Your standards quietly shaped this team — we'll feel that long after the goodbye email.
New Wishes
A handful of wishes pulled from the cabinet this morning. Pick one up — copy, save it to your pinboard, or send it on.
Thank you for never weaponizing busyness as a personality trait.
You earned every minute of this retirement and a fair amount of overdue rest besides.
The work continues, but a particular sharpness in the room is officially logging off.
Wishing you days that don't require status updates and weeks without a single sprint review.
You leave colleagues who remember your kindness more clearly than any of your deliverables.
What are we writing today?
Cabinets sorted by occasion. Open one — pages are arranged by warmth, not algorithm.
- Anniversary
- Baby
- Belated
- Best
- Birthday
- Boy
- Boyfriend
- Christian
- Christmas
- Congratulation
- Diwali
- Easter
- Eid Mubarak
- Engagement
- Farewell
- Fathers Day
- Friendship
- Funny
- Get Well
- Girl
- Girlfriend
- Good Morning
- Good Night
- Graduation
- Hanukkah
- Heart Touching
- Holiday
- Invitation
- Job
- Love
- Miss You
- Mothers Day
- New Year
- Recovery
- Retirement
- Romantic
- Thank You
- Thanksgiving
- Wedding
- Well
- Women's Day
- Sympathy
- Valentine's Day
- Halloween
- Veterans Day
May your inbox stay light and your weekends stay genuinely your own from here on.
Thanks for being proof that good colleagues aren't a myth — they're just retiring more often.
You handled the difficult years without becoming a difficult person — no small feat.
Enjoy the quiet — you earned it across every project we threw at you.
Some careers end with noise; yours ends with the quiet respect of everyone who watched it.
You leave behind work that holds up and a reputation that doesn't need defending.
Retirement is the long sentence at the end of a well-written paragraph — earned and deliberate.
May the next chapter feel less like an ending and more like finally turning the page.
You spent decades being reliable — now spend decades being unhurried.
The years gave you skill; the years ahead can give you time to use it differently.
Wishing you mornings that belong to you and afternoons answerable to no one.
You showed up when it counted and stepped back when it mattered — both rare.
Retirement isn't the absence of work, it's the freedom to choose what counts as work.
May your days feel longer in the good way and your worries shorter in every way.
You've earned the right to measure success in hours spent doing exactly what you want.
The career closes; the person you became across it walks forward unchanged.
Wishing you the slow joys: long coffee, longer walks, conversations without a clock.
You taught the people around you how to do the work — that lesson outlasts the role.
Retirement is permission to take seriously the things you used to call hobbies.