At the same time, you share the costs of your grandchildren's preschool that loom larger than private school fees, and often meet babysitting requirements, often on the other side of town.
By this stage, you might be living on your own after divorce or bereavement, worrying about a house that is too big and hard to maintain.
Finally it's 2031, you're 65 and you've got your gold card. But New Zealand is a vastly different place. Those aged more than 65 now outnumber those 15 years old or younger. The baby boomers are all retired, helping double the numbers on superannuation from about 600,000 today to a mushroom cloud of 1.2 million.
Back in 2014, many regions outside the main cities were already worryingly top-heavy with growing numbers of old and declining numbers of young. Now, they have widespread imbalances creating tensions, distress and inequality.
The year 2031 is not just your retirement year, it also marks the period when the first wave of baby boomers begin to enter the late retirement age phase of post-85. During the next 20 years, they will swell the numbers of the extreme elderly, and as they get older, the pressure on long-term care facilities, families and in-home support will be acute.
Facing you will be the stark reality of a rapid surge in visibly older decrepitude, as those more than 85 years of age go up in number by four or five times by mid-century when one in four retired people will be 85-plus, compared with one in eight today. Welcome to your retirement.
As a 48-year-old woman today, at least you can trust that New Zealand Superannuation will be secure when you turn 65 - can't you? The Government has parked superannuation policy at least for another term, maybe forever. Saying he would resign rather than tamper with the pension, Prime Minister John Key has taken serious debate about the future state of our policies off the table.
Other political parties think salvation will come in making KiwiSaver compulsory. Some are talking about raising the age, but few take up the challenge of the inadequacies of the welfare system for those who can't work as the age goes up.
On top of that, when you finally do get to cash in your KiwiSaver, you have to make sure your pot of money is invested sensibly for what might be a retirement of 35 years or more. How do you protect yourself from outliving these savings, when on this and other matters, the Government is strangely silent?
Poorly equipped to manage your investments, you see the flashy brochures promising superannuitants a "worry-free" future. The latest doing the rounds is an Australian thoroughbred racing investment that promises "you too can take instant advantage of the windows of opportunities that were previously hidden".Will you fall for the performance results of the past 21 months that show your $1000 mushrooming into exactly $106,864.82? Thankfully maybe not, given the lessons learned from the disasters in investments that litter New Zealand's past.
But the financial services sector is ever inventive, and who wants to spend retirement worrying that you have done the right thing? Perhaps it is time now to talk about the future.
Associate Professor Susan St John is co-director of the University of Auckland Business School's retirement policy and research centre. Tomorrow and on Friday she will explore the sustainability of New Zealand Superannuation and the attitude to retirement security of middle income Kiwis.