The Weight of Leisure
Retirement brings time affluence, but it also brings a vivid view of the horizon. How do we learn to live purely for now?
If time is running out, how can you justify spending the remaining currency on something that leaves absolutely no footprint behind?
How do we bring ourselves to engage in an activity fully for its own sake when confronted by an enhanced awareness of mortality? For me, this question began as a shimmering, smoky pattern — an ambient background noise that only slowly took shape after the structure of retirement set in.
In the workforce, time was an external currency. It was budgeted, traded, and justified by outcomes — a paycheck, a project completed, an objective achieved. Over decades, I was conditioned to live a strictly goal-directed existence, where the value of the present moment was always borrowed from the future milestone it served. Then, the career ended. The calendar cleared. I entered a state of time affluence, handed a blank check of hours to spend exactly as I please.
It should have been a dream come true.
But this sudden abundance arrived with a dark companion: a heightened view of the horizon, and a stark awareness of the limited time that remains.
And here is where a paradox of retirement bites: a sudden affluence of time, vast enough to support any pursuit, colliding with the narrowing corridor of a finite life. I am finally free to choose activities entirely for their own sake, yet the gravity of finitude raises awkward questions when I engage in them.
How do I summon the devotion to play, to create, to simply be — while knowing the act is entirely self-contained? How do I throw myself fully into an activity when the effort is not for a monument, but a moment? How do we justify the expenditure of energy when it is not preserved in a repository of achievements, carved into a legacy, or used to build a bridge to some future destination?
You would think that knowing time is limited would make us savor the pure, unadulterated “now” — to paint, to read, to play, to walk, purely for the joy of it. Instead, the awareness of mortality twists the autelic activities into unsettling questions that arrive unbidden, crashing into the very middle of doing. A persistent whisper demands to know the ultimate point of an arbitrary pursuit. If time is running out, how can I justify spending its remaining currency on something that will leave no footprint behind?
For now, I do not have answers. I know this interior monologue will go on. It will often feel tedious, spinning in exhausting circles without offering the grace of immediate closure or a neat solution.
But there is also a quiet necessity in keeping this introspection alive. By refusing to look away from the friction, I hope to slowly inch closer to a deeper grounding — a way to inhabit activities purely for the sake of the doing, and perhaps, lengthen the beautiful, tranquil spaces between the echoes of autelic anxiety.
Ciao, and thanks for reading.


