Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Your wifeCongratulations! Hope you find as I did that you just can't beat the new hours and that you love the new boss.
Congrats. It's a great, and weird, feeling at first.just sharing that today is the last day I have to report to work.
I plan to be on the water more and I plan to reach out to some of you in the hopes of fishing together in the future.
its time to hook up the boat and go fishing.
happy trails.
dp
It's a big adjustment, but far easier for folks with a lot of hobbies.Congrats. It's a great, and weird, feeling at first.
Totally agree that its important to turn the page, develop other interests and let the working past go. I don't consider myself an ex-whatever I used to be, ...but a husband/father/grandfather/flyfisher/pickleball player and many other things I'm doing today. We can only live in the moment, not in the past.It's a big adjustment, but far easier for folks with a lot of hobbies.
Our retired pharmacist of 40 years (and a truly wonderful man)...who always said he had no interests outside of work, has really struggled and visits his old pharmacy several times a week...despite being retired for almost 10 years.
Not so much. She agrees with me doing pretty much whatever I want. It helps that I don't often want to do something that would piss her off of course.Your wife![]()
Yup. I had plenty to do on the farm and some misc. My big adjustment was not having to set alarm, but waking up in a panic that i was going to be late. LolIt's a big adjustment, but far easier for folks with a lot of hobbies.
Our retired pharmacist of 40 years (and a truly wonderful man)...who always said he had no interests outside of work, has really struggled and visits his old pharmacy several times a week...despite being retired for almost 10 years.
to the bone.....money can buy you everything but time and nothing in life is more precious, everything else is just stuff.On August 1, 2000, just 20 minutes after escaping slavery, by the time I drove home I had forgotten everything I knew about about being employed. I never missed work for even one second, no more lathes, milling machines, CNC programming, no CAD files to deal with, no bull shit shop meetings or pin headed boss to endure. I was as ready as I could possibly be to retire.
I took Social Security at age 62 on the first day I was eligible for it and never looked back having made a significant amount of money on it in 25 years but more importantly, more than enough to live on when coupled to my 401K. I have often been amazed by people that would stay in a hated job for several more years just to earn an extra few hundred dollars a month on SS. Retirement wasn't near as expensive as it was claimed to be and the projections for what percentage of your work pay you would need in retirement were wildly over exaggerated in my case.
Average life spans in the United States have dropped in recent years and retirement ages have risen. There is a message there and money can't buy you time. I wish it could! On my 75th birthday my account manager called to wish me a Happy Birthday and reminded me that at my current rate of withdrawal I had 41 years of income left and should probably think about using some of it. I took her advice and now nearing 87 I have worked that amount down to about 19 years but am running out of time, not money. The freedom and sheer joy of retirement outweigh the value of a few hundred extra bucks a month earned by more years of servitude. But don't take my word for it, try it yourself, you will thank yourself later.