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Thread: Please retire as soon as you can.........seriously.

  1. #21
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    El Dorado Hills
    Posts
    3,715

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    Quote Originally Posted by Bob Loblaw View Post
    That's got to be worth a new fishing rod?
    And a reel!
    So long and thanks for all the fish!!!
    `·.¸¸.·´¯`·.. ><((((º>`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸><((((º>`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.. ><((((º>

  2. #22
    Join Date
    Jan 2015
    Location
    Sacramento, CA
    Posts
    594

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    An added benefit of retiring early is you free up a job for someone else.

    Obviously there is no one-size-fits-all approach to this issue. Who would ever guess your city (employer) would ever file for bankruptcy? Who would ever guess an "ex-relative" would conspire to change a will to which you were once a beneficiary? Yes, planning is extremely important, but sometimes life gets in the way of planning. Sometimes you don't have a highly-skilled or high-paying job and you aren't going to reap many rewards retirement-wise from it, but relatives die and leave you money and/or property that more than makes up for it. The "luck factor" can be huge, as any large lotto winner will attest. So we do our best and enjoy this eye-blink of a life we have. Personally, I'm a big believer in doing things that require a bit of physical ability before you become a looker rather than a doer. And we all know folks who, it seems, have given up, are even trying to act and be old. I spend a lot of time in the gym trying to put off the inevitable. I'd rather die by bear attack than by diabetes; makes for a better tombstone.

  3. #23
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Location
    PNW
    Posts
    413

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    i first retired at 32 yrs but got married now i am working and broke
    There is a fine line between fishing and standing there like an idiot!

  4. #24
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Fresno
    Posts
    741

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    Hey bob

    How about a short bike ride to Madera and back. I use to do this at least 3 times a month. Sometimes I pedal to Table Mountain have breakfast then ride home - the long way around. I'll talk to you more at the meeting this week

    J

  5. #25
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Davis
    Posts
    759

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    I retired at the end of the year at 51. I have some wind down to do but should be all out very soon. I have some uncertainty about how it will go but I get some confidence hearing from so many people who left early. I figure I need about five working fishing buddies or a couple of energetic retired guys to keep me occupied.

  6. #26
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    N CA/SW MT
    Posts
    44

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    Bill's got it right....

    Work hard and smart but smell the roses as soon as you can. My father was an engineer who meticulously planned his retirement future. But he didn't plan on being dead six months after retirement. I vowed never to repeat.

    After returning home from the service at 20 and penniless I went to work for a construction company six days a week for ten years while supporting a family. At the same time I went to night school and bought, sold and renovated income properties in the evenings and on Sundays. Got my degree in business after 6 years. Formed my own construction company building multi-family and commercial projects on the Central Coast for the next ten years. Brought on a managing partner and pulled the active participation plug when I was 40. Moved to the mountains to hunt/fish and spent the winters on the North Coast rivers chasing steelhead. A failed marriage along the way took a couple years for financial recovery. I'm now in my later 60's, not filthy rich but have been able to live an independent lifestyle for many years. Don't waste time whining about the bad hand you've been dealt, many have been there and moved beyond. This country provides all kinds of opportunities. Grab em and run.....time is limited. Good luck to all.

  7. #27
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Anchorage, Alaska
    Posts
    685

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    Well you guys are making me think. I retired the first time at 45 and played for awhile but I knew I could not make it on my State retirement. So I did some consulting for a few years and then went to work for the feds. For the last 6 months I have been working for 20 hours per week. I was going to retire but they asked if I could work a little to help out. The 20 hours per week is paying for some pretty special trips (2 times to Bristol Bay last year, 2 weeks in Belize and 1 in LA for redfish; this year Argentina 2 weeks, Baja 2 weeks, Belize 2 weeks, LA 1 week, one or 2 trips to Bristol Bay and maybe the Bahamas). So now I am thinking of finally pulling the plug for good.Maybe March 1 or May 1 in time for Baja and then an Alaskan summer. I'll be 60 in 2 weeks.

  8. #28
    Join Date
    Mar 2012
    Location
    east bay area
    Posts
    46

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    I appreciate this thread. I would like to hear more of supplemental medical insurances and
    what peoples outlook on them. My father just recently passed and if not for his military supp
    insurance it would have been frightening confronting these outrageous medical bills. Thanks!
    Last edited by JAM; 02-07-2015 at 12:49 PM.

  9. #29
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    back in the R.O.S.E.
    Posts
    304

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    as one of the sort of younger members here (lol, 34), the idea of retirement has taken on a pretty different meaning for me. I watched my parents work full time, not really take time for themselves, buy houses, cars, timeshares, etc...all within their means, but still get hit with tremendous setbacks (Dad got diagnosed with semantic dementia 5 years ago, lost most everything). All that planning went out the window. My generation doesn't have a "retirement" in the same sense as the older crowd, all our long term jobs have been shipped overseas, there is little loyalty between employer and employee, wages are so far behind expenses, leading the same kind of lifestyle my parents did just isn't a wise option. After chasing the same structure for a handful of years I've realized the best path is to keep things simple, not overextend myself, but to do what I can to enjoy the path instead of breaking myself for the next 30 years to relax later on. I know it's a risk, and a pretty big one, but the scariest thing I can think of is strapping myself to a job I hate to make enough money just to realize I don't have the health or interest in enjoying the last couple decades of life. I fished the Truckee last week, woke up in Dana Point yesterday morning, leave for Vegas next Monday, ate amazing ramen in Torrance yesterday, drove I5 through the rain listening to The Who till 3am last night...I have a car with 290,000 miles on it, I rent a house, I love my job, and I try to fill my free time seeing things and being active. To me, right now is retirement.

  10. #30
    Join Date
    Jan 2015
    Location
    Sacramento, CA
    Posts
    594

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    Great post, Gregg. You are what they call wise beyond your years.

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