agreed...sometimes a guy might have to get snooty at a place like that
Yeah that sounds miserable to me.Quote:Quote:
LMCane said:
I always thought that being a Maitre De at a decent restaurant in Florida would be a pretty good gig just to pay the mortgage each month.
get some exercise standing, dress up a bit, look at pretty women, how much stress is there putting people at different tables?
At a place nice enough to have a Maitre De I would imagine the stress is high dealing with that clientele.
Worked in the same location as a guy one time that had a low level but stable government job.LMCane said:
There is a headhunting group in my career field that offers part time contract employment, one right now in Napa Valley CA (defense contracting sphere)
so that would seem less stressful and pretty interesting to spend 6 months out in wine country of California
at the same time, to another posters point- is it worth it to still put up with the @#$# for much less money than I am making now?
it's hard to find the correct balance between:
1) "your health will be greatly improved by retiring" versus
2) "you will likely die quickly by retiring and not having to work which gives your life some meaning"
Stat Monitor Repairman said:Worked in the same location as a guy one time that had a low level but stable government job.LMCane said:
There is a headhunting group in my career field that offers part time contract employment, one right now in Napa Valley CA (defense contracting sphere)
so that would seem less stressful and pretty interesting to spend 6 months out in wine country of California
at the same time, to another posters point- is it worth it to still put up with the @#$# for much less money than I am making now?
it's hard to find the correct balance between:
1) "your health will be greatly improved by retiring" versus
2) "you will likely die quickly by retiring and not having to work which gives your life some meaning"
You'd see the guy on occasion and he'd promptly tell you he was a short timer and how many days he had till retirement.
Retired and was dead within a couple weeks.
Turns out the only thing keeping him from being a non-functional alcoholic was showing up to work every day.
Seen some folk over the years where work is their sole existence for living and they have no identity other than work.
Others don't have this problem at all. Guess it depends on the individual but I'd guess some percentage of the population is like this.
doing ANYTHING at age 82 is winning.MAS444 said:
Maybe I'm not understanding your post...but 82 is elderly ish?
Drinking beer and watching sports every day at 82 doesn't sound that bad. I don't necessarily want to be doing that every day at 60 or 70, 75...but got damn at 82 that sounds like winning.
+1. Even better if its overlooking a beach or a lake. Sounds like a pretty good life.MAS444 said:
Maybe I'm not understanding your post...but 82 is elderly ish?
Drinking beer and watching sports every day at 82 doesn't sound that bad. I don't necessarily want to be doing that every day at 60 or 70, 75...but got damn at 82 that sounds like winning.
I spend minimum 35 hours a month on my hobby. I know the exact amount of time over the last 5 years. I would spend 35 hours a week if I had the financial means.Pasquale Liucci said:
There's a BIG difference between a hobby or pursuit that you spend maybe five hours a month on (my pitiful excuse for a golf game for example) and something that's engaging enough to saturate the time and energy and focus that a big boy job demands when the absence of that becomes a vacuum
You literally wire yourself to clock in, kiss ass, and run the rat race for thirty odd years well enough that you can give the kids a better life than you were raised with, have the material wealth to retire early, etc - that's not insignificant. Now all of a sudden that energy that you had attenuated to providing needs to go into something else. Ok so say you play golf, ski a few days a year, hunt a couple weekends with the kids at the family lease or land. Scaling that to something that you can invest in twenty plus hours per week is not insignificant. It's a valid concern.
I commute down town, have twins that are 7, work a tough fast paced job. You make the time. Granted I gave up golf, played 10 years competitive, many years ago because it requires a big continuous time commitment. I am able to make the time now training because I can do multiple sessions a day in 30min to 1 hour bursts with longer efforts early Saturday.Pasquale Liucci said:
That's awesome, kudos to you. Consider yourself lucky. I can't comprehend having 35 hours a month even to spend on a hobby or recreational pursuit. I have kids 4, 3, 1, and wife is seven months pregnant. It's a good month if I get in a round of golf or a trip or two to the driving range.
