Anonymous wrote:Because Americans are becoming lazy and value leisure over industry.
Anonymous wrote:Americans don't want to retire early, corporations push them out. This country is full of sh**t. One one hand our stupid government tells up to work until 70, but good luck finding a corporation that will keep you post 59. Yes a lot of people would love to work longer so can save more for retirement. But our corporations which have now reached an absurd level of power and influence dispose of us as soon as we reach a certain age when we supposedly become toml expensive to invest in.
Anonymous wrote:Being acutely aware that I closer the end than the beginning of life. 56. Would like to make the most the next 2-3 decades. Not be chained to a desk and computer.
Anonymous wrote:If I had European type leavenof 25+ days a year and the office was half closed in August then I'd work longer. As it's, my 20 days a year are spent either eith sick kids or limited travel in short spurts. So I'm resting at 55 to enjoy life
Anonymous wrote:We have three kids so my dh jokes we will never retire. One was a surprise so we will be in our sixties when he’s in college!! But our jobs have decent work life balance and frankly hanging out with our kids is more exhausting than work which usually feels like a nice break.
You have to be careful about early retirement. It’s like an oasis illusion. When you feel less useful you end up declining very quickly. You need to have some ‘jobs’ lined up like volunteer work or grandparent duty that keep you connected to the society around you, especially younger people.
Anonymous wrote:I want to retire because my job as a college professor has changed massively from what it was when I entered the profession. It is almost entirely a different animal today. Admissions standards are lower, students are less prepared, everyone is only interested in the explicitly vocational aspects of my field and we spend much too much time combatting plagiarism. Our class sizes keep getting bigger and our service requirements are out of control because there are so few full time faculty. most of our administrative leaders are not academics and they don’t understand what we do. Every few years they bring in a new team of lame consultants who don’t understand academia and they come up with even more bizarre tasks for the faculty accompanied by new and wacky jargon. I am just not sure I can take another round. I am sixty. t