Thirty-one years of working for the Army. Thirty-one years of doing what the Army told me to do, and letting the Army take care of my health care, take care of my family, give me direction, pay my salary, having my back. And now what?
I have all these veterans benefits that I have to figure out: health insurance, life insurance, education benefits. They aren't black and white, and there seem to be a lot of decisions to make. Thousands of veterans have done it already, so I thought it would be clear and easy, but it sure doesn't seem like that. So, one of the things I want to do in this blog is clarify these benefits and the steps I went through to retire and receive these benefits.
So this is my blog. It’s about the things that affect my current life.
Retirement. After 31 years in the Army, my retirement was a little scary. There were a lot of unanswered questions that I ‘googled’ and ‘yahooed’ and asked and searched for and never got complete and accurate answers. So, for this part of my blog, I’m trying to keep my fellow soldiers informed. Trying to pass on the information that I wanted when I was getting ready to retire. Things I could have used, such as my finances during the first 6 months of my retirement, using the VA health system, using education benefits, and a myriad of other things that I don’t even know now to list here.
Writing. I acquired my MFA in Creative Writing about 6 months before I retired. Instead of working, my goal was to make up the difference in my salary by writing after I retired. So the other half of this blog will be how I worked through the ins and outs of writing a novel, starting a platform, and making money and learning about writing. Hopefully, this will help some other wayward writer or retiree to have realistic goals and aspirations. I don’t intend to destroy dreams, rather, share my experience so they are better prepared.
Job hunting. I'll have to search for another job in the mean time, until the writing money comes in, so I'll also discuss the ups and downs of that process.
I hope that the information here is helpful, for ultimately I hope to write something useful and if one person uses this information, then I will have succeeded.
For those of you who may not know, a PACE plan is a contingency plan. PACE stands for Primary, Alternate, Contingency, and Emergency. It's usually attributed to ways to communicate, four methods in case one or two don't work. Here, I want to discuss the plans I made for my retirement and how my plans worked, or didn't work.
Thanks for joining me here on the blog, I hope the information is useful to you.
RS
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