Once the wrapping paper is unfurled and our waistlines are an inch wider, it is time to settle into real life again. After the indulgence of the holiday season, I am overtaken by an urge to clean out and organize. Apparently, I am not the only one, judging from the abundance of totes and storage items on sale after the new year. One of the first things I am tackling is my clothes closet…again.
I retired from my full-time position over five years ago. At that time, I donated a lot of my nicer dress clothes and had The Big Burn with the threadbare ones. It was a way to mark the changing of that season of my life. I did keep a few of my professional dresses, slacks and jackets, just in case. I am not sure what “just in case” was going to be. Maybe it was a way of hanging on to that part of my life that I had spent my entire adult years building. Removing these last few professional items from my wardrobe forces me to face the question, “who am I now that I am no longer the nurse, instructor or department director?” Now, five years later, I am ready to release the rest of those items from my wardrobe and consequently release those professional roles that I have been hanging on to. No one said the emotional aspect of retirement was easy, or quick.
Why now? First, those items have been lingering in the back of my closet taking up precious real estate – both physical and mental. Maybe I am finally ready to close that chapter of my life. Or it could be the fact that several of those pieces of clothing are getting very outdated, although… that never stopped me from wearing an item before. If I find something that I really like, I tend to hold on to it forever: a perfect fitting pair of jeans, a super comfy chair or a husband of over 44 years. If I find something I love, I do not trade it in for a newer version. In husbands, that is a wise choice, but in clothing… not so much.
I learned this lesson several years ago when I was teaching at our local college. The faculty would lecture to an auditorium full of nursing students for 3-4 hours at a time. No matter how riveting a lecture on the diagnosis and treatment of cardiac dysrhythmias, after a couple of hours, your mind tends to wander. Students start thinking about what they are making for dinner that night, whether they remembered to let the dog out before they left, or they start evaluating the lecturer’s clothing.
At the end of each semester, faculty open their student evaluations with trepidation. You never know what kind of feedback you are going to get. So, imagine my surprise when a student wrote a lovely compliment and then followed it up with a comment that I needed to dress more modern. Hum… I don’t know, maybe it was that “classic” red wool blazer that my mom passed down to me that I wore for years. It was beautiful and good quality… but perhaps it was a little outdated. So much for timelessness. In a moment of weakness, I shared this wardrobe evaluation with my colleagues. It was worth the humble moment just to enjoy the laughter and jokes that we had over it for years. But, like any feedback, you have to evaluate what you can take from it. I donated the red blazer and a few other items at the end of that semester. Smile.
But I digress. The biggest reason that I am cleaning out my wardrobe after five years into retirement is that I have come to terms with the fact that my wardrobe needs have changed since I retired. I just don’t dress up much anymore. My mainstay items are sweats, joggers, leggings or shorts. Heck, wearing jeans is a dress up day for me now. Two pair of nice slacks are one too many and I rarely wear a dress anymore. Professional dress clothes are just not needed in my new world of retirement.
Benefits of a retirement wardrobe
Once in a while I miss dressing up. I used to enjoy clothes shopping and finding the perfect outfit with jewelry and shoes to match. But for the most part, the benefits of a retirement wardrobe far outweigh that. No more early morning decisions, standing in front of my closet trying to decide what to wear. And I save quite a bit of money by not having to buy dress clothes. When I am clothes shopping, which I rarely do anymore, I don’t even go into the professional dress clothes section. Why bother? I am really enjoying the casual clothes I wear almost every day now. Comfy is my new wardrobe mantra.
So, it is time to weed through my wardrobe and pull out the last of those items that I was saving “just in case” and open up some more space for my life now. Both mental and physical. How has your wardrobe changed since you retired? Are you loving it or do you miss putting on the suit jacket?