NRA4LIFE
WKR
I love my current job. Hunting, fishing, paying people to do the crap that I hate. It's turning out great. Almost 10 years now.
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I'm with you there 100%Personally, I hope I have an enjoyable life. I am not waiting until retirement to do the things I enjoy.
The first time I read this my mind went to “pulling the plug” as in what one does when you take someone off life support. Then read the part about planning it since you started working and I was like “I mean 59 is an odd age to call it quits but to each there own.” Then I actually used my brain and thought it through.My kids will be both be out of college when I’m 57. I’d like to pay for grad school also if they choose to go. Then I’m pulling the plug at 59.
I’ve been planning for this since I started working. Barring no extraordinary circumstances it will be very doable.
Near death experiences certainly have a way of focussing our time and efforts into the things that are most important to us.I get it... my job was extremely demanding, stressful, incredibly long hours... but man I loved it. And much of my identity was wrapped up in it. It took an ambulance ride, a near heart attack (at much too early an age), and a couple day stay in the hospital to realize what it was actually doing to me. Was a rather brutal wake-up call.
Now... the same job put me in a position where I can be financially independent now and much more flexible with my time (not sure I fully embrace the retire early part). So... was it worth it.... I'd say probably so, but if I had actually died.... definitely not. That's a pretty fine line in the sand....
I enjoy spending way more time with my wife and kids. If I could go back and do it again, I still would have worked my ass off early on, but maybe had the presence of mind to jump off the extremely stressful train a little earlier. Hindsight is 20/20 though.
In canada they'll pull your plug when you get old lolThe first time I read this my mind went to “pulling the plug” as in what one does when you take someone off life support. Then read the part about planning it since you started working and I was like “I mean 59 is an odd age to call it quits but to each there own.” Then I actually used my brain and thought it through.
Yes some folks truly enjoy their jobs.You got it buddy; people who love their jobs do so because they're control freaks that neglect their families and have no hobbys or interests. Just go ahead and roll with that.
Why do folks want to keep working when they could be doing other stuff. Are they trying to avoid spending time with their wives and families or just have no interests outside of work? Are they Type A's who need to control things? What is it?
Let me know when someone figures out the health insurance thing.
I can afford to retire early at 55 for everything, but health insurance.
A lot of states have insurance programs that fall into the ACA. They usually have huge breaks based on yearly gross income. If you’re retired, your gross income will be very low, qualifying you for those. I will be taking advantage of such in MN next year. Most insurance brokers can walk you through it.
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Is this subsidized by the state tax payers to make it cheaper?
No idea. It’s all a part of the Affordable Care Act and how each state handles it.
At this point I don’t really care. I can get my insurance for 1/3 the price of COBRA, and I’m good with that.
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I guess my concern would be if it is, then I'm depended on those subsidies continuing in the future. What if they stop that completely and now you actually have to pay for all of your health insurance? Could you afford it when your neighbors stop pitching in?
I want a free and clear retirement, not dependant on subsidies from tax payers, or even SS. If I get some SS that I paid in when the time comes, great, but I'm not banking on anyone for my retirement, but my wife and I.
Then I would suggest a rich uncle, parent or start out with enough money in the first place.
Or a country that has affordable healthcare.
Good luck.
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There's really no set dollar amount, it's completely tied to your yearly expenses. If you can get your yearly expenses low by sacrificing some luxuries in life, you can definitely meaningfully change your retirement age. Especially if you invest the money you save on those luxuries.I’m so curious to know what dollar amounts people feel they need to retire at a certain age, but know that’s personal info that most don’t share. I currently max out my 401k and finally just got a Roth 401k option to contribute to, which it all got switched there. My wife is a teacher so she will get a pension. I’m shooting for what I feel is a good chunk of money a month to be able to go on amazing hunts and family trips each year. That should be around the 4.5% mark of my 401k and hoping the market grows 7-9% during my retirement to leave my kids a fat sum to blow on fun stuff, as long as they turn out to be good responsible individuals. Our current home will be paid off in 6.5 years. I just want to live long enough to enjoy it and know with my history I’m walking a knife edge to get there.

Make sure you reject Medicare when the time comes. Wouldn't want those entitlements creeping in.I want a free and clear retirement, not dependant on subsidies from tax payers, or even SS. If I get some SS that I paid in when the time comes, great, but I'm not banking on anyone for my retirement, but my wife and I.