Anonymous wrote:I would look for something part time just to help pay the bills. I would not try to restart my full time career. But I am also married and am assuming my spouse would stay employed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 52 and plan to retire at 55—or sooner if laid off. My 59-year-old husband retired earlier this year after being laid off. Our mortgage is paid off, we have a high school junior with fully funded (in-state) 529. Our NW is $7m excluding home equity.
I’m
Very much in the same boat. I am taking VERA so I’ll be able to continue with federal health insurance for my family. Would you have something similar if you were laid off or retired? Or would you get health insurance some other way?
We don’t have health insurance, will pay out of pocket. That’s the reason I plan to work for 3 more years to get DH closer to 65. We have no pension either
Gotcha. Thanks! Retiring at 55 seems very smart in your circumstances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At 55, my youngest will just be going to college. Either I or my husband will have to continue working full-time for health insurance, as far as I can tell (current state), until we’re in our seventies unless we want to go broke quickly.
America is so screwed up: yes, you *can* make a lot of money, but what if you don’t, and what if you can’t after a certain age, and you’re in good health…it’s just so overtly capitalistic and extractive, it’s so tiring to consider.
Become a school bus driver. 20 hours a week just on school days and get medical year round
Anonymous wrote:I’m 57, spouse 59 and both in industries that are suddenly precarious (thanks, Trump!). We have retirement accounts, some savings, and a paid off house and If we get laid off we can retire and should be ok financially for ourselves in our lifetimes. But I worry about our kids (college age and just out). The economic future looks grim, stable jobs hard to come by, the cost of graduate education should they need it is high, the cost of buying a house and even a car very high. I hope we can keep earning and be able to help them out with grad tuition or a house down payment. The idea that kids should graduate from college and be “launched” and self sufficient seems like a luxury if a different era.
Anonymous wrote:I just found a very part time and am living off savings. Life is too short.