Route246
Full time employment: Posting here.
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2023
- Messages
- 685
This is a long boring ramble. Apologies in advance.
Retiring in Sept/Oct 2025 is planned. I confess to be an engineer's engineer. Those of you who are know exactly what this means. Always thinking in terms of optimization, always trying to figure out requirements, always curious if new technologies might be better and more importantly always willing to spend prodigious amounts of time to make sure solutions are elegant, practical and durable.
That said, for those of you who retired do you find yourself keeping up with trends, do you maintain your curiosity for new ideas, are you stimulated to the point of studying new things in order to stay out of your comfort zone?
The reason I ask is brain health issues run in my family. We are relatively fit and don't have history of cancer, heart disease or other physical ailments. I watched many family members deteriorate mentally and I wish to delay that as much as possible in my case through mental exercise, calisthenics and stimulation. I see many friends and ex-colleagues retire to Netflix and the couch. I ask about something simple like, "Have you checked out ChatGPT?" and the answer is frequently no, this being from people I know for a fact if they were still active and working would probably be all over it. Their response is usually I'm really spending my time binge-watching (whatever the heck that means) this or that on Netflix. It's great, you should check it out. Uhhh, I don't know what to say at that point.
I know there are older people who do remain engaged in trends and technology, who do remain curious and stimulated. A dear friend's father was a Cold Warrior rocket scientist and maintained this curiosity and engagement well into his late 80s and was always open to stimulating conversation up until near the end of his life. I had wonderful conversations with him, picking his brain about very esoteric things with him always cautioning me that there are some things that he could not disclose due to NDA, a true Cold Warrior and hero in my opinion, but I learned quite a bit from him and I know he was also enjoying our conversations because most of his friends were gone or lost interest and he always told me he appreciated our talks.
I wonder if my thoughts and sentiments are paranoia, autism spectrum-related or some other quirk. I also believe that the only fountain of youth available to me is my thought and thinking as the body gets older, stiffer and weaker, my brain is the only thing I can hope to retain.
Looking forward to retiring later this year. Huge project in flight now (home renovation) including new ham radio beam antenna. Just trying to put off for as long as possible a sedentary lifestyle, staying physically active and mentally stimulated.
Retiring in Sept/Oct 2025 is planned. I confess to be an engineer's engineer. Those of you who are know exactly what this means. Always thinking in terms of optimization, always trying to figure out requirements, always curious if new technologies might be better and more importantly always willing to spend prodigious amounts of time to make sure solutions are elegant, practical and durable.
That said, for those of you who retired do you find yourself keeping up with trends, do you maintain your curiosity for new ideas, are you stimulated to the point of studying new things in order to stay out of your comfort zone?
The reason I ask is brain health issues run in my family. We are relatively fit and don't have history of cancer, heart disease or other physical ailments. I watched many family members deteriorate mentally and I wish to delay that as much as possible in my case through mental exercise, calisthenics and stimulation. I see many friends and ex-colleagues retire to Netflix and the couch. I ask about something simple like, "Have you checked out ChatGPT?" and the answer is frequently no, this being from people I know for a fact if they were still active and working would probably be all over it. Their response is usually I'm really spending my time binge-watching (whatever the heck that means) this or that on Netflix. It's great, you should check it out. Uhhh, I don't know what to say at that point.
I know there are older people who do remain engaged in trends and technology, who do remain curious and stimulated. A dear friend's father was a Cold Warrior rocket scientist and maintained this curiosity and engagement well into his late 80s and was always open to stimulating conversation up until near the end of his life. I had wonderful conversations with him, picking his brain about very esoteric things with him always cautioning me that there are some things that he could not disclose due to NDA, a true Cold Warrior and hero in my opinion, but I learned quite a bit from him and I know he was also enjoying our conversations because most of his friends were gone or lost interest and he always told me he appreciated our talks.
I wonder if my thoughts and sentiments are paranoia, autism spectrum-related or some other quirk. I also believe that the only fountain of youth available to me is my thought and thinking as the body gets older, stiffer and weaker, my brain is the only thing I can hope to retain.
Looking forward to retiring later this year. Huge project in flight now (home renovation) including new ham radio beam antenna. Just trying to put off for as long as possible a sedentary lifestyle, staying physically active and mentally stimulated.