โNov-28-2015 02:49 PM
โDec-07-2015 09:28 PM
โDec-07-2015 05:45 AM
โDec-05-2015 08:53 AM
โDec-01-2015 05:55 PM
Executive wrote:
I retired the first time at age 36, the second time at age 50 and finally at age 65 I was ready. Not everyone is ready to sit around a campfire every night at a young age. I completed my bucket list after 6 short months and became really really bored.
Remember, when you're retired there are no vacation days and everyday is a Saturday!...Dennis
โDec-01-2015 02:44 PM
kyle86 wrote:campingken wrote:
Kyle86,
What type of work interests you? I retired from Law Enforcement at age 48, started at 21, and received an excellent pension plus life time medical. While I was working I bought stocks instead of toys and this is why I was able to pull the plug at 48.
A suggestion would be for you to join the National Guard. Invest 100% of your Guard income in a Roth IRA and at age 60 you will have their pension as well as a sizeable chuck of available cash.
Some really great advice here thank you all!!!!! Sorry to hijack the thread a tad.
Campingken, I'm interested in everything technical and critical thinking. I have an analytical mind and crunch numbers a lot. I should have gone to school for engineering but went a different route. I've dabbled with the idea of going back to school, but a buddy of mine who has an engineering degree is having an equally hard time finding a good job.
I tried to join the national guard 2 years ago but was rejected due to bad hearing (working under hoods with air tools is my guess). I figured the problem is my location so I bought an RV to try and be more mobile so we could go where the jobs are or at least that's the current plan. It stinks to leave my house and relatives, but the more I look at it like an adventure, the more excited I get.
I'm totally open to advice and criticism, and the stories of retiring in the 40s is very inspiring. I am very good with money, the problem is just not enough of it coming it.
โDec-01-2015 12:07 PM
gdhillard wrote:
Lots of wisdom here, as usual. I would add that learning to be happy without spending a lot is often easier than earning and saving more. Get out of debt, buy what little you actually need used, and shoot for humble and functional rather than shiny and fancy. I got "retired" by my last evil boss, and I decided that I had had enough, and would shift over to living low on the hog, and not go back to work. I'd rather have the time than the money, at this point in life.
โDec-01-2015 11:45 AM
โDec-01-2015 07:59 AM
โDec-01-2015 12:09 AM
campingken wrote:
Kyle86,
What type of work interests you? I retired from Law Enforcement at age 48, started at 21, and received an excellent pension plus life time medical. While I was working I bought stocks instead of toys and this is why I was able to pull the plug at 48.
A suggestion would be for you to join the National Guard. Invest 100% of your Guard income in a Roth IRA and at age 60 you will have their pension as well as a sizeable chuck of available cash.
โNov-30-2015 04:13 PM
โNov-30-2015 02:14 PM
โNov-30-2015 01:49 PM
jmcgsd wrote:
Just saw the Dali Lama's take on this subject on Facebook yesterday:
โNov-30-2015 11:20 AM
โNov-30-2015 10:54 AM