……GF?????
If she was a dinosaur, I thought she would be a Lickedalottapus?
Is her wife still around?
How does she explain the gifts to their kids?
…….and judging from the reaction on the T-Rex’s face and where your thumb is, it looks more like a proctologist‘s prop than a toy.
$0 debt in my household![]()
No credit card debt (just paying the full bill each month). One car payment. One mortgage payment. And soon 4 years of college but only $7K a semester.
I originally wanted to retire at 59 as a goal. Seems pretty unlikely at this point, but not impossible.
I've heard about that too, and suspected it of some people who retired from where I work and died within a few years. But I know others who have avoided it. One guy retired from here about 15 years ago and has done so much (my bass player ended up marrying his youngest daughter). Pottery oven in his home (made the dishes his daughter and my bassist use), motorcycle rides across several states, several other projects. I'd like that to be me. Tennis, volunteering, travel (I've barely been outside the US), ready at a moment's notice when my son starts a family to help with anything and everything. Give me that life!People say that without formal, regimented motivation - meaning a job requiring a set start time, as opposed to a casual plan to do gardening - an older person will become sedentary, and mentally unengaged; leading to early death.
Yeah, that's the thing to do if you can swing it. I know a few former coworkers who did that. The problem is, I can't just walk into my manager's office and say, "hey, let me retire and then immediately hire me as a consultant". There's also some period of time where you'd be in the process of transitioning to a retiree status, before you'd be eligible to be hired back. But if they'd let me do that, I'm eligible for the max pension benefits already. Mrs. Scotch is always telling me to do that. Problem is, we're hiring, and rather than pay me a consulting salary, they can pay 2 people to each work full time. I would only be able to work part-time if I was receiving my pension. And then there's the cost of medical benefits for being under 65 (ineligible for Medicare).My dad retired shortly after he turned 55. He will be 90 this March. For the first 7 or 8 years after retirement he was hired back as a consultant. So he made consultant's wages + got his full pension as well.
I can work for another company, and receive my full pension from my current employer. The thing with general consulting is that you need to have unique expertise in some area of broad need. For example, if you are an expert with a particular type of coding language, or firmware programming, or microprocessor design, you may be in general demand. Where I work, my expertise is in areas that are particular to this company, plus a small number (like 3) of other local companies.Can you consult for another company (or even companies) in the same capacity?
At the time, my dad's company was doing a "right sizing" exercise. He was not on "the list" but asked if he could be. So he got the package, and his retirement package and then they approached him to work on the side. In Canada, his basic medical is covered by the government. I think he was covered by extended benefits until he reached 65 (part of the layoff package). No benefits to the consulting jobs. Also no stress. He was no longer the manager just a consulting engineer.Yeah, that's the thing to do if you can swing it. I know a few former coworkers who did that. The problem is, I can't just walk into my manager's office and say, "hey, let me retire and then immediately hire me as a consultant". There's also some period of time where you'd be in the process of transitioning to a retiree status, before you'd be eligible to be hired back. But if they'd let me do that, I'm eligible for the max pension benefits already. Mrs. Scotch is always telling me to do that. Problem is, we're hiring, and rather than pay me a consulting salary, they can pay 2 people to each work full time. I would only be able to work part-time if I was receiving my pension. And then there's the cost of medical benefits for being under 65 (ineligible for Medicare).
An update to this. We closed on the HELOC (home equity line of credit) in late August. We've paid off $35k in high interest credit card debt, and my credit score has gone up by around 80 points. It's over 800 on one of the credit reporting bureaus.I can get a home equity line that will allow me to get rid of my high interest credit cards - which I've been paying for anyway. The payments would be half of what I'm paying now, and I'll actually pay them off in 5 years (not just kick the ball down the road).
So I'm really excited about telling the high interest rate CC companies to go fuck themselves, while also being able to do things for the house we need, like the generator.
