I wasn’t prepared for my retirement, not at all. We’re going back to December 2014 when I had a really bad cold and I could feel myself slowing down. At night, I was getting really bad sweats and I just put it down to ‘man getting old’, but eventually I went to my doctor because I was still feeling rough and he decided to do a blood test.
He told me that I had a rare blood condition called polycythemia. I was producing too many red blood cells and the blood was thick. I had to have a double bone marrow biopsy and various other treatments. During this period my line manager referred me to Occupational Health three times, which wasn’t really helping. It took me about three days to get over each venesection and I was on reduced hours as my line manager tried to get me back working.
There was a two-week period while I was having treatment where I had to go back to working full-time. At one point my line manager said to me that I might end up with an ill-health dismissal, but that wasn’t the way I wanted to end my career. I decided to take early retirement, even though my game plan was to do 40 years in the civil service – I would have retired a year later.
My retirement was something that was always going to happen, but I would have liked more time to prepare rather than being thrown in at the deep end. If I’d had more time I would have reduced my hours, planned my resignation and given myself more time to think about what I was actually going to do after I left work.