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The Joy of Retirement: Finding Happiness, Freedom, and the Life You've Always Wanted

The Joy of Retirement: Finding Happiness, Freedom, and the Life You've Always WantedAuthors: David C. Borchard, Patricia A. Donohoe
Publisher: AMACOM
Category: Book

List Price: $16.95
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Seller: purpleturtleproducts
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 204781

Media: Paperback
Pages: 288
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.8

ISBN: 081448056X
Dewey Decimal Number: 646.790973
EAN: 9780814480564
ASIN: 081448056X

Publication Date: May 7, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
   ISBN13: 9780814480564
   Condition: New
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Life after work no longer conjures up images of couples wandering the malls, playing golf, and taking endless Caribbean cruises. As baby boomers reach their 50s and 60s, they are redefining what it means to retire. Many of them are still choosing to work or create a whole new life entirely. What they crave is vitality, joy, and meaning in their lives. Author David Borchard has been helping adults reju­ve­nate their careers and lives for 30 years. In The Joy of Retirement, he shows readers over 50 how to reinvent themselves and achieve the kind of fulfillment and mean­ing in their lives they have always dreamed of. Now, readers can start crafting their future and discovering their passions with advice on topics such as: finding new interests that make the most of their unique talents * planning their lifestyle at 50+ * assessing what transitions they are ready and willing to make * defining priorities and goals * establishing their criteria for success * mastering the seven steps to maintaining vitality Revealing and hopeful, this is a book that will reshape how people look at the second phase of their lives.

Book Description

Life after work no longer conjures up images of couples wandering the malls, playing golf, and taking endless Caribbean cruises. As baby boomers reach their 50s and 60s, they are redefining what it means to retire. Many of them are still choosing to work or create a whole new life entirely. What they crave is vitality, joy, and meaning in their lives. Author David Borchard has been helping adults rejuvenate their careers and lives for 30 years. In The Joy of Retirement, he shows readers how to reinvent themselves and achieve the kind of fulfillment and meaning in their lives they have always dreamed of. Now, readers can start crafting their future and discovering their passions with advice on topics such as:

• finding new interests that make the most of their unique talents

• planning their lifestyle at 50+

• assessing what transitions they are ready and willing to make

• defining priorities and goals

• establishing their criteria for success

• mastering the seven steps to maintaining vitality

Revealing and hopeful, this book will reshape how people look at the next phase of their lives.




Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars The Best Yet on Planning For Retirement   February 23, 2010
Gloria G. Wallace (Mpls, MN)
David Borchard and Pat Donohoe have provided a real gift to people anticipating the many faceted dimensions that thoughtful people deal with when they face retirement. The entire book is filled with helpful information but the quality that makes this book stand out from the rest is the many assessment lenses they provide in looking at the landscape of retirement. An instrument to assess the lifestyle options include looking at your preference for leisure, new work, stability and serenity or change and adventure. This is of particular value to couples who might hold widely divergent views around what this stage of life should look like. Pat and David make you think about roles you are leaving and and assist you in establishing new criteria for fulfillment. There is great help in scoping out location priorities and, of special value is the information they provide on relating and behavior changes that can be thought about in advance. This is really well done and I am telling everyone I know at this stage of life about this helpful contribution.

Gloria Wallace
Psychologist and Executive Coach



2 out of 5 stars Look it over before you buy....   September 8, 2009
Flush Barrett-Browning (Tennessee Valley)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Perhaps aging is really very simple. Because most of the guidance this book offers is just common sense solutions to the problems of growing old. And since one of the by-products of aging is (one can't help hoping) common sense, then it goes without saying, why bother to read this book?

Sorry, but the authors' rather simplistic style and approach put me off.

hmmm....lots of words that don't say much. Reminds me of the education textbooks of my youth. Not a good thing!

Seriously, look before you buy. You may find more useful content than I did. From my perspective, this book had little to offer.



