The Retirement Thread

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Just had some large hail come over so nipped out and got the Courgettes and Squash back in before they get damaged.

Another news cleaned out the coffee grinder and bagged these at the charity shop trawl this morning;
IMG_7033.jpeg


Joseph Cheaney shoes and M&S belt for £18.00 the pair, just gave them both a going over with some dubbin .
 

Stevo 666

Über Member
A few questions for you experienced retirees from an aspiring one at some point in the next few years. How did you decide when was the right time to retire, and with hindsight was it the right decision/timing?

At present, my main criteria are pretty obvious and once all three are ticked then I'm out:-
1. Financial security with a bit of buffer
2. Having enough stuff to do/hobbies to fill the days
3. Getting hacked off with the job/working
Have I missed anything?

I've noticed that of my mates who have retired, they generally fall into 2 camps: the ones who have stayed retired and the ones that have 'unretired'. Maybe coincidence, but the ones who stayed retired tended to be those who could wind the job down gradually (moving 4/3 days weeks, going part time etc) and get into the retirement groove over a few years; while the ones who unretired were in fairly full on jobs where there was no wind down option: you either did it full time or not at all - and for them, going back was not about the money, which shows that point 2 is relevant I reckon. (That said, one of them complained that his new 'boss' at home didn't appreciate his work or pay him ^_^) I'm in the latter camp btw.

Any words of wisdom are very welcome 🙂
 
OP
OP
Dirk

Dirk

If 6 Was 9
Location
Watchet
A few questions for you experienced retirees from an aspiring one at some point in the next few years. How did you decide when was the right time to retire, and with hindsight was it the right decision/timing?

At present, my main criteria are pretty obvious and once all three are ticked then I'm out:-
1. Financial security with a bit of buffer
2. Having enough stuff to do/hobbies to fill the days
3. Getting hacked off with the job/working
Have I missed anything?

I've noticed that of my mates who have retired, they generally fall into 2 camps: the ones who have stayed retired and the ones that have 'unretired'. Maybe coincidence, but the ones who stayed retired tended to be those who could wind the job down gradually (moving 4/3 days weeks, going part time etc) and get into the retirement groove over a few years; while the ones who unretired were in fairly full on jobs where there was no wind down option: you either did it full time or not at all - and for them, going back was not about the money, which shows that point 2 is relevant I reckon. (That said, one of them complained that his new 'boss' at home didn't appreciate his work or pay him ^_^) I'm in the latter camp btw.

Any words of wisdom are very welcome 🙂

Everyone is different.
I worked for 30 years in one job before retiring.
I switched off from working life by the time I'd cycled home. Never gave it another thought. That was 11 years ago.
I feel that people over think things.
 

Dave7

Legendary Member
Location
Cheshire
A few questions for you experienced retirees from an aspiring one at some point in the next few years. How did you decide when was the right time to retire, and with hindsight was it the right decision/timing?

At present, my main criteria are pretty obvious and once all three are ticked then I'm out:-
1. Financial security with a bit of buffer
2. Having enough stuff to do/hobbies to fill the days
3. Getting hacked off with the job/working
Have I missed anything?

I've noticed that of my mates who have retired, they generally fall into 2 camps: the ones who have stayed retired and the ones that have 'unretired'. Maybe coincidence, but the ones who stayed retired tended to be those who could wind the job down gradually (moving 4/3 days weeks, going part time etc) and get into the retirement groove over a few years; while the ones who unretired were in fairly full on jobs where there was no wind down option: you either did it full time or not at all - and for them, going back was not about the money, which shows that point 2 is relevant I reckon. (That said, one of them complained that his new 'boss' at home didn't appreciate his work or pay him ^_^) I'm in the latter camp btw.

Any words of wisdom are very welcome 🙂

Words of wisdom ?? Not sure you'll get many of those on here ^_^ .
But seriously, every one is individual.
With me I got the chance to retire at 63. Full state pension, a small private pension of approx £3K per year and a small L/S from selling my small business.
I walked out and never looked back.
I had a good wife (sadly died now) , played golf and cycled. I enjoyed every minute of retirement apart from the serious pain of Sue dying.
So my advice is go for it asap.
My Dad worked till he was 65. Only had a state pension and died too soon..
Do it while you can is my advice.
BTW..... this section of CC was/is a great help to me and you will find a warm welcome here.
 

Tenkaykev

Guru
Location
Poole
Well - I am now officially old

My OAP bus pass has arrived!!

I got mine at 60. Had to go in person to the bus station with ID. Filled in the form and the lady behind the desk had one of those old web cams that look a bit like a golf ball and clip on the top of the computer monitor. Three renewals later and the new pass that arrives in the post ( after an email asking if I'm still alive 😁 ) still has the original photo ( I really miss what was my favourite shirt )
 

SpokeyDokey

69, & my GP says I will officially be old at 70!
Moderator
A few questions for you experienced retirees from an aspiring one at some point in the next few years. How did you decide when was the right time to retire, and with hindsight was it the right decision/timing?

At present, my main criteria are pretty obvious and once all three are ticked then I'm out:-
1. Financial security with a bit of buffer
2. Having enough stuff to do/hobbies to fill the days
3. Getting hacked off with the job/working
Have I missed anything?

I've noticed that of my mates who have retired, they generally fall into 2 camps: the ones who have stayed retired and the ones that have 'unretired'. Maybe coincidence, but the ones who stayed retired tended to be those who could wind the job down gradually (moving 4/3 days weeks, going part time etc) and get into the retirement groove over a few years; while the ones who unretired were in fairly full on jobs where there was no wind down option: you either did it full time or not at all - and for them, going back was not about the money, which shows that point 2 is relevant I reckon. (That said, one of them complained that his new 'boss' at home didn't appreciate his work or pay him ^_^) I'm in the latter camp btw.

Any words of wisdom are very welcome 🙂

My advice: once you are financially secure (means different things to different people - ours was a good annual income that you can easily live on plus a fair old whack in the bank) then go straight away and don't look back.

There will always be as much or as little to do as you want in terms of activities to fill your time. Plus, you want some good healthy years before the joys of old age really begin to take their toll.

I would sum up our retirement (very young) as comfortably-off lazy dossers having a ball but blighted by some bad health news on my part last year. No regrets whatsoever about leaving work with very high pay behind - the benefits came at a very high personal cost. Neither of us miss a single moment of it.

Other advice - never forget how long (or little) time you may have in your 'golden years'. Stay as fit as you can and try to avoid becoming immobile. And, if you have a partner do as much as you can together, as one day one of you will be left on their own and they won't be able to get any wasted time back as it will be too late.

Have fun, stay healthy, live long...
 
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