Views : 2,727,894
Genre: Nonprofits & Activism
Date of upload: May 26, 2022 ^^
Rating : 4.924 (885/45,474 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-01T22:57:53.191271Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
I retired from a busy and stressful corporate life at age 65. I migrated straight to Phase 4 - clearing invasive weeds and regenerating degraded / infested rainforest opposite our home. Found complete enjoyment and immense satisfaction. Two years later I have cleared around 7 acres of invasive species and witnessing the return of natural rainforest flora and fauna which had previously been choked out. I have enlisted other retirees as co-volunteers. Never been happier and fitter. Canāt wait to wake up for the next days efforts including photographing and cataloguing species I am findingā¦
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Retirees facing financial challenges often couldn't save enough during their working years. Retirement decisions play a pivotal role. Despite my parents having similar years in civil service, my mom invested with a wealth manager, while my dad relied on his 401(k). As a result, my mom retired with approximately 3.7 million, whereas my dad retired with around 1.4 million
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Retired now for almost 23 years. My advice is take care of your health and finances. Travel wasn't on my list of things I wanted to do, I did plenty of that during my working years. Get and stay healthy ! Stay mobile as long as you can, normal weight, good diet, reasonable exercise (physical and mental exercise). Help others when you can but don't become an enabler. Mobility becomes very important as we get older, eyes, ears, balance, dexterity and the strength to do what we want. Many of the people I know (probably most) have prediabetes or diabetes type 2 a lifestyle disease that can and should be controlled by diet. Relatives, relationships, beware of toxic personality people. Help them if you can but be ready to detach if you can't. Each of us are individuals but these things will apply to all us.
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I really liked this video because it confirmed for me what the majority of people think about retirement: that you will quickly get bored because of lack of a routine, and will struggle to find a way to replace the meaningful parts of your life when you were working. When I was nearing retirement, many people told me that I would be disappointed after I retired due to boredom, and I told them that I didn't think that would be true for me, but that I would let them know if they were right sometime down the line. I retired at 62 after working full-time for 40 years, and immediately felt the freedom of not having to keep to anyone's schedule but my own. My wife and I have been retired for 12 full years now, and neither of us has spent ONE SECOND being bored. We aren't wealthy but we have enough to pay our bills and have a little more fun. We love going on vacation, usually just a drive to a different city, and sometimes a flight to Hawaii or Florida. When we're not travelling, we have our own hobbies that keep us busy. My wife likes gardening, making jewelry, and cooking. I like music, golfing, and photography. We combine our hobbies sometimes, like when she helps me with my photos on vacation as she's learned to take great photos with her camera, or when I help her cook and develop my own favorite recipes. Best of all, our retired life IS our new routine. We have all our meals together and watch TV from 8 to midnight most evenings. We sleep on our new schedule, 2 am to 10 am, and are both sound sleepers. Fortunately, we are both healthy and have a fitness workout 3 times a week that helps keep us that way. In short, our Phase 1 has lasted WAY longer than the average 1 year he spoke about, and to be honest, I think we're still in Phase 1 after 12 years. Maybe it's because my hobbies are not something that you master quickly enough to get bored. Golf is something you never master, you just keep trying to hit good shots, and if you really like to play, you keep practicing in order to hit more good shots. I've played guitar for over 50 years, but I never had the time to get really good at it. But now I can practice much more and have improved a lot more in the last 12 years which is very gratifying. It inspired me to try to learn to play piano at age 71, which was a real challenge. After 2 years of instruction, I am nowhere near any good, but I do get better the more I play. So much more so, that I play piano every day now but only play guitar once a week. I guess my main point here is that not everyone is going to experience these 4 phases, so if you are nearing or new to retirement don't think that it's automatic. Do use these concepts to guide your retirement planning but make your golden years your own in your own way. If you need to make life more meaningful, follow some of his ideas. If you're happy to be free of the 9-to-5 grind and don't feel depressed or adrift, just continue to enjoy it.
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Just what I needed to watch.
My wife and I are directors of our farm business and own property, plus small pensions. I am nearly 55, my wife is 52.
We have started to save to retire from the farm, and possibly live on rental income, I'd really appreciate you go LIVE and talk about how to earn passive income online and retire comfortably, letās say $1M.
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I'm 54 and my wife and I are VERY worried about our future, gas and food prices rising daily. We have had our savings dwindle with the cost of living into the stratosphere, and we are finding it impossible to replace them. We can get by, but can't seem to get ahead. My condolences to anyone retiring in this crisis, 30 years nonstop just for a crooked system to take all you worked for.
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I worked in a very toxic work culture but was too terrified to look for another job---the pay and benefits were terrific, and both my boss and my (now ex-) husband kept telling me, "Who'd hire you?" Finally, at age 67, I was downsized out. After awhile I moved into a seniors facility that is like being on a permanent cruise. I've been retired now for almost 9 years and for the first time in my life I'm actually happy. I feel like I'm "resting" from all the bad stuff in my life, and there was a lot of that. I no longer care about "finding meaning" in my life. The thought of working fills me with horror. And frankly, I STILL can't wait to get up in the morning. I do what I please, when I please and with whom I please. There is no one to get approval from any longer.
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My wife and I did very well in the amount of money that we amassed for retirement. Well over 80% of that money was made because of taking advantage of buying high-end stocks at a deep discount during the Great Recession. 2009 I fired the stockbroker got rid of all mutual funds and bought individual dividend stocks. Be patient don't get scared and do your homework and you can make a killing
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@84gaynor
5 days ago
My $400k retirement account has gone up only by 2% in the past year due to rebalancing I did out of fear uncertainty and doubt. What are best alternatives to take in other to secure a financially free retirement and achieve ultimate peace? I donāt want to fail after 22 years of working hard.
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