I can’t stop thinking about this note.
Between my wife and I’s parents, 3/4 of them are obsessed with retiring so they “can do nothing”. They want to drink, gamble, play golf, and binge Netflix/sportsball. Or otherwise just not do much of anything.
And listen, I get it. Life is exhausting. Raising a family is beyond exhausting. But shunning all responsibility means giving up your actual life.
There’s nothing quite as empowering as being relied upon. That’s the number one thing I’ve taken from becoming a father. When I “retire”, I plan to stay engaged in my family, helping with grandkids, and doing fun projects with no profit pressure.
Don’t be the person who retires to nothing.
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Replies (10)
Love this. Great personal insight. This mindset has bled down from generations and I think it’s become cancerous, among many other things.
It seems outrageously prevalent in boomers. Lots of millennials also think this way, however, a lot of them are waking up to the lie, partially because retirement finance only worked for the boomers since they were just entering the workforce as the money printers came on, putting them in perfect position to reap all the benefits.
Exactly right
NA, there has always been doerz & followerz - naturallaw/* selfsov=selfemployED*/* most, the older generation i know had to figure out their own dependencies & were p2p usually. th@ middlegrift & welfareState came in concurrently but has really expandED/imhO
Ok boomer
you boyz should lose the labels imO
the labeling is for separation friend
You should write with correct spelling, grammar, and punctuation
Yes, exactly right. I would like to be separate from some people. Thank you for noticing.
alright, that dog "blameGAME" does not hunt!