The New Retirement: When Your Wife Gets a Passport and You Get the Keys to the House
TRetirement planning often focuses on pensions, investments, and healthcare, but overlooks one growing reality: the impact of children settling abroad. Across Ghana, many retirees are experiencing a new kind of family life shaped by migration.
As children establish families in countries such as the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and across Europe, many mothers spend extended periods overseas helping to care for grandchildren. What begins as a short visit often turns into months abroad, leaving husbands at home managing the family house alone.
While wives become frequent international travellers, many husbands remain the custodians of the homestead, maintaining the property and adjusting to a much quieter daily routine. Technology keeps families connected through phone and video calls, but it cannot replace the companionship of living together.
This growing trend highlights an important lesson: successful retirement is about more than financial security. Strong friendships, community involvement, faith groups, hobbies, volunteer work, and meaningful social connections are equally important in preventing loneliness and maintaining well-being.
The new retirement is increasingly defined by airports, passports, and families spread across continents. As more Ghanaian children build lives abroad, retirees must prepare not only financially but also emotionally and socially. In today's world, planning for retirement means planning for the possibility that love remains strong—even when families live thousands of miles apart.
Author has 123 publications here on modernghana.com
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