Celebrating Next – Ned Grossman

It is our mission at Lifelaunch Consulting to help others define their ‘next’ with purpose and intention, and to celebrate as a new chapter unfolds. As part of this, we are highlighting our friends who have successfully navigated the move from ‘now’ to ‘next’ and are thriving as a result! It is our hope that by sharing these stories, we inspire others to live their lives to the fullest.

Name:

Ned Grossman

My pre-retirement career:

Employee Benefits Consultant

Three ways I spend my time in retirement:

#1: Enjoying every day; the peace, calm and beauty of living as a human being rather than a human doing.

#2: Finishing my second book, “How to Succeed in the 21st Century: Focus on the Things over which You have Input, Impact and Control.” (It should be “out” very shortly.)

#3: Making the time to perform random acts of kindness. It’s actually quite a lot of fun!

What I love most about retirement:

See the answer to above question!

My biggest challenge with retirement:

Making it last.

What I did to prepare for retirement:

Honestly, nothing special. Welcomed it when it arrived and have embraced it ever since.

Something I’ve recently done for the first time:

Took a course in adult education, if you consider “Baseball: A Business or a Sport” adult “education.’

Most recent book/article I’ve read:

Thomas Friedman’s “Thank You for Being Late.”

My future:

To be determined.

My advice for future retirees:

Embrace it passionately; enjoy it enthusiastically; hope it lasts indefinitely!

Celebrating Next – Terry O’Connell

It is our mission at Lifelaunch Consulting to help others define their ‘next’ with purpose and intention, and to celebrate as a new chapter unfolds. As part of this, we are highlighting our friends who have successfully navigated the move from ‘now’ to ‘next’ and are thriving as a result! It is our hope that by sharing these stories, we inspire others to live their lives to the fullest.

Name:

Terry O’Connell

My pre-retirement career:

Executive Vice President, Time Warner Cable

Three ways I spend my time in retirement:

Spending time with God & family, charity work and lots of traveling.

What I love most about retirement:

Stress free living! I now have the time I need for my post-retirement passion which is aiding the operation and fundraising efforts for Star House, a 24×7 homeless youth drop-in center located in Columbus, Ohio. Star House serves homeless young people ages 14-24. Yes, 14-24 year old homeless youth right here in our back yard!

My biggest challenge with retirement:

No question, finding enough time to do everything! There are just not enough hours in the day to accomplish everything I’d like to do.

What I did to prepare for retirement:

I worked hard to leave my operation in good financial shape for the exceptional group of executives on our team. I also did everything possible to make sure those great executives were as well positioned as they could be in an environment of major companywide restructuring.

Something I’ve recently done for the first time:

Ha! I just had a knee replacement! No fun, but necessary. Also, I am planning a month long trip to Italy this September…beginning in Sicily, then Rome and the Vatican ending for two weeks in Tuscany. Can’t wait

Most recent book/article I’ve read:

Thank You for Being Late, by Thomas Friedman

My future:

Continue to support the Star House, travel, enjoy my time with my wife, adult children and our two grand daughters, Maeve and Maren.

My advice for future retirees:

Retire as soon as you can. Life is short, you never know what tomorrow will bring, especially about that which so many take for granted, good health! Remember, at a certain age, everyday you continue working is the last best physical day of your life. Find a new challenge to occupy your new found freedom. Giving back in some way does wonders for the soul.

Celebrating Next – Sandra J. Anderson

It is our mission at Lifelaunch Consulting to help others define their ‘next’ with purpose and intention, and to celebrate as a new chapter unfolds. As part of this, we are highlighting our friends who have successfully navigated the move from ‘now’ to ‘next’ and are thriving as a result! It is our hope that by sharing these stories, we inspire others to live their lives to the fullest.

