Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re mid-50s and our number is around $4M to generate income (with one modest pension & SS). This will probably take into our mid-60s to do, so we have to guess when we reach the breakpoint of enough money to support a lot of travel vs enough healthy years to actually do it.
So glad I never understood the "magic" of traveling. I'd much rather spend time in my nice house than a random village in Thailand.
Since this magical activity seems to be a significant cost in retirement for many, I also get to retire earlier. Yay, me!
I think of the world as a yard you can play in. I cannot relate to someone who is content to spend their life in one corner of the yard and not explore what else there is.
Different strokes for different folks. But air travel is one of the biggest contributors to global warming out there. The world may be your playground but it’s also where you eat breathe and sleep.
Please share with us everything else that you do because of your concern about global warming. Lol. Let me guess, nothing. You say that only because you can’t afford to travel.
DP--huh? I too limit my air travel because of its environmental impact--not because of money. It's kind of basic responsibility 101 these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re mid-50s and our number is around $4M to generate income (with one modest pension & SS). This will probably take into our mid-60s to do, so we have to guess when we reach the breakpoint of enough money to support a lot of travel vs enough healthy years to actually do it.
So glad I never understood the "magic" of traveling. I'd much rather spend time in my nice house than a random village in Thailand.
Since this magical activity seems to be a significant cost in retirement for many, I also get to retire earlier. Yay, me!
I think of the world as a yard you can play in. I cannot relate to someone who is content to spend their life in one corner of the yard and not explore what else there is.
Different strokes for different folks. But air travel is one of the biggest contributors to global warming out there. The world may be your playground but it’s also where you eat breathe and sleep.
Please share with us everything else that you do because of your concern about global warming. Lol. Let me guess, nothing. You say that only because you can’t afford to travel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My "I'd walk away without another thought" number is $10M (single, no kids, 50s).
I won't get to 10M absent some kind of windfall, but will likely retire with $3-4M TSP, $1M other, fed pension in the 150-200 range, $1M house paid off.
How are you getting a Fed pension of $150-200k? Are you dual Feds?
Never mind, saw you are single. How are you getting $150-200K pension? Doctor?
I also wonder how you are getting 150-200K pension?
Some private companies still need offer pensions.
Yeah but PP mentioned a TSP account.
Which, not that I am reading about a single TSP with $3-4M, I am realizing PP is trolling.
Can’t 2 Feds do that?
1 fed, independent agency, advanced degree, very long tenure (at top of wage scale now), max tax deferred TSP contributions nearly all in equities for the whole time. TSP now nearing 3M. If retiring at 62, the internal pension calculator puts the pension in the 150-200 range. No, I'm not going to post my statements and W2. But it's possible and I am definitely not the only person in my agency in this situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re mid-50s and our number is around $4M to generate income (with one modest pension & SS). This will probably take into our mid-60s to do, so we have to guess when we reach the breakpoint of enough money to support a lot of travel vs enough healthy years to actually do it.
So glad I never understood the "magic" of traveling. I'd much rather spend time in my nice house than a random village in Thailand.
Since this magical activity seems to be a significant cost in retirement for many, I also get to retire earlier. Yay, me!
I think of the world as a yard you can play in. I cannot relate to someone who is content to spend their life in one corner of the yard and not explore what else there is.
Different strokes for different folks. But air travel is one of the biggest contributors to global warming out there. The world may be your playground but it’s also where you eat breathe and sleep.
Please share with us everything else that you do because of your concern about global warming. Lol. Let me guess, nothing. You say that only because you can’t afford to travel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re mid-50s and our number is around $4M to generate income (with one modest pension & SS). This will probably take into our mid-60s to do, so we have to guess when we reach the breakpoint of enough money to support a lot of travel vs enough healthy years to actually do it.
So glad I never understood the "magic" of traveling. I'd much rather spend time in my nice house than a random village in Thailand.
Since this magical activity seems to be a significant cost in retirement for many, I also get to retire earlier. Yay, me!
I think of the world as a yard you can play in. I cannot relate to someone who is content to spend their life in one corner of the yard and not explore what else there is.
