Anonymous wrote:No. I am fifty and when I retire I am moving into an apt either in downtown D.C. or NYC. I want culture, good food, and walkability.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to move back to Manhattan or west side of LA.
Wow surprised to see so many more people here that want to retire in a city.... I thought I was the outlier!
I think it's so important to be able to walk places in retirement. Elders who live in the suburbs and are car-dependent are trapped once they're no longer able to drive.
Actually it’s really unsafe to walk everywhere when you are too old to drive. You will fall or get hit by a car.
Nah, many elders are just fine to walk, but can’t drive. What’s the alternative, sitting at home, quietly waiting for death?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Definitely want to stay in DC as home base. Sell the house in AU Park, buy a 2 BR condo downtown and another 2 BR condo in Rehoboth for the weekends, and we will all be set for a long time.
This is us. Want to keep/stay in our townhouse in old town Alexandria and spend time at our house in rehoboth. Go back and forth depending on what we are going.
Anonymous wrote:No. I am fifty and when I retire I am moving into an apt either in downtown D.C. or NYC. I want culture, good food, and walkability.[/quote
You should consider crime, healthcare cost, and the cost of support staff or assisted living if you need it later. DC or NYC is $$$. Also, the taxes suck. Soon as you are old enough to retire, the muggers will keep you from wanted to walk around, then you will seize up and be so stiff you can't walk and you'll need help and that's going to cost a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Good lord, this post is a list of young people desires. Guess what: when you retire you will:
1. be much more likely to live near your kids/grandkids
2. have health limitations that make urban living and walkability a challenge
3. still have life obligations if you have other humans in your life
How shitty OP to say joining up with other old people, preparing to die
It reads like such a selfish point of view like your entire retirement is a personal vacation. I'm so thankful instead that my mom was near us and in our kids' daily lives. And now that she has to move into a senior living facility, yeah I guess she is preparing to die. No need to actually bother living in the meantime I guess.
I'm 51 with two young kids. My sister is 49 with two teenagers. We have had my mom in our lives every day for the last 15 years because she moved to DC to be near us when we had children. And now as I'm getting near retirement age, I'm taking care of my mom every day. I can pretty much guarantee that my own retirement isn't going to involve a lot of self-indulgence or a nonstop vacation. It may suck but it is reality. Sure, I'd love go to live in Paris in the Marais, but I'm not leaving my mom to die alone and also planning to be around for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Good lord, this post is a list of young people desires. Guess what: when you retire you will:
1. be much more likely to live near your kids/grandkids
2. have health limitations that make urban living and walkability a challenge
3. still have life obligations if you have other humans in your life
How shitty OP to say joining up with other old people, preparing to die
It reads like such a selfish point of view like your entire retirement is a personal vacation. I'm so thankful instead that my mom was near us and in our kids' daily lives. And now that she has to move into a senior living facility, yeah I guess she is preparing to die. No need to actually bother living in the meantime I guess.
I'm 51 with two young kids. My sister is 49 with two teenagers. We have had my mom in our lives every day for the last 15 years because she moved to DC to be near us when we had children. And now as I'm getting near retirement age, I'm taking care of my mom every day. I can pretty much guarantee that my own retirement isn't going to involve a lot of self-indulgence or a nonstop vacation. It may suck but it is reality. Sure, I'd love go to live in Paris in the Marais, but I'm not leaving my mom to die alone and also planning to be around for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:I have a list that we have been using to figure out where we will live. We will be retired before our children are settled, so we can’t make decisions on where they will be.
In no particular order:
1) excellent healthcare
2) a view -can be water, mountains, pastoral, cityscape, I just want to be able to see beyond the neighbors.
3) further north from DC- at least cooler and I want a place that is not having a water availability issue
4) an active congregation in our faith
5) ideally, I would like to live so that we can walk to the village- Library, grocery, pharmacy, a few nice restaurants, PO, coffee/tea/pub
6) DH wants to be near some sort of winter skiing and ideally he wants to be able to hike from our house
7) a blue bubble in a blue state, I am done with purple.
8) a decent airport within 45 minutes
9) a college or university would be nice.
Obviously 5 and 6 are somewhat contradictory and we have to iron that out
The other is that, while we have found places we like that tick off most of the above-the view seems to be the one that is most likely to be jettisoned as it seems to be out of our price range when the rest are all in play- and I would really like one- so I have to figure out what else has to be dropped.
We liked Northampton and have friends there too.
Burlington, VT was a bit too far but still on the list
West Hartford is a possibility-my sister is nearby.
Next up are places near Hanover NH and Portland Maine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually really want to move to a retirement community where there are lots of planned activities. I read an article about that Margaritaville place and I’m ready to move there now! I’d love on-site golf, tennis, dining, etc. But we are only in our mid 30s with young kids so that won’t happen any time soon.
OP here and I'm really trying to understand... you don't think you would get bored of this lifestyle? Would you be fine with just seeing only people of your age group? You wouldn't feel disconnected from the rest of the world and society?
I will retire in two years,and don't have a plan yet.but I think you do not realize now how different you will feel in 30 years.
You will likely be stressed by things like the beltway. When your children go off to their own lives, your world shrinks.
Hectic days (or cooking for a large crowd) will seem more exhausting/daunting.
I am not saying you will want to just sit in a rocking chair, but when you are twice as old as you are now, you will feel differently. I guarantee it.
Anonymous wrote:Definitely want to stay in DC as home base. Sell the house in AU Park, buy a 2 BR condo downtown and another 2 BR condo in Rehoboth for the weekends, and we will all be set for a long time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually really want to move to a retirement community where there are lots of planned activities. I read an article about that Margaritaville place and I’m ready to move there now! I’d love on-site golf, tennis, dining, etc. But we are only in our mid 30s with young kids so that won’t happen any time soon.
OP here and I'm really trying to understand... you don't think you would get bored of this lifestyle? Would you be fine with just seeing only people of your age group? You wouldn't feel disconnected from the rest of the world and society?