Originally posted by teamsaint
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Retirement
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Originally posted by alycidon View PostCongrats, EA. For some unaccountable and entirely illogical reason, I have always assumed that you are much younger than your retirement suggestsMoney can't buy you happiness............but it does bring you a more pleasant form of misery - Spike Milligan
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Congratulations and a happy retirement, Caliban. I always wanted to go at 60 but it wasn't to be, alas. Looked at going down to a four day week but that's not financially viable either as I seem to have spent all my money on CDs! Three more years and I'll be joining the ranks of retirees."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Happy Star Wars Day!
... and May the Fourth be with you.
(Apologies - today is the first time in a third of a Century that I haven't said that to a group of kids who felt obliged to laugh in the hope that I'd let them off homework if they did.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post... and May the Fourth be with you.
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(& thanks Hornspieler, alycidon & Pet )"...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 teamsaint View PostIf retirement really is busier than working life, then I'm glad I don't have any immediate retirement plans.
(I completed my 6th 1000-piece of jigsaw of 2016 yesterday. I go running with my son twice a week - and usually win. Then there's the canoe I built. And editing an annual "magazine". Rescuing and archiving old photographs - though that's really a part-time job, as I have the temerity to charge for it.)
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostNow I don't feel as though I make a difference.
... is 'making a difference' what matters?
I am far from sure what (if any) difference I have ever made, either in work or subsequently. The joys of life for me have mainly resided in interaction with a few friends and loved ones, appreciation of certain works of culture, and the physical delights of existence. And of course 'botanising the asphalt'.
I hope your post-retirement perspectives will give you a variety of joys and satisfactions - even if it may seem harder to work out what 'difference' you are wanting or are expected to make.
As our American cousins - so dear to you in their linguistic felicities - might say - "Enjoy!"
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As I said on a different thread, I'm unretiring.
Despite having lots of time to pursue other interests, it has all seemed so empty for last 17 months. My previous life of music teaching and (occasional) orchestration have gone out of the window, and I am embarking on a completely new career of freelance photographic archive work.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostAs I said on a different thread, I'm unretiring.
Despite having lots of time to pursue other interests, it has all seemed so empty for last 17 months. My previous life of music teaching and (occasional) orchestration have gone out of the window, and I am embarking on a completely new career of freelance photographic archive work.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostAs I said on a different thread, I'm unretiring.
Despite having lots of time to pursue other interests, it has all seemed so empty for last 17 months. My previous life of music teaching and (occasional) orchestration have gone out of the window, and I am embarking on a completely new career of freelance photographic archive work.
However if the emptiness comes from somewhere deep it may not always be the case that diversion is the ultimate solution. At least not if you read Kierkegaard.
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[ I tried immersing myself in Kierkegaard. In the end I found I was too much of a light-weight - and that diversion was probably the best answer for me ... ]
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... all best wishes for the new venture.
However if the emptiness comes from somewhere deep it may not always be the case that diversion is the ultimate solution. At least not if you read Kierkegaard.
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[ I tried immersing myself in Kierkegaard. In the end I found I was too much of a light-weight - and that diversion was probably the best answer for me ... ]
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