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PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2022 2:00 pm 
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Nas wrote:
Frank Coztansa wrote:
Why is that painful? Because you will have a kid in 8th grade at that age?


:lol: :lol: They'll be in 5th grade.

I think it's knowing the end is near and that someone may have to care for me. I'm an extremely prideful person. That's going to be hard for me to deal with.

You can always put yourself out of your misery. Barring religious beliefs


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PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2022 2:10 pm 
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Nardi wrote:
Nas wrote:
Frank Coztansa wrote:
Why is that painful? Because you will have a kid in 8th grade at that age?


:lol: :lol: They'll be in 5th grade.

I think it's knowing the end is near and that someone may have to care for me. I'm an extremely prideful person. That's going to be hard for me to deal with.

You can always put yourself out of your misery. Barring religious beliefs


I am. I've already had the conversation. Unless I have an illness that I can recover from, I will not have anyone wiping my ass. I'll go out on my own terms.

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2022 3:53 pm 
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good dolphin wrote:
I went to a party this weekend and ran into a guy who worked for the government for 35 years and just retired at 57. I do say this, I'd go bonkers being fully retired by then. Even if I went to a lake house or an island, that gets old when it is your existence. I could become handy but if I'm going to make work, why don't I just work for a lot more money. I wake up the Monday after Thanksgiving or the first work day after Christmas and curse the alarm but most days I'm up when it rings anyway.

I probably could retire today and live simply. I could die and my family would be fine. That's comforting enough.

I like the ability to pick and choose my work. If you are an asshole, I now won't work with you at any price. If I want to go to London in March, I know I have to work X hours between now and then to pay for it, and then decide if it's worth finding a client who needs my services for that long.

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2022 3:58 pm 
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My FIL is 75 and has cancer. He's still going to work. I think my dad was about 57 when he retired. I have no idea what my husband's plans are.


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PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2022 4:15 pm 
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Spaulding wrote:
I have no idea what my husband's plans are.

Image
:wink:

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2022 4:28 pm 
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My wife was 52 when she passed. She planned to retire early. We saved accordingly.

Nothing is promised. 'Man plans, God laughs.' Enjoy everyday. Don't spend like drunken sailors and don't sock it away like Scooge. Find a balance is the lesson for me.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 8:30 am 
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Looking at finances right now, I should be in a position to retire around 55 in 20 years or so. Question is if I want to or not. I still enjoy work and think I'd rather keep working and growing the nest egg rather than retire then. Who knows though. It will be the 2040s by then so maybe I really will be sick of it all and want to retire, but I just can't imagine what I'd do with that time without growing bored.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 12:02 pm 
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Ogie Oglethorpe wrote:
Looking at finances right now, I should be in a position to retire around 55 in 20 years or so. Question is if I want to or not. I still enjoy work and think I'd rather keep working and growing the nest egg rather than retire then. Who knows though. It will be the 2040s by then so maybe I really will be sick of it all and want to retire, but I just can't imagine what I'd do with that time without growing bored.

There's a middle ground. Doing whatever you want whenever you want isn't all that it's cracked up to be. The definition of boredom is, to me, not being useful. So doing whatever you want whenever you want, will get boring. Right now, you got work, kids, a marriage, it seems you don't have time to even take a shit and you go, "hell yeah, bring on the boredom". In reality, this is the best part of your life. I have more to say but no one wants to hear an old man pontificate to those that really matter. That's how life goes.


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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 12:12 pm 
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Nardi wrote:
Ogie Oglethorpe wrote:
Looking at finances right now, I should be in a position to retire around 55 in 20 years or so. Question is if I want to or not. I still enjoy work and think I'd rather keep working and growing the nest egg rather than retire then. Who knows though. It will be the 2040s by then so maybe I really will be sick of it all and want to retire, but I just can't imagine what I'd do with that time without growing bored.

There's a middle ground. Doing whatever you want whenever you want isn't all that it's cracked up to be. The definition of boredom is, to me, not being useful. So doing whatever you want whenever you want, will get boring. Right now, you got work, kids, a marriage, it seems you don't have time to even take a shit and you go, "hell yeah, bring on the boredom". In reality, this is the best part of your life. I have more to say but no one wants to hear an old man pontificate to those that really matter. That's how life goes.


