gsganzer
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jun 11, 2003
- Messages
- 4,022
- Location
- Denton, TX
- Tractor
- L3800 w/FEL and BH77, BX 2200 w/FEL and MMM
I'm 59 and have worked since I was 16. Even before that, my mom had me doing chores for elders at our church. Both my wife and I have always been responsible financially, living well within our financial means. This allowed us to take many trips abroad, including hunting safari's, European trips etc. We paid our mortgage off years ago and our youngest child is in her sophomore year of college with her schooling fully funded.
I've spent most of my adult life traveling for work but have always had great career stability in the oil/gas, power generation industries. I started working for myself as a consultant back in 2016, a move I wish I did much earlier in life, making more money, with better flexibility than any other time in my life. The last few years, when not traveling for work, I focused on completing all the projects we wanted done at our house in an effort to make it more maintenance free and enjoyable. Some of these projects I did myself, others I realized I had the means to pay someone else to do them.
When my mom passed about a 2 years ago, I realized that all my immediate family was gone. My brother died when he was only 45, my dad died unexpectedly at 80, but my mom lived a full life to 87. The old saying, "life is short" really started to hit home and I started reflecting on what my own legacy would be with my kids.
This last year, I started taking a better look at our situation and realized we surpassed that "magic number" we always set as our retirement goal, so we hired a financial planner to see if retirement is possible and navigate us through it. I joke that he's our "money mechanic", but he's been much more than that. He's relieved us of the stress of navigating the complicated world of taxes, distributions, estate planning etc. He's also been our reality check that we can make early retirement work and has plotted the path for us in easily understandable terms.
Now, we're selling our home of almost 30 years and closing on the home we hope will take us to the end. Ironically, our "downsizing" has us moving to a bigger house, with a bigger workshop and over 3x the acreage. But the new home is 4 years old, not 50 and the layout is better for aging needs. The acreage is larger, but the upkeep is simpler. And the new place is still close to good medical care and amenities but is in a more rural setting. It's also a home that our kids will either want to keep when we pass, or it will be simpler for them to sell.
Our goal is for me to keep working for the next year, to help pay for a few tweaks to the new place and then retire for good. My customers have asked me to continue working for them from home, assisting with sales, engineering and other tasks I'm suited for, so "retirement" might continue to have a fluid definition for a bit.
I've come to the realization that I can always continue making more money, but I can't make more time. I need to ramp up enjoying the time that's left, with all those in my life.
I've spent most of my adult life traveling for work but have always had great career stability in the oil/gas, power generation industries. I started working for myself as a consultant back in 2016, a move I wish I did much earlier in life, making more money, with better flexibility than any other time in my life. The last few years, when not traveling for work, I focused on completing all the projects we wanted done at our house in an effort to make it more maintenance free and enjoyable. Some of these projects I did myself, others I realized I had the means to pay someone else to do them.
When my mom passed about a 2 years ago, I realized that all my immediate family was gone. My brother died when he was only 45, my dad died unexpectedly at 80, but my mom lived a full life to 87. The old saying, "life is short" really started to hit home and I started reflecting on what my own legacy would be with my kids.
This last year, I started taking a better look at our situation and realized we surpassed that "magic number" we always set as our retirement goal, so we hired a financial planner to see if retirement is possible and navigate us through it. I joke that he's our "money mechanic", but he's been much more than that. He's relieved us of the stress of navigating the complicated world of taxes, distributions, estate planning etc. He's also been our reality check that we can make early retirement work and has plotted the path for us in easily understandable terms.
Now, we're selling our home of almost 30 years and closing on the home we hope will take us to the end. Ironically, our "downsizing" has us moving to a bigger house, with a bigger workshop and over 3x the acreage. But the new home is 4 years old, not 50 and the layout is better for aging needs. The acreage is larger, but the upkeep is simpler. And the new place is still close to good medical care and amenities but is in a more rural setting. It's also a home that our kids will either want to keep when we pass, or it will be simpler for them to sell.
Our goal is for me to keep working for the next year, to help pay for a few tweaks to the new place and then retire for good. My customers have asked me to continue working for them from home, assisting with sales, engineering and other tasks I'm suited for, so "retirement" might continue to have a fluid definition for a bit.
I've come to the realization that I can always continue making more money, but I can't make more time. I need to ramp up enjoying the time that's left, with all those in my life.