Anonymous wrote:I wish I knew. DH wants to leave the area and will be retiring in the next 3-5 years. He hates cold weather. We thought of Florida but visited multiple places there to check it out and culturally it was a huge "no" again and again. North Carolina still gets cold in the winter.
I don't mind the cold, and would love to look at Vermont or Maine, or return to Chicago where I used to live but it's all too cold for DH. Not sure what we are going to do. CA would be amazing, but when need to lower our costs, not increase them. Same issue with the Sedona / Taos areas.
So -- I don't know.
Anonymous wrote:For those of you talking about moving to a foreign country to retire, do a lot of countries let you just immigrate there at retirement age? Do you have to independently wealthy or something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any of you with children thought ahead to when you become older and possibly infirm and need the support of your children? I have quite a few friends who had to manage their parents' old age from hundreds of miles away, and it's no a picnic. By the time many people who have moved to FL or wherever need support with their age-related issues, they are too old to pick up their life and move it closer to family. Also, why would you purposefully move so far away from family and friends? I just don't get it.
Some people don't only have friends in one place, and they are more apt to travel, so they don't mind living somewhere else. They tend to be more independent and capable, and know they will see and stay in contact with their friends and family. They are also really good at meeting new people, are outgoing, like to entertain, and have strong/consistent people skills. It is part of living their kind of life, and they gravitate toward the same. I think this is a foreign concept to people who are more introverted and/or low energy (even if they think they are not).
Have you lived in the same town or geographic area all your life?
PP here. Actually, no. I lived overseas in multiple countries the first 18 years of my life and I have two passports. Everywhere I have ever lived (countries in Asia, Europe, Middle East, and South America), most older people remain near their children or families of origin. Just try managing your aging parents' health from thousands of miles away--as I had to do--and see how you like it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My best friend (60) just retired in Montreal. She is glowing and her husband (59) loves the jazz scene. They were both life-long New Yorkers.
How do you emigrate in retirement to Canada? Is it that easy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have any of you with children thought ahead to when you become older and possibly infirm and need the support of your children? I have quite a few friends who had to manage their parents' old age from hundreds of miles away, and it's no a picnic. By the time many people who have moved to FL or wherever need support with their age-related issues, they are too old to pick up their life and move it closer to family. Also, why would you purposefully move so far away from family and friends? I just don't get it.
Some people don't only have friends in one place, and they are more apt to travel, so they don't mind living somewhere else. They tend to be more independent and capable, and know they will see and stay in contact with their friends and family. They are also really good at meeting new people, are outgoing, like to entertain, and have strong/consistent people skills. It is part of living their kind of life, and they gravitate toward the same. I think this is a foreign concept to people who are more introverted and/or low energy (even if they think they are not).
Have you lived in the same town or geographic area all your life?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Manhattan. And I will be able to afford it.
No car, best health car, amazing theater, I could go on and on.
the older I get, the more this is my view too.
What about the rats and smell and crime?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Manhattan. And I will be able to afford it.
No car, best health car, amazing theater, I could go on and on.
the older I get, the more this is my view too.
Anonymous wrote:Have any of you with children thought ahead to when you become older and possibly infirm and need the support of your children? I have quite a few friends who had to manage their parents' old age from hundreds of miles away, and it's no a picnic. By the time many people who have moved to FL or wherever need support with their age-related issues, they are too old to pick up their life and move it closer to family. Also, why would you purposefully move so far away from family and friends? I just don't get it.