Speak, old man.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 1:38 pm 
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Nardi wrote:
Ogie Oglethorpe wrote:
Looking at finances right now, I should be in a position to retire around 55 in 20 years or so. Question is if I want to or not. I still enjoy work and think I'd rather keep working and growing the nest egg rather than retire then. Who knows though. It will be the 2040s by then so maybe I really will be sick of it all and want to retire, but I just can't imagine what I'd do with that time without growing bored.

There's a middle ground. Doing whatever you want whenever you want isn't all that it's cracked up to be. The definition of boredom is, to me, not being useful. So doing whatever you want whenever you want, will get boring. Right now, you got work, kids, a marriage, it seems you don't have time to even take a shit and you go, "hell yeah, bring on the boredom". In reality, this is the best part of your life. I have more to say but no one wants to hear an old man pontificate to those that really matter. That's how life goes.


if you give yourself a purpose, you'll thrive in "retirement". Retirement to me is I no longer require a paycheck to pay my bills. that's it. I can still earn money, thats no issue, its just not required. there is still work to do and I'll likely still be busier than ever before.


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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 1:51 pm 
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I’ll be 60 in five years and hope to retire then. I’ll probably still work, like at Home Depot to keep busy and get health care. My current position is very stressful, so I look forward to an easier lifestyle. I also plan to move out of this state for better weather and lower taxes/cost of living.


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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 2:14 pm 
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hnd wrote:
Nardi wrote:
Ogie Oglethorpe wrote:
Looking at finances right now, I should be in a position to retire around 55 in 20 years or so. Question is if I want to or not. I still enjoy work and think I'd rather keep working and growing the nest egg rather than retire then. Who knows though. It will be the 2040s by then so maybe I really will be sick of it all and want to retire, but I just can't imagine what I'd do with that time without growing bored.

There's a middle ground. Doing whatever you want whenever you want isn't all that it's cracked up to be. The definition of boredom is, to me, not being useful. So doing whatever you want whenever you want, will get boring. Right now, you got work, kids, a marriage, it seems you don't have time to even take a shit and you go, "hell yeah, bring on the boredom". In reality, this is the best part of your life. I have more to say but no one wants to hear an old man pontificate to those that really matter. That's how life goes.


if you give yourself a purpose, you'll thrive in "retirement". Retirement to me is I no longer require a paycheck to pay my bills. that's it. I can still earn money, thats no issue, its just not required. there is still work to do and I'll likely still be busier than ever before.

If you get a paycheck, you aren't retired. You are semi-retired.


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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 2:38 pm 
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bunch of old fucks on here

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 2:59 pm 
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Up close and personal, Al Capone's scar wasn't bad. It's the photography that accentuated it.


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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 3:01 pm 
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Nardi wrote:
Up close and personal, Al Capone's scar wasn't bad. It's the photography that accentuated it.


Tell me more about prohibition. Did the government intentionally kill any members of your family?

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 3:10 pm 
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Nas wrote:
Nardi wrote:
Up close and personal, Al Capone's scar wasn't bad. It's the photography that accentuated it.


Tell me more about prohibition. Did the government intentionally kill any members of your family?

I had to grease both sides of fence.#touchables


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PostPosted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 5:30 pm 
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good dolphin wrote:
bunch of old fucks on here

Well, it is a 1996- looking message board, so I don’t think the youngsters are leaving TikTok, Snapchat or Fortnite to post here.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 6:29 am 
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Heisenberg wrote:
I’ll be 60 in five years and hope to retire then. I’ll probably still work, like at Home Depot to keep busy and get health care. My current position is very stressful, so I look forward to an easier lifestyle. I also plan to move out of this state for better weather and lower taxes/cost of living.


