Even when retirement is something you chose, planned for, and looked forward to, the transition can still feel surprisingly unsettling.
That’s what Candace described at our first meeting. After a 20-plus year career as a marketing executive, she couldn’t wait to be free of the early morning alarm clock, all-nighters to meet deadlines, and the 24-7 demands of coordinating a global team. Deep down she knew it was the right time to step away, and yet she found herself wondering, “I wanted this. Why do I still feel out of sorts?”
That feeling can be confusing. Many people experience a kind of disorientation that’s hard to put their finger on, and perhaps a sense of being a little lost.
The Connection Between Work and Identity
Work is rarely just work. Over time, a role, a title, even a company affiliation becomes woven into our identity. It gives shape to our days, offers a sense of purpose, creates built-in relationships, and provide a familiar way to measure progress and contribution.
Research on retirement and identity helps explain why this matters. In her article “Older Canadians’ Identity and Well-Being in Retirement,” Nicky J. Newton presents research that shows how people adapt their sense of self in retirement, and how that’s connected both life satisfaction and a sense of meaning in life.
Retirement is not only about leaving a job. It’s about adapting to a new phase of life without the usual routines, relationships, and rewards that provided meaning for years.
Work often answers questions we don’t even realize we’re asking: Where do I belong? What am I responsible for? Who relies on me? What makes my waking hours feel worthwhile?
For Candace, understanding that some of these questions were lingering beneath the surface set off a lightbulb: “No wonder I’m feeling off. I’m reorganizing not only my time but myself in this next phase of life.”
Reorienting in Retirement
Navigating the questions of “Who am I now?” and “Where do I belong?” can feel tender, uncertain, and even awkward at first. You may need to experiment before you know what feels meaningful now. You may need to grieve parts of your former role, even if you’re happy to leave other parts of it behind. You may need space to discover who you are becoming, not just what you’re leaving.
Retirement is often described as a finish line, but for many people, it feels more like crossing a threshold. The old map no longer quite fits, and the new one has not fully been charted yet.
If you feel disoriented, you are not alone. You may simply be in the very human process of reorganizing your footing in a new chapter.
Exploring Your Identity Questions
In my coaching work, I invite clients to get curious about their identity questions with care and compassion. We look at who you’ve been, what parts of yourself you want to carry forward, and what parts of you may be ready to emerge.
Identity is a part of the Pillars for Post-Work Wellbeing framework that I use in both one-on-one coaching and in a group coaching program where participants have space to reflect, experiment, and learn from others who are navigating similar questions. If you are wondering who you are becoming in this next chapter, let’s chat about how we can explore that question together.






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