinen, master of mid century American architecture- a man almost forgotten these days to the would-be masters of today like Piano and Calatrava, you find posts with my two cents about their works. Then a bit of nostalgia about the wonderful Design Research stores and their headquarters in Cambridge. Finally an appreciation of billboards, really two apprecations.

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change up
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Life slips into a routine

If you are like me, you enjoy routines and familiarity. Routines are especially appealing after you leave a job or career where you couldn’t control your daily activities. After chaos, it feels good to relax into a regular schedule- any schedule. Before you know it you have created a big routine for yourself. I used the term ‘rut’ when I first wrote the last sentence but that really isn’t fair. Routines can be good or bad and sometimes a good routine can turn into a rut over time. The trouble is that it is difficult to notice the difference. Because anything you do for a long time becomes something you stop appreciating.

Even things you like can become boring.

Say you love to play golf. Or maybe that you used to love playing golf when your work schedule didn’t let you play very often. Now that you are retired, you play several times a week. Is it still fun. Do you get excited each day when you drive to the golf course. Or is it just a routine? What do you do if you can’t tell?

Do a change up.

Bill who blogs at Adventure Retirement is a great resource for new retirement ideas.  He suggests that you make a small change once in a while. Maybe you won’t like it but when you go back to your old routine, you have a reason to explain why you like what you are doing. You no longer have to struggle to justify your routine. You know that you like it.  Bill has some other suggestions about retirement lifestyles and I recommend that you read him regularly but for now let’s stick to the thought of trying something new from time to time. Take a new route when you drive to your regular destinations. Play a new golf course. Find some new partners. Shift your schedule. It’s not as if you don’t have complete control. You can change back any time you like but take the opportunity to open your mind to something new.

Small Steps can be big.

You don’t need to come up with a whole new retirement lifestyle. You don’t need to worry about many complicated, unanticipated impacts of the changes because you change one thing at a time and the change is small. If you like it then you can open up to more changes – or not. If you don’t then go back to normal.

What I am suggesting is that you make sure that your routine is one that you like and not a rut that you slipped into and which has numbed you to enjoyment. You may have the perfect retirement lifestyle but you won’t know it until you make a small change and learn how much you appreciate it. On the other hand you may have drifted into a serious and deadly rut and are just too numb to know the difference. Try a change up and find out.

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