kb67mopar
Well-Known Member
I hope this doesn't piss too many of you off
Now why would that make anybody mad? Thats just plain awesome and pretty much everybody's dream. Now if only I could find a way in.... Need a delivery guy?
I hope this doesn't piss too many of you off
Yeah right. I guess you didnt read my post. If i retire i would starve and be homeless. I dont think ss would cover my house note.As a young guy reading through this I have to say the earlier you can retire the better! Get out of the work force and let others work if you can afford to retire. Working at age 70+ is greedy in my mind and you are taking jobs away from people struggling to get by when you could be comfortably soaking up your earned income.
On another front, for those of us in our younger years there is no hope of retirement anymore, they engineered the system to result in us working to within 2 years of our expected length of life and they keep trying to raise the age of retirement. At this point they are looking at age 67 and by the time I retire it will be over 70. That means I will have to work 54 years to earn my retirement...that's bullshit.
Besides the fact that they want to work us to death, the cost of everything has gone up so fast compared to wages that it will be impossible for me to get ahead. I'll still be paying of school debt when my son goes to college which means I will not have had time to build up a nest egg of any sizable value and then have to try to support his tuition, fees, books etc which by that time will probably be 3x as expensive as now.
IMHO those of you in your 50's-60's had an easier opportunity and have a much better chance of getting out alive..me, I am just F-ed in the A.
Yeah right. I guess you didnt read my post. If i retire i would starve and be homeless. I dont think ss would cover my house note.
I hope this doesn't piss too many of you off, but I retired at age 44 back in 2000. I basically worked my a## of for 29 yrs. Newspapers at 14 , first paid job at the Burger Chef at 15, needed a work permit back then. After HS graduation I got a job as a delivery boy for $1.95 at a privately owned auto parts store ,age 17. Standing behind the parts counter one day leaning against a catalog rack ( Yes Paper Book Catalog Rack )a customer asked about a part. Next thing I know I'm a counterman. The ownership saw me as ambitious, and made me a store manager at one of their 6 stores at age 20. In 1981 the two owners split up and the owner that ended up with the store I was managing offered me a partnership. I realized that he was looking for an exit plan in me , and I paid him each month and held back my monthly bonuses towards ownership. He allowed me to buy in to 25% of the business , and taught me alot of valuable business princepals along the 10 year stretch. Bill was 25 years my elder , and he basically taught me all the administrative parts of the business. In 1991 it got to the point where I had learned pretty much all I needed. I was doing most of the work , and he was taking most of the money. He elected to sell his 75% out to me. I took some money out against my house as a down payment , and he took back the rest of the note at 8%. Him and his previous partner always stressed the importance of owning the real estate you were doing business in.They had owned most of the buildings that they were in , but not the one I was in. In 1992 I approached the building owner and asked to buy it. He sold to me that year , and took back part of the note. I went on to open 2 more parts stores in the next few years. I always saw my business as my retirement vehicle. I knew that SS wasn't going to do it for me. We just kept adding more and more inventory as the years went on. Around late 1997 my wife fell ill with brain tumors, and had two of them resected by the end of that year. Also competition for price in this business got really intense. WH distributors selling directly to installers and the like. With gross profit waning and my wifes health issues , we decided to look around for a buyer. The national parts chain Carquest was wanting to make inroads into our areas . I actually contacted them , and they liked the way we ran our business operations. In late 2000 we sold our small chain of stores to Carquest for seven figures. They paid us for all of our inventories and fixtures and equipment , and kept all of the employees employed as well. Sue and I paid off Bill's note and the remaining notes on commercial real estates we owned. Invested the balance of the money. Carquest signed long term notes with us on the buildings that they occupied, and to this day 13yrs later they still are tenants. I basically just went home to spend more time with my wife. God bless, she has been cancer free now for 10 years. So ,again , basically our retirement is in the commercial real estate that we own outright. And of course IRA's and SS in a couple of years. I never depended on the Gooberment for retirement , and I don't recommend it either. I used to tell young employees that the delivery position is'nt a dead end job at all. It's all in how hard you want to work. Of course they always knew my story. When I was younger and not as wise, I used to think that I accomplished all these things on my own . I know now that the Lord has blessed me and my family, and put wise , helpfull people in our lives from whome to take advise and counsil from. I'm really just a High School educated Southern Maryland Redneck , that took all the great advise and help along the way.
The best thing that you can do if you are retiring for any reason is get yourself out of debt. It's pretty tough to retire if you are carrying a mortgage or any other significant payments.
The best thing that you can do if you are retiring for any reason is get yourself out of debt. It's pretty tough to retire if you are carrying a mortgage or any other significant payments. Unless you have a lot of retirement income, downsize to a smaller place or even to a rental to get away from making house payments. It's worked for me and I'm living pretty well on a small pension and some savings without a mortgage hanging over my head. I know retirees that live in their travel trailers that live up here in the summer and down in Arizona in the winter and they are happier than most people that are still working. It's not for everybody, but it's just one option.
Hey Dog, do you think it's possible you're just going through a kind of unemployment blues? I was unemployed for over a year and I started thinking I was worthless and couldnt work/ didnt want to work (of course it might have been I finally began listening to my wife lol). Really took its toll on me, it's been a full 3 years in mynew career (went from construction and engineering to teaching) and I honestly am just pulling out of it. Part of why I bought my 1st Mopar.
Ya know, a guy as talented as you, maybe you might look at local Churches and schools and ask if they need a handy man. It's a good job with some freedom, decent hours, though the pay aint great. Being around kids might refresh ya a bit, get ya back thinking of the good in the world.