I retired in January, not long before the lockdown.
I am goal driven, but I make sure I had goals outside of work. I was a bit more limited during the pandemic, but hiking and scrambling up mountains was safe. I set a goal to hike 1,000 miles during my 65 year old year.
I made it in 10 months, along with 217,000 feet of elevation gain. Next was completing 200 Southern California Peaks (which I started as a pre-teen), which I did the end of September. Now, I am focusing on 1,000 miles in the 2021 calendar year.
I have about 67 miles to do in December. I should be able to make it. I finished November with 102. My mileage is down from earlier in the year, but the miles have been much more rugged.
I am also building up my guitar song repertoire and learning blues piano. That gives me something to work on when I am at home.
I found that I adapted very quickly, and it did not take long for my work focus to shift to my personal outside of work goals.
I am still waiting to start travelling. We had set some travel goals before retirement that we had to put on hold. That is why it is important to have something in reserve.
I was doing a lot of indoor climbing training prior to the pandemic. I was working on getting my outdoor climbing confidence back (age related decrease in strength and agility). That plan had to go on hold.
I was a competitive archer and expected to be competing now, but I am so busy with my current activities that I have not had time to train. That's one more thing I can get back to.
I think keeping busy is key. My dad was successful at retirement. He started taking outdoor classes and going to Elder Hostels, which is now call Road Scholars.
He was an amateur photographer (aerial photographer during WWII) and used retirement to get more seriously into it.
As far as medical, we went with an Advantage plan because we live in an area with large medical networks. All of our PPO doctors were covered by the Advantage plan.
I think if you don't have a large network then they can be a disadvantage.
Something to keep in mind about medical insurance, if you think it is a waste of money. Medical issues can cause you to lose your house if you are not covered.
People complain about high co-pays, which can be a bummer, but the most important financial issue with medical insurance is covering the stuff that can bankrupt you, not the things that cost a lot, will hurt, but you can manage.
You never know when you will be diagnosed with a serious illness or have an accident.