^Hey, where did my response post go? Oh well, it must have been deemed nonsense by the internet gods. Bottom line, retirement sucks.
I disagree. Retirement is great if you have the money and will to enjoy it.^Hey, where did my response post go? Oh well, it must have been deemed nonsense by the internet gods. Bottom line, retirement sucks.
I disagree. Retirement is great if you have the money and will to enjoy it.
You see, how people treat money/wealth can lead to quite different outcome/mentality.
If you treat money as a goal, when you have much like 20 million or 50 millions, while you feel you have financial security and the boredom gets to you; while you feel abundant compared to the common crowd, but on the other hand, your ego is hurting you when you realize there are people whose fortune is swing up and down 100 million to 500 millions daily without lifting their finger. However, if you treat money as a tool/vehicle. then when you accumulate certain wealth, you feel that you can deploy it to things that you wish/hope to do , just to create something that give your sense of real accomplishment in life, lots of money does not really mean anything, as a beggar can hit a 500 million lottery and richer than you overnight, a moron can inherit more wealth than you can ever achieve by trading, and those gigantic entrepreneurs make a huge fortune by creating business that benefit millions of people, Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Mark Z, Jeff Bezo, Elon Musk, just to name a few. To them, money is only the by-product but not the goal, therefore they draw their satisfaction and happiness outside of money; Mark Z will donate 99% his money away, that show people something that money does not mean a thing for him, so gain or loss of money won't cause any euphoria and anguish in his life at all.
Yes, I'll agree to the point that there are multiple factors to consider. I lived a, shall we say, interesting life through my twenties and early thirties, so anything now is much more tame. That, and the wife is still working with no intention of calling it quits anytime soon, so what's a guy to do? After 21 months of having all the time and enough money to get myself in trouble I decided to nip that shit in the bud and go back to work a couple days a week for the outfit I retired from. It pays well, and is interesting work. Project management for mechanical maintenance in heavy industry. More than anything this whole aging gracefully is what sucks. Just ain't ready to cruise over into the slow lane.I disagree. Retirement is great if you have the money and will to enjoy it.
Success brings it's days of melancholy. I can make a half million bucks a month now trading futures. I've got it down pat. Not selling anything or answering PMs on that from guys with various misspellings of Sean and Brandon etc. but just for context. (Just treat trading like you want to be a soloist at the Met young lads, work, no tricks)
I do a respectable amount of charity and community work. I have a daughter, a young adult now who is completing her PhD.
But I'm not adjusting to having no problems and no worries very well. The ultimate first world dilemma. I am finding things that don't actually matter to be concerned about, I can feel my brain digging and sifting for gold in a largely empty stream.
I used to get seasonally affected depression but since moving to near the equator that is gone for years. To be honest the boom and bust was not so much of a problem as I understood the dark times would pass and I'd be fine for nine months. I'm fit enough, I get edgy when too exercised, that gym burn addiction tires me out.
I've hardly had a conversation in years where I did not largely know how it would end. It is difficult to find really much more intelligent than me friends who are not nearly always busy.
Unlike many, I don't really have that sense of spirituality, I'd like to, I had some, but my brain seems very good at saying to me that pattern in randomness is not real, ignore it. I can't even pretend to myself I sense a higher force. Trading did that for sure.
Does anyone later 40s+ perhaps have any advice on is this a phase, just how it is or any ideas on what can shift this? First world problem as they say but worth a shot asking.![]()
I have a friend who is OCD. He is an engineer, scientist, and former successful business owner. He is semi-retired and even though he has a wide range of interests and has the time to do them, he is still semi-bored.
He has thoughts of getting involved with the local University in some way. He says he likes the enthusiasm and creative energy that some students have and he would like to participate in a meaningful research project that he can lend his expertise to.
I remember CNBC having a show titled “Second Acts”. They talked about successful people leaving their careers to start another one. There may be some content there worth looking into.
Whatever you choose, I sure you and the people around you will be better for it.
Steve Jobs had that one right, psychedelics do a power of good.