5 out of 5 stars Practical Planning for a Creative Retirement   December 13, 2008
James G. Macdonell (Shepherdstown, WV and)
10 out of 11 found this review helpful

For years, as a long-time family therapist and as a Presbyterian minister involved in parish ministry, I have dealt with clients and parishioners facing approaching retirement who didn't have a clue as to what they want to do with the rest of their lives. Some of them have become traumatized by indecision, while others have acted precipitously in relocating somewhere else without having any basis for choosing this particular location.....only to quickly discover that the choice they made was disappointing of wrong. In his new book, The Joy of Retirement, author David Borchard, a professional counselor with 30 years of experience in career management and transition counseling, has provided a means of helping those facing retirement to examine their own talents and dreams in creating happy, productive futures. Borchard does this by challenging those in their 50's and 60's to intentionally assess and define the pertinent issues, priorities and goals which will help them make intelligent decisions in establishing vital futures. The author provides charts, raises questions, and gives examples of how others have traveled the successful road to retirement. I heartily endorse this excellent, common-sense, challenging and very warm and human little book which offers a practical course of action for those looking to gain a hope-filled vision of what creative retirement can hold for them!


5 out of 5 stars Excellent tools to help you organize your thoughts about retirement...all of them.   December 9, 2008
Sheila Maher (Washington, DC)
7 out of 8 found this review helpful

As an executive coach I have used Dave Borchard's career-focused tools to help my clients maximize their success and fulfillment, while reducing stress and balancing their lives. In The Joy of Retirement he has given us another set of tools that enable us to make sense of our complicated and sometimes contradictory feelings about retirement. Even if you have done considerable thinking about retirement this book will help you deepen and organize your thoughts.


5 out of 5 stars Covers what many retirement books don't--the personal journey   October 13, 2008
Leia Francisco (Washington. D.C. area)
7 out of 7 found this review helpful

David Borchard and Pat Donohoe have created a must-have guide for those 50 and older as they shape their "retirmenent" years. There are plenty of fine books and sources about the financial,geographic, and recreational opportunities of our later years, but The Joy of Retirement is unique. It explores the internal journey, our stories, our true passions, our unfinished business, and how we make behavioral shifts as our senior years. The assessment tools designed by Borchard give a whole picture of the self in retirement and his experience with hundreds of clients in retirement brings interest and depth to his major points.

I love this book.


Leia Francisco
Life Coach, MA, ACC
Leia Francisco Associates


Worthwhile Reading

Your 401k Account - An Annual Checkup
By Dee Marie

You probably perform a lot of tasks annually. Some of these tasks protect you, your family, or even your assets. These chores include visiting your doctor for an annual physical or cleaning the gutters on your house. Well, next time you're making your list of 'must-do's' be certain to include a checkup for your 401(k) plan on your list.

Your annual examination of your 401(k) plan should cover a few different aspects of your investment. You can check each one quickly by exploring your most recent account statement.

First, you should evaluate your contribution amount. Changes in your financial position over the past year could warrant an increase or decrease in the amount you put into your 401(k). Receiving a raise at work is a great occasion to increase your retirement contribution. Changing your contribution amount isn't what matters here; it's taking the time to decide if you should make a change.

Next, you should take a look at your investment choices. A mutual fund that was outperforming its peers at this time last year may have tanked over the last twelve months. Although it's important to remember that you don't want to change your investment allocations too often, a regular examination of the funds you've chosen isn't excessive.

Finally, you should check on the way your investment options within your 401(k) are spread. Investing in four mutual funds, you might decide to put twenty-five percent of your account into each fund. However, if one fund grows more aggressively than another, at the end of the year you may have forty percent in one fund, ten percent in another, and twenty-five percent in each of the remaining two funds. Since financial experts sometimes advise that retirement accounts should be spread among many different types of investment, you may want to rebalance your account back to your original allocations of twenty-five percent in each fund.

Making changes to your 401(k) plan isn't something that should be taken lightly. Speak with your financial advisor if you aren't certain about the direction you should be taking. Regardless of the actions you decide to take, you'll feel better about your retirement plan after taking care of its annual maintenance.

Want to learn how to save more money? Head on over to http://NotMadeOfMoney.com/blog - Be sure to grab our RSS feed or sign up to receive email updates

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Retirement Facts
Whether a worker is offered and participates in a retirement plan at work depends greatly on what type of worker the person is: • Public-sector workers have the highest level of participation in a retirement plan (75.8% in 2004), while parttime workers typically are not offered a retirement plan or rarely participate when they are. • Among all workers, less than half (41.9% in 2004) participate in a retirement plan. • Among full-time, full-year wage and salary workers, more than half (56.6% in 2004) participate in a retirement plan.
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