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Active Adult Living Del Webb Communities Retirement

Retiring? Join A Group!

People Are Groupish

We join teams, leagues and fraternities. During the work years we join work groups, committees, trade and professional associations. We were a part of or interacted with groups of employees, vendors, and customers.

Then there are our major groups we belong to in the realm of politics and religion.

Groups helped define who we are. We take on group identities and work together to accomplish goals. Even though the chimp inside us is selfish, we can become good team players and motivate each other and accomplish things we can’t do by ourselves.

Turning to Retirement

When you retire, you leave behind some of your primary groups that were work related. They provided part of your identity, friends, structure and support and will need to be replaced with other groups to provide the same benefits in your retirement.

You hear from the experts that in retirement you need to find a new passion, make friends and get active both physically and mentally.  But they don’t tell you how to do that.

Join A Group

Groups can still play a major role in your life.  They can provide the structure to participate in both physical and mental activities while introducing you to potential new friends and socialization opportunities. They can help you fill your calendar with things you like to do! They can give you some fun things to look forward to. They can motivate you. Groups can serve a greater good and let you do things you can’t do by yourself.

How To Find Groups in Retirement

Start looking for some groups that sound interesting, something you like to do. Create the right mixture of groups to participate in, to create some balance in your life, that maybe was missing during the work years.

If you are aging in place, a great place to start is to visit your local “Active Adult” Senior Center.  Don’t let your bias stop you. Go visit and ask for the Activities Schedule.  I did this when I retired and ended up being on the activity committee.  I joined the walking group on Tuesday and Thursday at 8am and played bocce M-W-F.  I  was in charge of the monthly dinner.  Mary Ann enjoyed the yoga group. Mary Ann and I made new friends and had a great time at our senior center.

This inspired us to move to an Active Adult Community.  This type of 55+ community is the poster child for groups and activities.

We have over 80 groups here at The Village at Deaton Creek, a Del Webb Community.

Active Adult Community Groups

This week I attended the forum club meeting that meets every Tuesday and we discussed Latin American. It was fun and I learned quite a bit.

Mary Ann and I are in the bocce league and we played two games yesterday afternoon. Each game was with different people and we have a schedule to play each of the seven teams twice.  We all meet at the bocce courts each week and catch up, laugh and have a good time.

I joined Larry’s pickleball group, an informal group of us who learned to play pickleball together last year after taking the free class.  Larry coordinates the schedule for the week among about 15 of us.  This is one of my favorite activities because of the people and the game.

The Democratic group made me Treasurer so I get to keep the list of members and collect the dues.  I get to attend the board meetings and the general meetings which I attended last Tuesday to hear a great speaker talk about the climate.

The week I also attended the Veterans Support Group meeting and heard a speaker and the club make plans to support a shelter in Winder for homeless veterans.  I also got some tips about my own veterans’ benefits from this same group.

Two mornings a week I go to Lisa’s Cardio Sculpture class and really like it. It helps with core training which will help my race walking.

I used to go to the Coin Collectors group and the Creative Writers Group but both of those groups disbanded after many meeting. That opened up room for other groups.

Mary Ann loves going to The Culinary club with her friend Mary Lou and playing with her Hand and Foot card group every Tuesday.  So we each have our own groups but we still share a lot of activities.

Before almost all of our friends were shared friends, but now each of us has friends in our groups.

Mary and I just booked a 10 day New England Fall Discovery Tour and will leave from the parking lot by the clubhouse and we will join 20 or 25 people from the community for this tour.

We have so many other groups we would like to join but our calendars are full at the present. Who knows, maybe after a while we will drop a group and add a group or two.

Meanwhile outside the community, I compete in Race Walking and am a member of the Atlanta Track Club and the USA Track & Field which I am on the race walking committee.  So that is another group that I share activities with friends.

The Walking Group at the hospital next door invited me to come back and I understand the group still meets that I started last October!  Maybe I will drop in this week for a walk with them. After The National Senior Games in June, maybe I will join them and get some members interested in Race Walking.

In Summary

As you can see, groups have an important role in our retirement. If you are having trouble getting started in retirement, visit your Active Adult Senior Senior or find you an Active Adult Community to visit, to see what they offer. You will be glad you did.

 

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Retirement

Travel: Motorcoach Guided Tours

Mary Ann and I just returned from a 10 day motorcoach tour titled “New England Fall Foliage Tour”.  Previously, we had been on a 14 day motorcoach tour of Italy and a 14 day motorcoach tour of Germany and Austria, but that was a long time ago, so we didn’t know what to expect.

On our tour, we visited the Liberty Bell and Independence Hall in Philadelphia, had lunch at Quincy Market in Boston, had Chowder at Mystic Seaport, ate lobster in Boothbay Harbor Maine and did a dinner cruise on Lake Champlain in Burlington VT. Since it was a Fall Foliage Tour we also drove through the Smoky Mountains in NC, the White Mountains in NH, the Green Mountains of VT, the Catskills of New York and Shenandoah Valley in Virginia.

That sounds great doesn’t it? It was. But is was sometimes frustrating and very tiring at times also.

The tour company we used decided to replace the tour guides at the last minute and the new guides did not know the locations we visited. They tried to read a description off the internet. That was disappointing.

We logged 2900 miles and visited 16 states in 10 days, resulting in a rushed, not well thought out itinerary, trying to cover too much at our expense. On two separate days, we got on the bus at 8am and did not get to our hotel until 8pm.  Ugh!

There were 44 passengers and 2 tour guides and a driver. All passengers were age 55+ and 4 were from our Active Adult Community. We got to meet some interesting people.

This was a local tour company in Lula, Georgia that had been recommended to us by several neighbors in our Active Adult Community who had taken shorter trips. Maybe we just had a bad tour. The tour company did reply to my concerns and have made changes.

Several of our fellow motorcoach travelers told us that this would never happen on Collette Tours or Road Scholar Educational Tours. Our tour was not cheap, but these tours are more expense but apparently offer better planned out tours with more informed tour guides. There are also motorcoach tours by American Express,  Trafalgar and Grayline.

Shopping bus tour companies and really taking a detailed look at the tour is something I really didn’t think about before, but sounds like good advice now. Do you really want to change hotels every night and travel 2900 miles with a large group of 44 people trying to see as many sights as you can in an unreasonable amount of time?

It’s not how many hours you can spend on the bus or how many sights you can say you visited, is it? It’s a pleasant travel experience you are looking for.

Our hotels we stayed at were the Hampton Inns and Holiday Inns which are fine if you have a car, but they were not really close to anything to walk to. We only stayed in two hotels that were interesting, but we really didn’t have enough time to enjoy them and the area.

We now know more about motorcoach travel and are better prepared to research what we are looking for. Maybe taking a shorter motorcoach trip would be better next time, at least for us.

Robert Fowler

PS: If you do take a motorcoach tour, you may want to bring these items:
A pillow for your head (we bought one at Bed, Bath & Beyond)
A cushion for your back, if needed.
A small blanket or throw.  They keep it cool on the coach.
Hanging cup holder
Ear plugs
A medium size backpack to go under your seat