That's a great plan. My dad retired at 60. I'll never forget- He was a union cement mason and called about some insurance question and the rep said "you know- you can retire now with your full pension." That night he asked me if I thought he should retire and I said YES without question. Put in your papers right now. 2 weeks later he retired and spent the majority of the rest of his life in Southern Illinois hunting and fishing. He still did some odd jobs while in his 60s to keep occupied, help out his former company, and for some extra spending money but he did everything on his own terms. He had a great retirement in his 60s till COPD kicked his ass in his 70s.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 9:03 am 
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Nardi wrote:
Ogie Oglethorpe wrote:
Looking at finances right now, I should be in a position to retire around 55 in 20 years or so. Question is if I want to or not. I still enjoy work and think I'd rather keep working and growing the nest egg rather than retire then. Who knows though. It will be the 2040s by then so maybe I really will be sick of it all and want to retire, but I just can't imagine what I'd do with that time without growing bored.

There's a middle ground. Doing whatever you want whenever you want isn't all that it's cracked up to be. The definition of boredom is, to me, not being useful. So doing whatever you want whenever you want, will get boring. Right now, you got work, kids, a marriage, it seems you don't have time to even take a shit and you go, "hell yeah, bring on the boredom". In reality, this is the best part of your life. I have more to say but no one wants to hear an old man pontificate to those that really matter. That's how life goes.

I'm with you, Nardi. Work is work, play is play. If your play becomes your work, it takes much of the joy out of it. It doesn't mean work has to be miserable. This is something way lost on our young adult kids. They have some kind of false understanding that working a regular job is misery.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 9:23 am 
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Gen-X is going to have to keep working til they drop to support their unemployable Gen-Z childers. Especially in IT. More and more difficult to find new young hires with the requisite skills. Too much phone and tablet nowadays. No one uses real computers at home anymore. Unfortunately the world still runs on real, well, cloud facsimiles of real computers.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 9:27 am 
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DAC wrote:
60 and I'm out. My wife has already said she'd work a couple extra years for our health insurance. We had our son when I was 39 so we'll need her insurance since paying for a dependent out of pocket is crazy expensive. I'll plan to still work part time but nothing as strenuous as what I do now.


Oh good going. You'll be dead before he graduates college. LOL


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 9:43 am 
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just too many people who don't earn enough to put money away at a young age. pensions have mostly went the way of the model-t and today's conventional wisdom is that you yourself, have to fund your own pension. score a big win for corporate america. too many people earning $15-$22/hr for the first 5-10 years of their working lives and that isn't enough to put money aside. the gig workforce, i just don't see how they can put anything aside.

with health care costs averaging a 9% annual increase - every year; no way around this for most until medicare kicks in. then they don't understand that is only hospital and that supplemental will have to be purchased to pay for other medical costs.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 10:17 am 
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Hussra wrote:
Gen-X is going to have to keep working til they drop to support their unemployable Gen-Z childers. Especially in IT. More and more difficult to find new young hires with the requisite skills. Too much phone and tablet nowadays. No one uses real computers at home anymore. Unfortunately the world still runs on real, well, cloud facsimiles of real computers.

I get what you're saying, but not sure I fully agree...

I see this with our kids, but most of them don't plan on having kids and are actually pretty modest in terms of spending and how they live. I see an awful lot of 2000 babies that are just clueless / directionless. The only issue I see is if we become grandparents. I'm pretty sure my wife is ready to just take any babies that come along...raise them and tell the kids to have a nice day. :lol:

I have hope with my youngest and his peers....I see a potential / hopeful rebound from the Y2k Idiocracy babies.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 10:21 am 
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blackhawksfan wrote:
DAC wrote:
60 and I'm out. My wife has already said she'd work a couple extra years for our health insurance. We had our son when I was 39 so we'll need her insurance since paying for a dependent out of pocket is crazy expensive. I'll plan to still work part time but nothing as strenuous as what I do now.


