beads wrote: » Financially yes. Would I want to retire? Maybe not full time. I actually enjoy what I do for a living and there is only so much gardening and farming to accomplish in 2.5 seasons. - b/eads
TheFORCE wrote: » So, are you ready for your retirement?
TheFORCE wrote: » Oh man i was hoping to get better reaponses. I'm surprised people dont think about their retirement.
TheFORCE wrote: » Why not invest your time teaching and playing and spend more time with your family and grand kids or change your lifestyle and try to live longer. Why waste your remaining hours in an office lol. .
Rakurai wrote: » Retirement...... what is that. I will probably work until I'm near 60 (another 30 years). Have another house to get in that time, hopefully paid off. The sucky part to saving is for two kids college and weddings. Putting the minimum into my 401k for company match, the only good thing I have going for me is VA disability. I'm sure before I retire I will plan another couple of trips to the desert, can't pass up that ~2.5-3x the pay, compared to the states, that should help any retirement/house payments. When I retire I will probably have a hard time finding things to do, also not sure if I can put up with the wife...
TheFORCE wrote: » Wow too many workaholic people in here. Really people? You want to go to work when you are 70+ or until you kick it anf listen to your manager and co-workers complain about everything and anything? Lol. Why not invest your time teaching and playing and spend more time with your family and grand kids or change your lifestyle and try to live longer. Why waste your remaining hours in an office lol. Theres so many things to do and see in this world. Very disappointed that people are conditioned to accept working until their final hours.
jamesleecoleman wrote: » What do you usually grow?
NetworkNewb wrote: » Bitcoin
NavyMooseCCNA wrote: » My retirement will start about five minutes after I die at my desk. I have no illusion to being able to build any kind of retirement at my age at my current income. I was a financial adviser for over a year and I have a good idea of what is needed
NuclearBeavis wrote: » Sounds about right. I have a high quality backpack and sleeping bag so hopefully I won't freeze to death if I become homeless. Does that count as a retirement plan?
hurricane1091 wrote: » i doubt most people get to retire going forward in the general population. Young kids take out massive amounts of loans and it's forever before they even get a real start. Wages are poor in many sectors as it is and jobs will continue to be phased out across the board. If SS runs dry, things will be pretty ugly. Even if you put $10k a year into a 401k for 35 years, that alone won't be enough to survive off of without SS. You figure the life expectancy will be so high by that time (I figure general health will go down as the population continues to eat poorly though but modern medicine will keep folks going long past their shelf life). I don't care about what the theoretical Forbes articles say, everyone here with a 401k knows 8% returns year in and year out does not happen. Just a couple of years ago many folks were actually losing money on their 401k, but fortunately the economy has been on the upswing it would seem.
cbdudek wrote: » I don't know about this. If you put in 10k a year for 35 years with the annual rate of return of 7%, you are going to earn 1.4 million. If you factor in a 50% employer match up to 6% of salary, then you are going to make 1.8 million. Thats taking into account you start at 30 and end at 65. Now, if you factor in salary increases and you adjust your savings rate in accordance, you are going to be saving more to the tune of 1.8 million without employer match. Not factoring in social security, thats a pretty good chunk of change.