Originally posted by teamsaint
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Retirement
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My official retirement date of December 31 2019 was the very day that the first covid case was announced in China and the pandemic largely threw everything up in the air regarding my retirement wishes and expectations. I adored the first lockdown but it got a bit tedious after that. Plans to take day trips, post pandemic, have been scuppered by rail strikes, the odd health issue and poor weather and I've never really got into the routine I wanted.
One thing though: I'm still loving it and it beats hell out of work!"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostPlans to take day trips, post pandemic, have been scuppered by rail strikes, the odd health issue and poor weather and I've never really got into the routine I wanted.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
I can sympathise, nay empathise. I had just got back into the 'routine' - or perhaps habit - of shouldering my rucksack and making for Europe with my train ticket. Then with each subsequent year there seemed to be something. I did get to Falmouth, though.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostMy official retirement date of December 31 2019 was the very day that the first covid case was announced in China and the pandemic largely threw everything up in the air regarding my retirement wishes and expectations. I adored the first lockdown but it got a bit tedious after that. Plans to take day trips, post pandemic, have been scuppered by rail strikes, the odd health issue and poor weather and I've never really got into the routine I wanted.
One thing though: I'm still loving it and it beats hell out of work!
My work was only ever part-time(casual staff) and seasonal, so my official retirement at the end of October won't be a big change, not least as I'll still be doing voluntary work there. I already get my(nearly full) State Pension, but now need to decide what to do about the tiny sum from my current employer and the even tinier sum from a previous job - in total something like £800 pa!
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
Your disrupted plans for daytrips rather mirrors my experience, and it has been tiresome and often rather depressing - trying to get the various factors to align sufficiently has proved nigh on impossible. The worst part is not being able to see my grandchildren, as visiting them adds an extra variable into the mix due to the need to stay over rather than being able to do a daytrip. However I'm determined to try and get some use out of my 3 year railcard before too long and take some short trips out to the coast before the weather and daylength stick their spanners in the mix, although to be fair with the chronic fatigue issues that now plague me the short days aren't so much of an issue - I run out of energy long before the ending of the light!
My work was only ever part-time(casual staff) and seasonal, so my official retirement at the end of October won't be a big change, not least as I'll still be doing voluntary work there. I already get my(nearly full) State Pension, but now need to decide what to do about the tiny sum from my current employer and the even tinier sum from a previous job - in total something like £800 pa!
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post
I thought it rather shoddy that no extension or refund on rail passes was offered during/after the pandemic: I imagine that the rail companies got better financial support/compensation than my local cinema did, but the cinema extended my membership card more than once during the period without being asked.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostOne thing though: I'm still loving it and it beats hell out of work!
I can honestly say that I haven’t missed work for one single second - you too?"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
Ditto, 7 years & 4 months on!
I can honestly say that I haven’t missed work for one single second - you too?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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It’s all over the place. I know many that feared retirement and wound up really enjoying it, and others that had their fears confirmed. I also have seen a great many think that they were done and suddenly realize they were living beyond their means and have to renter the workforce. Some of the latter are bitter, but more of them seem to realize that they had missed the socialization and structure that work gave them. Some of the same issues prevail in the discussion re Remote vs On Site working in the wake of the pandemic.
In my case I had planned to engage in Adult Education in Retirement, possibly getting a History or Literature Degree. However the programs that had sought Adult Learners all vanished in the wake of the pandemic, some of them being available in rump form on Zoom only, and I detest Zoom. Then, there is the Protestant Work Ethic that my wife and I seem to be afflicted with (despite her being Irish Catholic and myself Jewish), namely that despite both of us spending over 4 decades in Patient Care, we somehow haven’t earned the right to not be gainfully employed
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostIt’s all over the place. I know many that feared retirement and wound up really enjoying it, and others that had their fears confirmed. I also have seen a great many think that they were done and suddenly realize they were living beyond their means and have to renter the workforce. Some of the latter are bitter, but more of them seem to realize that they had missed the socialization and structure that work gave them. Some of the same issues prevail in the discussion re Remote vs On Site working in the wake of the pandemic.
In my case I had planned to engage in Adult Education in Retirement, possibly getting a History or Literature Degree. However the programs that had sought Adult Learners all vanished in the wake of the pandemic, some of them being available in rump form on Zoom only, and I detest Zoom. Then, there is the Protestant Work Ethic that my wife and I seem to be afflicted with (despite her being Irish Catholic and myself Jewish), namely that despite both of us spending over 4 decades in Patient Care, we somehow haven’t earned the right to not be gainfully employed
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
Ditto, 7 years & 4 months on!
I can honestly say that I haven’t missed work for one single second - you too?
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