Four ways to prevent loneliness from wrecking your
retirement
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[July 02, 2018]
By Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - When Monica Dwyer of West Chester, Ohio thinks of
retirement, her mind wanders to her family friend Paul.
Paul had a wife and kids, and a good job at Procter & Gamble. But his
wife died 15 years before he did, and, over time, his social circles
started shrinking, along with his finances.
Eventually, Paul “barely had money to eat,” Dwyer said. He kept his
thermostat at 55 Fahrenheit (13 Celsius), even in frigid Ohio winters.
He could not drive, surviving on $1 McDonald's hamburgers, and was
alienated from his children, before he died.
“He was a forgotten soul,” Dwyer said.
You might not hear of stories like Paul's very often, but they are out
there. A study https://www.cigna.com/newsroom/news-releases/2018/new-cigna-study-reveals-loneliness-at-epidemic-levels-in-america
released last month by health services company Cigna found that nearly
half of Americans report feeling lonely sometimes or always, which the
study concluded is a national “epidemic.”
“We had been hearing from customers that they are feeling more
disconnected and lonely, so we wanted to do some research to understand
the state of loneliness across the U.S.,” said Dr. Doug Nemecek, Cigna’s
chief medical officer for behavioral health. "What we found was
astounding."
The emotional impact of loneliness in retirement is obvious – feelings
of being isolated and misunderstood, with social interactions that lack
meaning. But loneliness turns out to have financial ramifications as
well.
Take healthcare costs, for instance. “People who feel lonely are less
healthy,” Nemecek said. “There are many studies linking loneliness to
worsening heart disease, cancer, diabetes, depression and substance
abuse. In fact, healthwise, loneliness is comparable to smoking 15
cigarettes a day.”
If you are strategic and determined, there are multiple defenses against
social isolation as you get older. Here are four tips from financial
planners.
MOVE TO A RETIREMENT COMMUNITY
Society likes to poke fun at retiree developments, like the elder
Seinfelds buying their condo in Del Boca Vista. But at larger senior
communities like The Villages and Sun City Center, both in Florida, “you
could participate in a group activity nearly every hour of every day,”
said Holly Donaldson, a financial planner in Seminole, Florida.
Retirement communities are a powerful alternative to retiring “in place”
in your own home. Staying in your home may initially sound appealing
because of the comfort level with your surroundings, but it could
eventually leave you very alone indeed, especially if you are struggling
with physical disability.
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A couple walks down the street in the Tverskaya district of Moscow
August 17, 2013. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
KEEP WORKING
If you enjoy working, and your employer does not have any mandated retirement
age, then by all means keep showing up at the office. The first benefit is
cognitive, keeping you alert and active and maintaining that social circle in
the workplace.
The second benefit is financial: Just a couple of years of additional work means
you are actively building up your 401(k) assets, not drawing anything down, and
boosting your Social Security payments by delaying taking them. That alone is
enough to create a robust retirement outlook.
VOLUNTEER
Volunteers live longer, have lower levels of disability and higher levels of
well-being, according to data analysis by the Corporation for National &
Community Service (CNCS), a federal agency. One surprising fact: volunteerism
has a greater impact on well-being than other factors like income, education or
marriage.
Volunteering also assembles a new social circle to hold you up in dark times.
Intuitively, many seniors know this already: More than 21 million older
Americans provide 3.3 billion hours of service every year, according to the CNCS.
CREATE SOCIAL CHECKS AND BALANCES
Retirees are highly susceptible to financial abuse, thanks to social isolation.
The losses amount to an estimated $36.5 billion every year to fraud, scams and
exploitation, according to a study by True Link Financial, a financial services
company aimed at retirees, with the vast majority of financial abuse not even
being reported.
The sad fact is that 90 percent of financial abuse comes at the hands of someone
in a position of trust, like a family member, according to the non-profit
National Adult Protective Services Association.
The best way to defend against being at the mercy of one person is by having
multiple people in your corner. If you have church friends, childhood friends,
extended family and volunteering friends – all looking out for you – it will be
less likely you will be taken advantage of.
“I always recommend having duplicate financial statements sent to someone you
trust,” advises Brett Anderson, a planner with St. Croix Advisors in Hudson,
Wisconsin.
(Editing by Lauren Young and Frances Kerry)
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