The Retirement Thread

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Drago

Legendary Member
Good point's, but in later life you said you were shuffling paper. Did you not miss the buzz of the earlier days.

Maybe I could have added more stressful, or easier to retire from.

Yeah, being a DS was boring. Not like on the telly. I didn't miss the excitement, but something more interesting would have been nice, but it was for less than 2 years.
 

jongooligan

Legendary Member
Location
Behind bars
I wonder if civil service jobs are more boring than private sector one's hence the reason people cannot wait to retire from them.

I moved into the CS when I was 40 so that I could get every weekend off to look after the kids. Both my wife & I worked shifts before that and childcare was getting to be a problem. I've pretty much hated every minute, finding it both extremely boring and stressful at the same time. Others may have a different experience but I'm convinced that the perfect civil servant is one who creates work for other civil servants and the CS is there to keep a number of people off the streets who would be otherwise be calling for revolution.
Took partial retirement just over a year ago and I'm counting the days until full retirement.
 
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Dirk

Dirk

If 6 Was 9
Location
Watchet
[QUOTE 5135680, member: 43827"]My father-in-law worked from the age of 15 to 65 either underground or in the army. He died less than a month after retiring.[/QUOTE]
I was deeply affected by the death of my old Inspector when I was with GPO Telephones. I was a 19 year old T2A Fitter at the time and had attended his leaving do on the Friday afternoon, at the pub just up the road from our depot.
He had a massive heart attack and dropped dead the same evening.
From that day on I had a different outlook on life.
Funnily enough I can still remember the registration number of the new Hillman Hunter he had bought, the week before, for his retirement - TNP269L. :huh:
 

mr_cellophane

Legendary Member
Location
Essex
I was deeply affected by the death of my old Inspector when I was with GPO Telephones. I was a 19 year old T2A Fitter at the time and had attended his leaving do on the Friday afternoon, at the pub just up the road from our depot.
He had a massive heart attack and dropped dead the same evening.
From that day on I had a different outlook on life.
Funnily enough I can still remember the registration number of the new Hillman Hunter he had bought, the week before, for his retirement - TNP269L. :huh:

He needs to get out and get the tax up to date
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screenman

Squire
Just finished brekkie, now off for a swim then venturing to Ikea in Sheffield later, maybe even a trip into Planet X or Meadowhall.
 
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Dirk

Dirk

If 6 Was 9
Location
Watchet
[QUOTE 5135876, member: 43827"]There was a time when I could name the reg numbers of all the cars I owned. But, and I don't know whether it's my memory worsening or the number of cars owned increasing, I can't remember a few from the 70s and 80s.[/QUOTE]
The earliest reg number I can remember is my Dad's Austin A35 van from about 1959 - 1423NX.
Some numbers just seem to stick in your mind.
I can remember giving our milkman's horse (Omo) dry crusts of bread and telling the milkman my mum's CoOp divi number. I would be about 4 at the time. That was about 60 years ago and I still use that number in some passwords.
 
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Dirk

Dirk

If 6 Was 9
Location
Watchet
[QUOTE 5135891, member: 43827"]My uncle, who is in his 90s, still uses his WW2 army number reversed for any pin numbers.

My late father used to do the same.[/QUOTE]
Some things are deeply ingrained.
 

jongooligan

Legendary Member
Location
Behind bars
He's wise reversing it, just in case somebody else has remembered it too. :whistle:.
I use my check number from when I worked dahn t'pit. Haven't worked there for forty years :eek:
 
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