Your Retirement Job?

Anonymous
I "retired" from nursing once we had kids as the hours didn't work with my spouse who travels a lot for work. I SAH for a few years then got a remote part time govt job doing basically admin type work. Unfortunately now I have to be in the office. My intention when I took the job was never to be commuting to downtown DC everyday so I have the desire to move on from it. However, I don't want to give them exactly what they want so am still holding the line until they fire me.
Anonymous
Just chiming in on this thread to point out that some of us do many of the jobs mentioned here you all refer to as “fun retirement” jobs as our main careers/ sources of income. If you do actually decide to do this work, please be mindful of professional rates and not come into a field and charge far less. Our children and livelihoods depend on it.
Thanks.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I "retired" from nursing once we had kids as the hours didn't work with my spouse who travels a lot for work. I SAH for a few years then got a remote part time govt job doing basically admin type work. Unfortunately now I have to be in the office. My intention when I took the job was never to be commuting to downtown DC everyday so I have the desire to move on from it. However, I don't want to give them exactly what they want so am still holding the line until they fire me.


Now we’re reeeaalllyy stretching what “retirement” means.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Just chiming in on this thread to point out that some of us do many of the jobs mentioned here you all refer to as “fun retirement” jobs as our main careers/ sources of income. If you do actually decide to do this work, please be mindful of professional rates and not come into a field and charge far less. Our children and livelihoods depend on it.
Thanks.


Right. Because they’re not retired!
Anonymous
I do garden designs, mostly word of mouth, and some restoration projects like tree planting through grants with the county. I also do a lot of volunteering with schools like working on monarch gardens that are part of the school curriculum.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My colleague retired and is now a dogwalker. It keeps her fit.


This is what I plan on doing.
.

Unless she does it for free, she’s a professional dog walker. Not retired.


Give it a rest. What is your problem?


+ 1
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My mom is an Admin Assistant now at a local CPA firm. She was a CPA prior to retiring, so she knows the ins and outs. She loves being interact with people, but mostly, she loves the insurance. The secondary insurance she needed to carry with Medicare was very, very expensive.


I’m sure they love having her and her expertise!
Anonymous
I'd like to be an usher at a concert venue. And yes, I'd still consider myself to be retired. Working 5-10 hours per week at minimum wage for a summer season isn't even in the same ballpark as being a highly paid attorney working tons of hours.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Just chiming in on this thread to point out that some of us do many of the jobs mentioned here you all refer to as “fun retirement” jobs as our main careers/ sources of income. If you do actually decide to do this work, please be mindful of professional rates and not come into a field and charge far less. Our children and livelihoods depend on it.
Thanks.


I’m not trying to be mean, but if your job is easy enough to be considered for a “fun retirement job” then maybe the market just doesn’t support a wage high enough to support a family for that particular job.

If your job is not in fact easy and fun, then the problem will fix itself when the retirees find out what a grind it is in real life and they quit.

Market forces are all around us and you can’t blame individuals for doing what works for them. For example, some lifeguard jobs around me pay more than $15 an hour. However, the teens all want to work at our neighborhood pool because it is easier and nicer than working at the Reston Water Mine or heaven forbid a Rec center pool. So they happily take minimum wage and work at our neighborhood pool.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My mom is an Admin Assistant now at a local CPA firm. She was a CPA prior to retiring, so she knows the ins and outs. She loves being interact with people, but mostly, she loves the insurance. The secondary insurance she needed to carry with Medicare was very, very expensive.


I’m sure they love having her and her expertise!


So she’s working to afford the insurance. Not retired.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I "retired" from nursing once we had kids as the hours didn't work with my spouse who travels a lot for work. I SAH for a few years then got a remote part time govt job doing basically admin type work. Unfortunately now I have to be in the office. My intention when I took the job was never to be commuting to downtown DC everyday so I have the desire to move on from it. However, I don't want to give them exactly what they want so am still holding the line until they fire me.


Now we’re reeeaalllyy stretching what “retirement” means.


I'm younger but I dont work in my original career field. For all intents and purposes I am retired from that career. I would not be hired if I applied for an opening tomorrow. I also don't need to work, so my current part time job is(was) more like a hobby job to keep myself occupied as OP was describing. It's not like a serious second career or anything.
Anonymous
Still researching, so far nothing seems to be as flex as retirement!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My colleague retired and is now a dogwalker. It keeps her fit.


This is what I plan on doing.
.

Unless she does it for free, she’s a professional dog walker. Not retired.


No need to keep showing that you are an imbecile.
Anonymous

I would like to volunteer as a gardener in beautiful estates such as Hillwood or Dumbarton Oaks. If I lose my weight and look good in a year, I would get trained to be a substitute Pilates reformer instructor.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'd like to be an usher at a concert venue. And yes, I'd still consider myself to be retired. Working 5-10 hours per week at minimum wage for a summer season isn't even in the same ballpark as being a highly paid attorney working tons of hours.[/

I’d love to be a usher at a concert venue.
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