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Kat Kombrinck, 80, walks a friend’s dog in Eden Park in Cincinnati, Ohio. Kombrinck retired at 67 only to re-enter the workforce a few years later. Now she dog-walks and pet-sits for extra
income. Maddie McGarvey Facebook Twitter LinkedIn
Retirement isn’t always a choice. Sometimes life happens and forces a change. And it doesn’t always happen all at once.
Kat Kombrinck was 67 when she retired from her job as a financial planner. She had recently moved from Cincinnati to Los Angeles to help her son and daughter-in-law with her grandkids and
was still adjusting to her new surroundings. On top of that, the technological changes rippling through the financial-services industry were stressing her out.
Apple had just launched the iPad, and 4G was rolling out. Mobile was taking off. Apps and digital investing platforms were becoming more prominent, adding a new layer of complexity to her
profession.
“I started getting physically unwell,” says Kombrinck, now 80. “My heart rate went up. I had a tough time breathing, and I realized I had to get out.”
Gregory Reid What’s Your BiggestRetirement Mistake?
Retirement isn’t just about leaving a job. It's about changing your life — your routine, your budget, your priorities, where you live. It's decision after decision, and you don't always make
the right one. Is there something you wish you’d done differently?
AARP Members Edition wants to hear about your retirement regrets. A mistimed exit from the office? A move to the wrong place? A relationship you gave up? Spending too much, or too little?
Share your story at retirement@aarp.org and we might feature it in this series.
But retirement didn’t last long. Rents were rising in Southern California, and Kombrinck didn’t think she had enough cash flow to cover the increases and live comfortably. Then there was
the time to fill; she wasn’t the type to pick up a hobby or relax. So, two years after retiring, she went back to work.
“I don’t do well with nothing or very little of anything to do,” she says. “I have to feel like I’m productive.” Working gave her that feeling.
New job, same stressFinding a full-time job proved difficult, however, so Kombrinck took temporary positions while she searched for something solid. About a year later, she ended up back in financial services,
the industry she had fled, this time as an insurance agent.
By then, she felt comfortable with the technology and thought she could do the job, but the cutthroat nature of working in sales was a new stressor. So was the ageism she says she
encountered.
“Going back to work was a mistake. I thought I knew enough, was comfortable enough, but I found out I wasn’t,” she says. “It's really hard to get older; you're not as quick as you were.” Her
younger co-workers noticed and made comments that took a further toll on her psyche.
“I really thought I was having lung problems, but the specialists said, ‘You are just stressed out,’ ” she says.
She was 77 by this time and ready to retire permanently. She still needed the money, but the job was causing more harm than good.