Name:

Sandra J. Anderson

My pre-retirement career:

In 2010, I retired as a partner from the Columbus law firm, Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP, where I was a trial attorney for 33 years. I took four days off and then started working again, as Associate Vice President and Deputy General Counsel with The Ohio State University Office of Legal Affairs. OSU was one of my very favorite clients when I served as Special Counsel for the University on a number of fascinating cases during my years (decades) at the Vorys firm. After three years as in-house counsel at OSU, I retired a second time. This time, I succeeded in staying retired (at least so far).

Three ways I spend my time in retirement:

I get to pick only three? Okay, here goes.

(1) Non-profit board service and community service. In other words, I am actually still working – just not for compensation. Current examples: Chair of the Equality Ohio Education Fund Board; Vice-Chair of Planned Parenthood of Greater Ohio board; Steering Committee member, The Matriots PAC; Legacy Fund of the Columbus Foundation board; Ohio State Legal Services board; Ohio University Foundation board; and working on or supporting political campaigns.

(2) Enjoying my family, such as traveling with my wife (our big trip last year was biking and river-cruising from Prague to Budapest), visiting Mom at her nursing home at least once a week (she is very happy there, which is a blessing), walking the dogs (they are family too, of course), and spoiling nieces and nephews (including the great-nieces and great-nephew, with more on the way).

(3) Planting and harvesting from my front yard garden in Dublin, Ohio, and posting pictures on Facebook to document (brag about?) the progress and produce throughout spring, summer and fall.

Speaking of “three ways,” my life philosophy (which I borrowed from another source somewhere along the way) has evolved to this: Life should be lived in thirds: One-third learning, one-third earning and one-third serving. Not necessarily in that order, but in that proportion. I never stop learning. My earning years are mostly behind me. And now, my focus is on the service part.

What I love most about retirement:

So many things. Freedom and flexibility. Wearing blue jeans much of the time. Being well rested. Very rarely do I set an alarm. If I’m not awake of my own accord, one of our dogs (the one with the ravenous appetite) usually serves the purpose of rousing me up at breakfast time.

My biggest challenge with retirement:

Before I became a “retiree,” my fear was that I would become invisible and irrelevant, since I had spent so much of my life being (or thinking I was) identified by my profession and place of employment. That fear did not materialize, and I was pleasantly surprised to find that folks still wanted to meet me for coffee, lunch or adult beverages, and that they wanted me to serve on boards and campaigns and such. The challenge then has become managing my schedule and trying not to overcommit. Also, I really, really miss having an assistant. And an IT department.

What I did to prepare for retirement:

Probably the best thing I did to prepare was to diligently save for retirement, starting early during my earning years. That advice about maxing out your 401K contributions? I followed that. I also started planning and saving in other ways early on, such as purchasing a Long Term Care policy and investing in non-retirement accounts, too.

Something I’ve recently done for the first time:

In March 2017, I did something that happened to me only once before, when I was born. I spent the night in a hospital. I received a new right hip.

Most recent book/article I’ve read:

Lynn and I belong to two Book Clubs, both dating back 20-plus years and populated by the dearest of friends. I usually have two or three books under way, on my bed stand, at any one time. Right now, I’m in the midst of “Radium Girls” by Kate Moore and “Y is for Yesterday” by the recently-departed Sue Grafton. Favorite books recently include “Lab Girls” by Hope Jahren and “Being Mortal” by Atul Gawande. Also, after my dog wakes me up each morning, I pour myself a cup of coffee and leisurely review The Washington Post, The Columbus Dispatch, The New York Times, and any interesting articles posted by my Facebook friends. Plus, a stack of magazines await: the Atlantic, Vanity Fair, Time, AARP (increasingly a favorite), etc. It’s important to invest in the First Amendment.

My future:

Continuing to work on boards, causes and political campaigns that have the promise of making the world a better place. And adjusting to whatever life will be like when my currently-working spouse retires. I think it will be fantastic!

My advice for future retirees:

Save some money. Seek financial planning advice. Be kind and attentive to family, friends and strangers. Take care of your own health (physical and mental). Plant a garden. Adopt some dogs. Find a good place to board the dogs, so you can travel sometimes. And be eternally grateful for your opportunities!
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