Oh good going. You'll be dead before he graduates college. LOL


there are a few people i know who are still trying to have their first child (not adopt one, mind you) into their early 40's. like, beyond natural conception and IVF, even to surrogacy. it's insane...because they just want to say they have a baby. like it's a PS5 they want to own.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 10:31 am 
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W_Z wrote:
blackhawksfan wrote:
DAC wrote:
60 and I'm out. My wife has already said she'd work a couple extra years for our health insurance. We had our son when I was 39 so we'll need her insurance since paying for a dependent out of pocket is crazy expensive. I'll plan to still work part time but nothing as strenuous as what I do now.


Oh good going. You'll be dead before he graduates college. LOL


there are a few people i know who are still trying to have their first child (not adopt one, mind you) into their early 40's. like, beyond natural conception and IVF, even to surrogacy. it's insane...because they just want to say they have a baby. like it's a PS5 they want to own.

I'd say it's more that many who long thought they never wanted to have kids realize at close to 40 that they are missing out on something pretty natural and amazing.

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brick (/brik/) verb
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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 10:33 am 
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BigW72 wrote:
W_Z wrote:
blackhawksfan wrote:
DAC wrote:
60 and I'm out. My wife has already said she'd work a couple extra years for our health insurance. We had our son when I was 39 so we'll need her insurance since paying for a dependent out of pocket is crazy expensive. I'll plan to still work part time but nothing as strenuous as what I do now.


Oh good going. You'll be dead before he graduates college. LOL


there are a few people i know who are still trying to have their first child (not adopt one, mind you) into their early 40's. like, beyond natural conception and IVF, even to surrogacy. it's insane...because they just want to say they have a baby. like it's a PS5 they want to own.

I'd say it's more that many who long thought they never wanted to have kids realize at close to 40 that they are missing out on something pretty natural and amazing.


This. Others caved to their spouse or found one that made them want kids.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 10:36 am 
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Capitalism remains undefeated


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 10:40 am 
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W_Z wrote:
blackhawksfan wrote:
DAC wrote:
60 and I'm out. My wife has already said she'd work a couple extra years for our health insurance. We had our son when I was 39 so we'll need her insurance since paying for a dependent out of pocket is crazy expensive. I'll plan to still work part time but nothing as strenuous as what I do now.


Oh good going. You'll be dead before he graduates college. LOL


there are a few people i know who are still trying to have their first child (not adopt one, mind you) into their early 40's. like, beyond natural conception and IVF, even to surrogacy. it's insane...because they just want to say they have a baby. like it's a PS5 they want to own.


Many people delayed important life events (purchase of first homes, getting married, having children, sending children to college, etc) following the economic collapse of 2008. The U.S. birth rate in particular fell off dramatically, so it makes sense that the same group of twenty-somethings who chose not to start families 10-15 years ago is now revisiting those decisions by having children in their late 30s or 40s, presumably under better individual economic circumstances. This is yet another consequence of failed neoliberal economics. Thanks Obama!

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 10:46 am 
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Tall Midget wrote:
W_Z wrote:
blackhawksfan wrote:
DAC wrote:
60 and I'm out. My wife has already said she'd work a couple extra years for our health insurance. We had our son when I was 39 so we'll need her insurance since paying for a dependent out of pocket is crazy expensive. I'll plan to still work part time but nothing as strenuous as what I do now.


Oh good going. You'll be dead before he graduates college. LOL


there are a few people i know who are still trying to have their first child (not adopt one, mind you) into their early 40's. like, beyond natural conception and IVF, even to surrogacy. it's insane...because they just want to say they have a baby. like it's a PS5 they want to own.


Many people delayed important life events (purchase of first homes, getting married, having children, sending children to college, etc) following the economic collapse of 2008. The U.S. birth rate in particular fell off dramatically, so it makes sense that the same group of twenty-somethings who chose not to start families 10-15 years ago is now revisiting those decisions by having children in their late 30s or 40s, presumably under better individual economic circumstances. This is yet another consequence of failed neoliberal economics. Thanks Obama!


Is there ever a perfect time to have a child?

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2022 11:05 am 
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KDdidit wrote:


Capitalism remains undefeated

Self importance had a brief moment there, but that window was shut.

In my industry, I saw a lot of colleagues leave for substantial pay raises. None of them were particularly remarkable so it may have been a short term trade for them.

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