Quote:
Originally Posted by BigRedChief
(Post 17611130)
I was a contractor in I.T. so I didn't have an office to retire from. Because of the short term memory loss issues I had to retire a year or two before planned.
I'd like Arrowhead Kingdom to survive past me. I think we are already there but I had already started to turn it over a couple of years ago to others before my health issues.
I created a leadership crew to run things. Been going well. I'm still involved but letting others take the lead. I'm not involved in the road tailgates and events this year. We has planned big push this off season to expand our international chapters beyond the 6 countries we are already in. But, now even though I have the extra time these days, I just don't have the passion that would take to pull off.
So far, I'm finding that I like having no daily responsibilities beyond feeding myself. :D
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Right on, brother. I'm beyond blessed because outside of the ailments a former Navy diver has in his late 50s, I'm good to go. A few back issues, but I don't think many active people get into their late 50s without some kinds of aches, pains, and some arthritis poking its way into reality, and it's nothing that working smarter than harder doesn't get around. I too was I.T. for most of my life, worked from home, was blessed beyond belief to have leaders under me who made my life pretty darn easy and allowed me to take time off and not worry for even a minute about what I'd be returning to. Sure networking has it's tough days, wide area networking comes with added stress of whining users, but at the end of the day you adapt to they bullshit, ignore the noise, and focus on the mission.
That said, like you, it's awesome to have near zero corporate responsibility. Technically I still work because I teach scuba, but it's a passion, it's easy, it provides LOTS of travel with offset costs, and I can do as much or as little as I want. I knew that this passion of mine wasn't something most people can do at a high level into their 70s, so when the younger son graduated from school I knew it was time to get out of the corporate bullshit and start living the wonderful life that ~50 straight years of working, starting as a paperboy, have provided. Sometimes I wish I had retired in my early 50 mid 50s, but I didn't want to retire until we knew what the younger son was going to pursue as a career. As soon as that was done I never looked back.
Egypt with the younger son is going to be epic... I don't think I've been so excited to go on a trip as I am for this one. And in a proud dad moment, I'm more than sure I'm going to pause for a moment when we splash for the first time on 9/1/2024 that while his early diving career is different than mine was, at that moment, I'm be diving with my son who will be more qualified in some areas of the industry than me. Yeah, I'm smiling ear-to-ear. And I'm going to certify him in both wreck and advanced wreck diving in the north Red Sea - something I told him he'd have to wait for. It's time, now he just has to show me that he's ready to complete the certification.
I'm not sure what the last part has to do with retiring, but for me it does, it's one of the milestones I had set for myself, if he was ready (and wanted to endure dad being a bit of a prick for the advanced cert), so I'll allow it!