That will change as the kids get older and they can join in with me, whether that's golf, maintaining the feeders and food plots on our family land an hour away, etc, but I'm just saying it's a valid concern
Amen. If you want something bad enough in life, you will find the time and the means. Most people just choose not to put in the work to do what makes them happy and settle.Ragoo said:I spend minimum 35 hours a month on my hobby. I know the exact amount of time over the last 5 years. I would spend 35 hours a week if I had the financial means.Pasquale Liucci said:
There's a BIG difference between a hobby or pursuit that you spend maybe five hours a month on (my pitiful excuse for a golf game for example) and something that's engaging enough to saturate the time and energy and focus that a big boy job demands when the absence of that becomes a vacuum
You literally wire yourself to clock in, kiss ass, and run the rat race for thirty odd years well enough that you can give the kids a better life than you were raised with, have the material wealth to retire early, etc - that's not insignificant. Now all of a sudden that energy that you had attenuated to providing needs to go into something else. Ok so say you play golf, ski a few days a year, hunt a couple weekends with the kids at the family lease or land. Scaling that to something that you can invest in twenty plus hours per week is not insignificant. It's a valid concern.
Edit: 5 hours a month isn't a hobby, you spend more than 5 hours a month pooping. If you truly find something you enjoy you would make time to engage in it.
Sounds like you already have a hobby/recreational pursuitQuote:
I can't comprehend having 35 hours a month even to spend on a hobby or recreational pursuit. I have kids 4, 3, 1, and wife is seven months pregnant.
tommyjohn said:Sounds like you already have a hobby/recreational pursuitQuote:
I can't comprehend having 35 hours a month even to spend on a hobby or recreational pursuit. I have kids 4, 3, 1, and wife is seven months pregnant.
Man, I'm all for drinking beer & watching sports.... but doing that every day in my 80's sounds like a really poor existence. I'd be bored to death. A person need purpose, activity, family, real hobbies, etc. Hopefully at that age I can at least be fishing with my grandkids or something similar.Quote:+1. Even better if its overlooking a beach or a lake. Sounds like a pretty good life.Quote:
MAS444 said:
Maybe I'm not understanding your post...but 82 is elderly ish?
Drinking beer and watching sports every day at 82 doesn't sound that bad. I don't necessarily want to be doing that every day at 60 or 70, 75...but got damn at 82 that sounds like winning.
Pasquale Liucci said:
There's a BIG difference between a hobby or pursuit that you spend maybe five hours a month on (my pitiful excuse for a golf game for example) and something that's engaging enough to saturate the time and energy and focus that a big boy job demands when the absence of that becomes a vacuum
You literally wire yourself to clock in, kiss ass, and run the rat race for thirty odd years well enough that you can give the kids a better life than you were raised with, have the material wealth to retire early, etc - that's not insignificant. Now all of a sudden that energy that you had attenuated to providing needs to go into something else. Ok so say you play golf, ski a few days a year, hunt a couple weekends with the kids at the family lease or land. Scaling that to something that you can invest in twenty plus hours per week is not insignificant. It's a valid concern.
And 35 hours a month, at that. Respect.tommyjohn said:Sounds like you already have a hobby/recreational pursuitQuote:
I can't comprehend having 35 hours a month even to spend on a hobby or recreational pursuit. I have kids 4, 3, 1, and wife is seven months pregnant.
You going to Israel or Ukraine?Malachi Constant said:
Retirement plan for me is to travel around and watch rocket launches.
Hopefully more Canaveral, Boca Chica, and Vandenburg and less Gaza and UkraineSpreadsheetAg said:You going to Israel or Ukraine?Malachi Constant said:
Retirement plan for me is to travel around and watch rocket launches.
SpaceX as seen above Fountain Hills, AZ tonight! #SpaceX pic.twitter.com/72qINrYmPR
— Cira Storms (@sonoranstorms) April 2, 2024
I'm planning early semi-retirement to the Ormond Beach/Melbourne area not too far from Canaveral.Malachi Constant said:Hopefully more Canaveral, Boca Chica, and Vandenburg and less Gaza and UkraineSpreadsheetAg said:You going to Israel or Ukraine?Malachi Constant said:
Retirement plan for me is to travel around and watch rocket launches.
LMCane said:
the downside to living there is that if we get into a global thermal nuclear war, the odds of surviving the first blasts is about 1%