With apologies to Webster's Dictionary, this is no longer your father's (or mother's) retirement. Today's retirees, and those approaching retirement, differ from their parents in a number of important ways. Baby boomers (those born between 1946 and 1964) are living longer, perhaps spending 30 or more years in retirement. As a group, they are healthier, more active physically and mentally, more affluent, more educated, and more likely to relocate after retiring. Although seemingly an oxymoron, more Boomers plan to continue working in retirement and view retirement as a process, rather than an end, with perhaps several forays into and out of the workforceThis truly is a "new" retirement. In fact, many believe the word "retirement" itself needs to be retired - the word no longer represents the porch-rocking, shuffle-board playing, early-bird dining, silver-haired stereotype of... less