Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My co-worker retired at 55. She has always been single, no kids. The world traveler type. She bought a condo I assume relatively young, and had minimal bills. She is living an amazing life; I told her I want to be her when I grow up!
Me too!! But I'll be 56 when I retire and have kids in college (paid for). I'm already plotting my travels and daydreaming about it.
We are not all child brides, orthodox or amish like you.
I do not understand this comment. For those who had kids in early-mid 30s - very typical - this timing would work out.
That is a child bride unless you only have 1 or 2 kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My co-worker retired at 55. She has always been single, no kids. The world traveler type. She bought a condo I assume relatively young, and had minimal bills. She is living an amazing life; I told her I want to be her when I grow up!
Me too!! But I'll be 56 when I retire and have kids in college (paid for). I'm already plotting my travels and daydreaming about it.
We are not all child brides, orthodox or amish like you.
I do not understand this comment. For those who had kids in early-mid 30s - very typical - this timing would work out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My co-worker retired at 55. She has always been single, no kids. The world traveler type. She bought a condo I assume relatively young, and had minimal bills. She is living an amazing life; I told her I want to be her when I grow up!
Me too!! But I'll be 56 when I retire and have kids in college (paid for). I'm already plotting my travels and daydreaming about it.
We are not all child brides, orthodox or amish like you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My co-worker retired at 55. She has always been single, no kids. The world traveler type. She bought a condo I assume relatively young, and had minimal bills. She is living an amazing life; I told her I want to be her when I grow up!
Me too!! But I'll be 56 when I retire and have kids in college (paid for). I'm already plotting my travels and daydreaming about it.
Anonymous wrote:$500-$600 a month invested was enough to retire at 47.
Three cars and a condo were the only bigger purchases. I was never out of work for long, no emergencies, and never sick. Finances separate from my partner as they just loved to spend while I budgeted.
Kids will pay for their own college. They have the money.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I downsized. We are selling our inside-the-beltway NoVA house (we had tenants for a couple of years) and have moved to way outside the beltway. This drastically reduced our housing costs and we are pulling about 600k in cash out of the house we are selling. DH is retiring soon enough, probably in about a year.