Hi, 54 yo, Federal Employee in NW Washington, Wary of Retiring at 55

Which top? The car's or hers? Or in the best of worlds, both.>:D

I'm more likely to encounter another dead man at the wheel than a bare-breasted woman in a convertible. Demographics and social change gets us all in the end.

Ha
 
TopDown... One sentence told me you will have no problem with retirement:
"I'm a lazy procrastinator and have been successful at work because I had to. In retirement I don't have to be successful at anything. Maybe that is what really scares me. But that pine box scares me more."

I retired at 54 and if I had to admit it, my reason was because I was really tired of the usual rat-race routine. Don't get me wrong, I was a Registered Civil Engineer, so I had a great job and good income. But I was ready for a change. I was single and tired of playing by American society rules. I got really tired of the single's club, the gym and match.com. I am fundamentally lazy and love the company of pretty young women. I couldn't find that in the good ole' USA.

You can read my solution at:
http://www.early-retirement.org/forums/f29/whatll-your-retirement-look-like-42601.html

Somehow you will find a great way to fill your time when you retire. And forget about the pine box. If you are that poor that you can only afford a pine box, then you will suffer a lot more while you are alive than when they pack you 6 feet under.
 
Amethyst - I got up to a hundred on a highway out in the middle of nowhere - does that count?

Heh heh...husband pulled that stunt in the MR2, someplace between Binghamton and Watkins Glen, many years ago. He's still glad he dared to do this for once in his life and I'm still glad there were no radar-equipped cops around. The car, for its part, was probably the happiest it's ever been.
 
Walt34 - I think I was born with the worried frown lines. Maybe I should take a 'before' pic ...

Bestwifeever - Well, it won't be this one (driving top down with the 'top' down)

FurBall - I live in the State of Washington. I did visit DC for a week back in 78 I think it was. I was married at the time and the husband was there for work. I spent my days touring all by myself and felt very brave. It was my first plane trip too. A week wasn't long enough. So, you never know, I'll PM you if I make it that way again.

Hobo - I'd ask about handsome young men but I'm not looking to mother anyone :blush:

Amethyst - I like the curvy roads better than the long straight stretches. And I like night with the top down - it's kind of eerie.

Thank you all for your words of wisdom and welcome.

There is this huge part of me that is counting the days (approximately 314 or 224 workdays) until I go, and just the little annoying voice whispering 'but, what if, oh no'. I find that I enjoy and agree with all the advice to 'do it' and mentally argue with anything else. :LOL:
 
My top doesn't go down...it stays right up there where it belongs :cool:
 
TopDown, I discovered after I retired I would have bad dreams about situations at work that were bad and getting worse - no matter how hard I tried to fix them. It was kind of like a soldiers version of post traumatic stress syndrome - flashbacks to the bad times of the past.

The American workplace trains you to stress and go through mental gymnastics. Worrying about things is part of your job. And you take this same habit home with you and apply it to your personal life as well. I think that is what you are going through right now.

After I retired and even now I find myself thinking - "God, I feel good, I am happy and life is wonderful." That is really true... I consciously think about how much I am enjoying life. I never felt this way when I was working. Then, if I didn't have a crisis to deal with, I would worry about something else.

You make me laugh because all your posts seem to end with "just the little annoying voice whispering 'but, what if, oh no'." TopDown, you are a trained all-American worker, born, bred and trained to worry. People like you have made America a super-power, but it takes a hellava toll on your pysche.
 
Topdown, if things go as planned I will be retiring at 54 to Spokane (I grew up in SW Wash). Some of the same problems you and others have mentioned get me worried as well. I will get the immediate pension (if they offer VERA) but it will take a pretty decent hit before I get to 62....and being a school teacher it won't be much of a pension anyway (figure about $17k a year which I hope will cover our basics). House is paid for though although it will take a bunch of fixing to make my wife happy. But 1 car for the two of us.....keeping things pretty simple.....hoping the pension/SS Supplement/SS/$500k in the bank will give us the $45k a year to live on that we are planning. Dragging my UK wife out of England at that time, so it is a LOT more scary for her. I have seen too many people work until they have "enough" money to do everything they want and then drop dead within a couple years of retirement. I would rather be retired and living fairly cheaply now.
 
I have seen too many people work until they have "enough" money to do everything they want and then drop dead within a couple years of retirement.

Surprising how often that happens. And that is the penalty side of 'just one more year'. That is one reason I took a fairly early (57)M retirement and set out to do things in life that I have put off. Money is nice, time is even more precious.
 
I'm fifty and plan to go in September of this year. However it is a difficult decision because the 'what ifs' keep attacking me. I'm having the same sort of feelings. What if the economy tanks and they somehow diminish my pension. What if I can't get health insurance? What if I'm making a big mistake? Maybe I should stay till next year. I think the responders hit it on the head. Most of us haven't made any major life decision in many years and this is a huge one. That's why I'm here.,to find out how cold the water is and the consensus seems to be that the water is just fine and we won't drown. Good luck, your're not alone.
 
I have seen too many people work until they have "enough" money to do everything they want and then drop dead within a couple years of retirement. I would rather be retired and living fairly cheaply now.
I suppose it has occurred to you that there might be several ways to interpret that information?

ha
 
TopDown, There are a number of both retired & actively working feds on this board, as you can tell. I'm 51, CSRS currently with 32 yrs, and will absolutely retire at age 55 in 3+ years. No having to think about it for me. I don't have much else to offer above what some others have already said, but feel free to bounce any thoughts you have off the folks on this board, they're a great bunch and I've learned, a wealth of knowledge about pretty much anything. PS, I currently have no idea exactly where I'll be living once I do retire, EXCEPT that it will be someplace in the south. I've lived my entire life in the southern US (NC, TX, LA) but my current job is in Wisconsin. Talk about a change! It's nice, when it's not -20 degrees, but my heart's in the south and so's the rest of my family, so that's the direction I'll be heading when it's all said & done. See you around!:)
 
SarahW -

Yakers - I'd like to travel - I've done only a little and that's a shame. I spent 20 years living in Alaska. 4 on a boat in Juneau. My daughter spent her first 3 years of teaching in the Alaska Bush. I was very fortunate to get to visit many parts of the state. Where'd you two get to?

.
We went up the Dempster Hwy to Inuvik then into Alaska through Top Of The World Hwy, Chicken, Tok, Valdez and then back through BC into Haines and took the ferry down from there.
All the gory details: Driving to the Arctic

Someday we would like to get to Nome & western Alaska.
 
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