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- Joined
- Jan 16, 2011
- Messages
- 74,040
- Reaction score
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- Location
- NorCal Sierras
If you can afford to do it, retire 100% & leave the work force permanently...
Enjoy your freedom of not punching a clock or going into an office/workplace...
Especially if you work for someone else, dependent on them...
most here have heard my story
I semi-retired at 38, in 1997
but I also, started a Golf Pro-shop, club repairs, lessons
& when not traveling to drag race, I'd play a bunch of mini tour events
some while travelling to drag race...
Spend a lot of $$, & kept a place to have kids work, made a few $$$
(most were home schooled, except the 2 oldest)
have them learn what it takes to make a living, run a business & the responsibility
opening & closing...
Do the till/banking daily, customer relations etc.
&
I still did consulting/subcontractor contacts for the dealership group
but now only 40hrs a month, paid very well for it too...
More per/hr than when I did it full time...
I worked for them, off & on for 20 year prior, as a Facility Mngr/In House GC/Contractor
(35-ish years combined) after I retired to go out, traveled & raced far more,
I'd do rodeos with Lisa, drive the towrig/trailer, keep her gear up
take care of the horses... Lisa's rodeo stuff, took a ton of $$$ & time...
Only right she put up with my racing for years...
I'd also spend time going to kids after school events,
music, theater, their games & sports, hobbies...
Did all that until about 2007, 48 y/o...
I worked far more hrs, after I retired, than I ever did when I was working full time...
Money was good but way too hectic, lots of stress...
you either work or you don't
seems there's no in between, for me anyway
I'm 100% retired since I was 62, 2021
I highly recommend it...
work sucks, it's a 4 letter word
Enjoy your freedom of not punching a clock or going into an office/workplace...
Especially if you work for someone else, dependent on them...
most here have heard my story
I semi-retired at 38, in 1997
but I also, started a Golf Pro-shop, club repairs, lessons
& when not traveling to drag race, I'd play a bunch of mini tour events
some while travelling to drag race...
Spend a lot of $$, & kept a place to have kids work, made a few $$$
(most were home schooled, except the 2 oldest)
have them learn what it takes to make a living, run a business & the responsibility
opening & closing...
Do the till/banking daily, customer relations etc.
&
I still did consulting/subcontractor contacts for the dealership group
but now only 40hrs a month, paid very well for it too...
More per/hr than when I did it full time...
I worked for them, off & on for 20 year prior, as a Facility Mngr/In House GC/Contractor
(35-ish years combined) after I retired to go out, traveled & raced far more,
I'd do rodeos with Lisa, drive the towrig/trailer, keep her gear up
take care of the horses... Lisa's rodeo stuff, took a ton of $$$ & time...
Only right she put up with my racing for years...
I'd also spend time going to kids after school events,
music, theater, their games & sports, hobbies...
Did all that until about 2007, 48 y/o...
I worked far more hrs, after I retired, than I ever did when I was working full time...
Money was good but way too hectic, lots of stress...
you either work or you don't
seems there's no in between, for me anyway
I'm 100% retired since I was 62, 2021
I highly recommend it...
work sucks, it's a 4 letter word