Different strokes for different folks. But air travel is one of the biggest contributors to global warming out there. The world may be your playground but it’s also where you eat breathe and sleep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re mid-50s and our number is around $4M to generate income (with one modest pension & SS). This will probably take into our mid-60s to do, so we have to guess when we reach the breakpoint of enough money to support a lot of travel vs enough healthy years to actually do it.
So glad I never understood the "magic" of traveling. I'd much rather spend time in my nice house than a random village in Thailand.
Since this magical activity seems to be a significant cost in retirement for many, I also get to retire earlier. Yay, me!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re mid-50s and our number is around $4M to generate income (with one modest pension & SS). This will probably take into our mid-60s to do, so we have to guess when we reach the breakpoint of enough money to support a lot of travel vs enough healthy years to actually do it.
So glad I never understood the "magic" of traveling. I'd much rather spend time in my nice house than a random village in Thailand.
Since this magical activity seems to be a significant cost in retirement for many, I also get to retire earlier. Yay, me!
I think of the world as a yard you can play in. I cannot relate to someone who is content to spend their life in one corner of the yard and not explore what else there is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re mid-50s and our number is around $4M to generate income (with one modest pension & SS). This will probably take into our mid-60s to do, so we have to guess when we reach the breakpoint of enough money to support a lot of travel vs enough healthy years to actually do it.
So glad I never understood the "magic" of traveling. I'd much rather spend time in my nice house than a random village in Thailand.
Since this magical activity seems to be a significant cost in retirement for many, I also get to retire earlier. Yay, me!
I think of the world as a yard you can play in. I cannot relate to someone who is content to spend their life in one corner of the yard and not explore what else there is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re mid-50s and our number is around $4M to generate income (with one modest pension & SS). This will probably take into our mid-60s to do, so we have to guess when we reach the breakpoint of enough money to support a lot of travel vs enough healthy years to actually do it.
So glad I never understood the "magic" of traveling. I'd much rather spend time in my nice house than a random village in Thailand.
Since this magical activity seems to be a significant cost in retirement for many, I also get to retire earlier. Yay, me!
Anonymous wrote:As a ten year retiree I have found that excluding education costs we are spending a lot more now then when we were working even though we don’t have a mortgage. We travel a lot more both domestically and internationally and we’ve joined two clubs. The things we use to do ourselves like yard work now others do. We could be spending 50% more.
Anonymous wrote:You people are all crazy with your $10M numbers and such. I know a guy that made $100K last year selling options (covered calls and cash-secured puts) using around $400K of his capital.
He was laid off early and decided to look at options to make his money last longer. Now he just lives off the option income and doesn't even touch the other $1 million he had saved. In other words, he retired essentially off $400K, so I hope you $10 million posters *love* your jobs. Otherwise, you're throwing away your life for no reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My "I'd walk away without another thought" number is $10M (single, no kids, 50s).
I won't get to 10M absent some kind of windfall, but will likely retire with $3-4M TSP, $1M other, fed pension in the 150-200 range, $1M house paid off.
How are you getting a Fed pension of $150-200k? Are you dual Feds?
Never mind, saw you are single. How are you getting $150-200K pension? Doctor?
I also wonder how you are getting 150-200K pension?
Some private companies still need offer pensions.
Yeah but PP mentioned a TSP account.
Which, not that I am reading about a single TSP with $3-4M, I am realizing PP is trolling.
Can’t 2 Feds do that?
1 fed, independent agency, advanced degree, very long tenure (at top of wage scale now), max tax deferred TSP contributions nearly all in equities for the whole time. TSP now nearing 3M. If retiring at 62, the internal pension calculator puts the pension in the 150-200 range. No, I'm not going to post my statements and W2. But it's possible and I am definitely not the only person in my agency in this situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My "I'd walk away without another thought" number is $10M (single, no kids, 50s).
I won't get to 10M absent some kind of windfall, but will likely retire with $3-4M TSP, $1M other, fed pension in the 150-200 range, $1M house paid off.
How are you getting a Fed pension of $150-200k? Are you dual Feds?
Never mind, saw you are single. How are you getting $150-200K pension? Doctor?
I also wonder how you are getting 150-200K pension?
Some private companies still need offer pensions.
Yeah but PP mentioned a TSP account.
Which, not that I am reading about a single TSP with $3-4M, I am realizing PP is trolling.
Can’t 2 Feds do that?