Every Issue

The Archive

Honest, earned perspective. One issue at a time.

Pillar:

Issues are organized by pillar. Use the filters above to find what matters most to you.

6
Issue No. 6 Relationships

The Gap Between Joining and Belonging

What I am learning from the men who keep showing up.

A Facebook group, a Friday morning coffee table, and the quiet difference between raising your hand and finding a place that starts to feel like yours.

Read Issue No. 6 →
Men gathering outdoors for conversation and connection
5
Issue No. 5 Money

The GoGo Window

The years when money can still become memories.

Retirement is not a flat line. A dollar at 68 is not the same as a dollar at 82, and the best years deserve a plan that lets money become memories while the body still says yes.

Read Issue No. 5 →
Jim and Sheryl watching elephants from a safari vehicle at golden hour
4
Issue No. 4 Health

I Now Track My Protein Like It's a Stock Portfolio

I thought I was tracking numbers. I was really protecting freedom.

I was somewhere around month twelve of retirement, just into 60, feeling softer than I had ever been and slower than I expected to feel. Muscle is not about vanity. It is health currency — the physical reserves that let you live on your own terms at 75, 80, and further.

Read Issue No. 4 →
Man tracking health and nutrition at sunrise
3
Issue No. 3 Purpose

Purpose Doesn’t Announce Itself

The quiet impact of showing up.

At some point, I stopped waiting to go back. I am not sure exactly when it happened... That acceptance should have felt like relief.

Read Issue No. 3 →
Man deep in thought
2
Issue No. 2 Structure

Good Days Don't Just Happen

Recognizing that freedom still needs a framework.

One of the biggest surprises of retirement has been realizing how much of my day used to be built for me. Structure is not the opposite of freedom. It is what keeps freedom from turning into drift.

Read Issue No. 2 →
Man on a dock at sunrise
1
Issue No. 1 Identity

I spent a year telling myself I was just between jobs.

The year I stopped waiting to go back.

Forty years in television production. Hundreds of people around me every day. That was my world. I loved it. Then one day the industry shifted, and I found myself on the other side of a career that had shaped my entire identity.

Read Issue No. 1 →
Man overlooking coastal bay at sunset

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