shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,860
|
Post by shaxper on May 22, 2022 21:07:21 GMT -5
I love books, and I love reading, but I've now been trying to finish David Copperfield for 4 years now because my family manages to take up all my time. One day, I know I won't have the kids around (and wanting to spend time with me) so book reading falls to the wayside, but I sure do miss it, and I keep trying to find more time for it in my life! As it is, I barely get any comics read each year.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on May 22, 2022 22:54:53 GMT -5
Hmmmm...
Assuming we haven't been hit by the asteroid Apophis in 2029 or 2036, or the Anti-Christ, and I'm still here in my 60s....well into the 2040s....
...hopefully I'll have a very nice nest egg and can do whatever the hell I want.
|
|
|
Post by Ish Kabbible on Jul 5, 2022 13:05:51 GMT -5
I am retired now, thankfully became retired before the Pandemic. I'm fortunate to get a very good Social Security amount that more than covers my monthly living needs so I don't have to dip into my savings unless I really need to splurge on a big ticket item or fancy vacation. I usually just add to my savings each month So I'm now able to make headway through the entertainment media I've accumulated over the years, watching films and TV I've not seen before as well as listen to Albums I've ripped or downloaded My comics reading has ceased for the time being. Instead I'm trying to complete my comic download project first. You can never know when the free spigot can get turned off. Once I'm done I'll have plenty to catch up
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jul 5, 2022 13:29:34 GMT -5
Goal one is maintaining as much of my regular work-out routine as my broken-down body will allow. Secondary goals are reading (comics and prose), and I have humungous backlog of video games that have been sitting on my hard drive forever. I hope I'm not too arthritic to play them when I'm retired. Also, I hope I don't piss away my golden years just putzing around on the internet.
|
|
|
Post by codystarbuck on Jul 6, 2022 17:06:01 GMT -5
Well, being part of the first generation to earn less than their parents, I doubt I will get to retire until my body starts failing me. I started out Barnes & Noble, with a pension, until they succumbed to the 401K nonsense, in the mid-90s and turned over the program to that. Yeah, the stock market never goes down.....
I left B&N with what I had earned in the pension and little more, as they didn't exactly pay a staggering wage, even to managers. The only reason my salary was as high as it was, at the end (which is part of why we parted company, as they started targeting longtime employees, who cost too much in salary and benefits) was because I brokered the company's desperation to build back up a store into a raise beyond the normal rate. After that, it was nearly 2 years of financial instability, which ate my savings and what little I had, for a retirement. Part of that is my responsibility, for carrying too high a debt for too long; but, the economic reality was also a factor.
Right now, I have more money invested than I did before, solely because of my inheritance of 1/3 of my mother's retirement accounts. I am at least 10 years away from retirement age; but, the reality is that I could not live on Social Security, alone, even with that inheritance and another 10 years interest (assuming I don't need to touch any of it, which is a dangerous assumption).
I have harbored no illusions, since my 40s, that I was not going to get to retire at 65. Heck, my parents weren't able to do that, even with pensions and retirement accounts. My dad worked full time, after his retirement from teaching, for at least another decade or two, then part time until less than a year before his death. My mother worked full time, until age 65, then part time, to supplement Social Security and her retirement money. She continued to receive at least part of my father's pension, after his death, which is probably the main reason my siblings and I inherited more than just an insurance payout. I will probably working full time until either my body starts giving out (which may be sooner than later, based on current chronic aches and pains) or it is no longer worth working a full time job and switch to part time and Social Security. Either way, barring a lottery miracle, I don't see a life of leisure before the end. It's part of why I have always taken my pleasure as it comes, rather than look to the end for some big reward.
My only real desire is more time to read and watch the classic movies that I missed or ignored, in my youth. Beyond that, it's just the 3 S-es, a decent meal or two, and a few scratches for the cats.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Jul 6, 2022 18:59:22 GMT -5
I plan to be passed out in an opium den in Limehouse most of the time. With a faithful side-kick coming to get me out and get me straight to solve just one last case every now and then. How did I miss this? Best response ever. I'm a ways away from retirement yet (20-25 years)... hoping Mssrs. Bezos and or Musk will have Moon Ranches available for me then, where I can live until I can download my consciousness into an android body. Hopefully then I'll have time to finish my to read list.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 29, 2023 19:30:54 GMT -5
I think i would like to do it in India somewhere I used to travel to India occasionally for work. Usually it was the New Delhi area, but I remember attending a conference at a retreat in the Goa area on the coast adjoining the Arabian Sea that was particularly beautiful. While I had traveled to other countries before, I always found visiting India to be quite the experience, one that had many cautions in terms of safety (there were daily travel warnings we had to monitor for certain regions), or even personal health as a Westerner visiting and getting the right shots beforehand and having to do things like using bottled water to brush my teeth. Similarly I remember armed hotel guards (and certain other locations) inspecting our driver's car at a gated entry every time as standard procedure. The biggest impression though was certainly all the people (and I say this as a New York City native), and seeing the sprawl of the greater Delhi area and seemingly never-ending construction. The scale of it all (and sheer volume and diversity of real world sights and sounds) are so much to take in, I witnessed a considerable amount of poverty on one hand, but also had so many experiences with people there I will never forget. And I absolutely loved the food and tea, while a fan of Indian cuisine I could get here in the USA prior to that, I was in heaven with the "real thing". I think I would put chutney on everything if I could.
|
|