Not so much but I could make it more enjoyable again if I worked at it. I guess due to downturns in the business you could say I am semi working? About 170 days a year
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I spend about 15 weeks a year in Sosua spaced out over several trips.I still have to decide if I want to be in Sosua full time as a retiree.
Edit: note that is 170 days a year working away from home with nothing to do but work. I definitely would not go back to my old work rotation which was 3 in 1 out. Now it is 2 in 2 out, which although pays less money is much easier to do.
Valid points for some... but not for me. I happened to have had a job I hated,,, well maybe not hate hated... but one that was not very inspiring. It did offer me the opportunity to travel frequently and almost at will. I started planning my retirement in my mid-40s... and wanted nothing else but to retire outside Jersey... and then outside the US. Still not bored... no major identity crisis... and I was pleased as punch to leave government employment. (BTW, a government bureaucrat has very little "identity"...LOL). I guess one negative I came across is becoming lazy... I mean real lazy... like walking more than a 1/4 mile became a chore. Decided to get unlazy and doing much more walking and exercising now. Outside of trying to watch every TV show and movie on Kodi. I do free consulting for la senora's meals-on-wheels restaurant. I like the idea of 6 paisitas working in the kitchens every day. As long as my state pension and social security stay afloat, I am a happy camper.
Blue Devil
I am the pussy licker Let's have some fun. Not invisible. Snitches are pathetic little people!
Disclaimer. This post may not be in response to a post by Greybaby. So Greybaby doesn't need to cry about it. Rover has you pegged to a T
I read the article (thanks for posting it Hunter) and while I do agree with the author's point about it being harder to retire early if your life revolved around the job title you had and the degree of importance you associated yourself with to the job, I also can't agree more with Weyland. This guy sounded like some pretentious prick who couldn't stand to be associated with the unwashed masses (no more priority boarding in business class!....boo fucking hoo), and even with a $200,000 yearly income, he STILL worried about not having enough money to be satisfied.
Not the type of guy I want to hang around with. Sounds like a boor.
The weekend before I flew to Kenya, that Friday night an ambulance came to my work place. Apparently a guy had keeled over in the locker room and was out. Have no idea how long it was before someone noticed and was concerned enough to call for a supervisor. Eventually a 911 call was made and paramedics were summoned. The guy was taken out of the building and rushed to the hospital.
When I came in for work that Monday, the first person I saw asked me, "Did you hear about Greg?" I said I just got here and hadn't heard anything. He had died late Sunday night. He wound up having a massive heart attack. The guy was 2 years older than me. Another one gone way too soon. There have been dozens over the years. That Thursday night, I boarded a flight for Istanbul and then onto Nairobi and Mombasa. Two weeks of holiday bliss to interrupt the daily routine of work and living a life that, despite some people always thinking in a half serious way that I'm perpetually on holiday, like so many here, my life is the same routine about 85% of the time. It's that 15% that makes up the memories of a life well lived.
Greg, and so many other of my coworkers over the years, never had their chance to retire early, or late for that matter. I know you can't control outside forces in life and there is the old joke, "How do you make God laugh? Tell him your plans!".....but my own motivation comes a great deal from my travels to other places, to have some perspective on what life is like for those who face true hardships on a daily basis, of experiencing the joy and happiness of people who have taught me that you can truly be happy without all the materialistic crap that our commercialized society says we need in order to be happy, valued, content. In other words, living a certain way to please others, and I suppose the author lived his working life with that factor as a primary focus since he admittedly worried about it.
I harbor no such illusions with my own retirement. I just eagerly look forward to having the chance, unlike so many of those who I worked with had denied to them, and see how I can live a life knowing I own every waking hour of my day, for the first time ever.
That will be the biggest adjustment. And one that I am going to be ready to meet head on once I clock out for the final time.
Pretty much only to Sosua and Vancouver, maintaining homes in the two. My employer flies me to work and flies me home. Theoretically future vacations I would go somewhere else. I am not working full time, some would say it is semi-retirement, but come the end of my work rotation I really don't want to go anywhere but home. And at 2-3 weeks at a time, Sosua is a relaxing place to be, believe it or not.
Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.
- Benjamin Franklin
I am on the JD gig now...semi retired and travel 8-10 weeks a year. That could change in future. At the moment I have zero desire to live in third world full time. I like working when I am home. My goal would be 6 months abroad 6 months USA...something like that. PI - Carribean- Africa...Though Sage has a point in that going from here to there you cant really put down roots and get a feel for a place.
I will shut the business sometime...But now I like it. I am not going to keep it open till 83..lol...
Your the one who doesnt travel anymore....dont hate on me...
And my sisters kids will get nothing....my 3 foreign wives will get it.
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