Anonymous wrote:I'm a PP, not the OP. But if I were the OP, I'd ask something along the lines of "if you have $5 million plus and you're over 50, why aren't you retiring?"
Posters in their 30s or 40s--especially those raking in the money and all the prestige and accolades and "things" that come along with it--just don't have the time or mindset to contemplate the reality that, like all of us, their days are numbered. But one day they will. Then the question will become relevant to them. But right now, and quite understandably, it isn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because we want $10m to retire.
Why? Give us an outline of your retirement plans and why you need that much to achieve them, then explain why those plans are so important and desirable that they're worth giving up more of your prime years working to achieve them. I'm genuinely curious. After all, time is limited--for all of us.
Anonymous wrote:We have $6.5M not including the house, and work for health care benefits. Paying out of pocket for 10-15 years for the two of us plus kids before reaching Medicare eligibility seems like such a waste of funds. Since one works for health care benefits, it is only fair that the other works, too.
Anonymous wrote:The fun things to do if you’re young and stop working altogether cost a lot.
People are more likely to switch jobs or start a business, if that’s something they want to do.
Truthfully a lot of the slack gets taken up by caregiving. Children and elderly parents.
Anonymous wrote:I enjoy my hobbies way more than working. There are a lot of productive and intellectually engaging activities that aren’t sitting in a 9-5 office job + shitty commute. I bet most of the people who “enjoy working” are wealthy and privileged enough that they either WFH/hybrid/live very close and don’t need to spend 2-3 hours a day commuting.
I don’t understand how someone can enjoy a soul crushing commute that makes you too tired to work out and cook a meal 5 days a week, getting up at the crack of dawn and being forced to go to sleep at 9pm to avoid sleep deprivation, have to poop in a public restroom, sit in back to back meetings for 5 hours a day discussing things you don’t give a shit about, needing to wear uncomfortable clothes all day, can never let loose and be yourself while at the office, etc, etc. Not to mention you’re locked in to a select few geographical areas where your industry is located, have no freedom of movement or freedom over your time.
For most of us working is an incredibly dehumanizing experience and the whole thing is a miserable slog. I seriously don’t understand how the average office drone who makes low 6 figures would actually choose this life if money weren’t a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because we want $10m to retire.
Why? Give us an outline of your retirement plans and why you need that much to achieve them, then explain why those plans are so important and desirable that they're worth giving up more of your prime years working to achieve them. I'm genuinely curious. After all, time is limited--for all of us.
Np. Working is not “giving up” one’s prime years just because I have $5M invested. It’s a choice about how we want to spend our time, and some of our years. There’s a sense of fulfillment from that, and it’s no less valuable than puttering around in a vegetable garden.
Oh, please. I retired with less than that and we have a gardener. Your "sense of fulfillment" is more likely from deriving your self-worth and identity from your job title and paycheck. And let's face it, most high paying jobs don't contribute jack shit to society. It's not like you're a fire fighter or something.
You seem angry and troubled. A lot of people take pride in their jobs, and their jobs do contribute to society, or at least to the society that most of us would like to inhabit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because we want $10m to retire.
Why? Give us an outline of your retirement plans and why you need that much to achieve them, then explain why those plans are so important and desirable that they're worth giving up more of your prime years working to achieve them. I'm genuinely curious. After all, time is limited--for all of us.
Np. Working is not “giving up” one’s prime years just because I have $5M invested. It’s a choice about how we want to spend our time, and some of our years. There’s a sense of fulfillment from that, and it’s no less valuable than puttering around in a vegetable garden.
Oh, please. I retired with less than that and we have a gardener. Your "sense of fulfillment" is more likely from deriving your self-worth and identity from your job title and paycheck. And let's face it, most high paying jobs don't contribute jack shit to society. It's not like you're a fire fighter or something.
Anonymous wrote:I love love love my job. And we have 2 kids in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because we want $10m to retire.
Why? Give us an outline of your retirement plans and why you need that much to achieve them, then explain why those plans are so important and desirable that they're worth giving up more of your prime years working to achieve them. I'm genuinely curious. After all, time is limited--for all of us.
Np. Working is not “giving up” one’s prime years just because I have $5M invested. It’s a choice about how we want to spend our time, and some of our years. There’s a sense of fulfillment from that, and it’s no less valuable than puttering around in a vegetable garden.