So much for retirement(?)
Been here in my Gulch location for over a couple years. Took a part-time engineering job that has been very enjoyable and keeps burger and beer money coming in. But, I've been repeatedly looked up by those in my past wanting me to do something called "work". It's not stopping. Job offers. Work offers. It's an interesting thing. Lately, it's been pouring down. Yesterday I lunch with a former colleague who is now a manager of an international engineering company and they offered me a job doing whatever I want to do. Basically, asking me to write my dream job description. I've never had one like that. As I was sitting down mulling it over today I got a call from another former colleague asking me if I want to work on a cutting edge hospital project. This has been very strange. Had a forensics career (not just a job) repeatedly offered by a former colleague I really respect. There was a good chance I'd be making burgers, teaching science or driving a school bus after coming here. But as the old saying goes, "They keep drawing me back in!" I've still got the energy but would only work full-time with a big pile of green incentive so large it'd choke a horse. Not a complaint. As Biden would say, "Not a joke!" But it's an interesting conundrum. I remember back a few decades ago when one couldn't buy a job. Anybody go through that in the past recessions? Where I'm at now the management isn't quite old enough to have experienced the full bite of the past recessions (you know...when you have a car payment, mortgage and kids to feed). I know these busy times are not permanent. That's a factor...isn't it? Anybody else experience this kind of thing - wanting to quit in a time when there's a shortage of good people? We're living in interesting times...
I built a company from scratch in the 80’s to 5 branch locations in 3 states and sold it in 2009 after I saw what resident Zero was doing and bought a 1000 acres of undeveloped land in the middle of Tx. Spent a year building my Gulch and got enticed to running a large wind turbine facility (wind turbines suck btw). Did that for 3 years until they talked me into going into their solar division. Wound up installing systems on literally every continent on the planet the next 3 years. I got back from Capetown 2 years ago this month, and my wife asked me if she could see my passport. She took it into her office here at the house and shredded it.
( a subtle hint I figured).
But I have been clobbered with offers, including a head engineer job running Powerwall, from corps eager to hire 68 year old codgers who know their ass from a hole in the ground. I stay busy running this ranch and livestock and maintaining collectibles like my copper jacketed lead assortment, plus I install solar powered water wells for ranchers and preppers. I could make more $ going back to work in the corp world or starting another company, but as the the old saying goes
“how much money did he leave” when he passed away?”
The answer is, “all of it”.
So I’m happy with what I planned for all these years.
Gone fishing…..
Before we left on our trip, we were discussing how bored we both were. We are both very productive people and we had both enjoyed our careers, me a software engineer and she worked at a large utility.
Cutting to the chase, while on our trip last eek, my wife mentioned to a former colleague over drinks how she may want to go back to work. This colleague apparently made a few calls and my wife has had 4 interviews since we got home last weekend. She has another one tomorrow.
I had a similar experience with a former colleague as well. He has a couple of large projects and would hire me in a minute.
So this thread is indeed serendipitous. We are 66 and 64 (I’m younger) and after dealing with know-it-all young engineers that really didn’t know much at all and certainly had a tough time getting any project to the finish line, it gives me a warm feeling all over that these companies realize that they need us older guys to actually get anything done. Yes, I’m generalizing, but that has been my experience over the past 10 years or so. Funny how the pendulum swings back when the rubber meets the road.
Thanks for this thread. Good luck to everyone stepping back into this.
Mind you, this is the SAME company that flew him out here 8 years ago for an interview and "found a better candidate," who was, probably, 40 years younger. So, he was 64 then, 72 now, and NOW he's a very valuable, SENIOR level employee. They spared literally NO expense moving us here, paying for house selling and buying expenses. You name it, they did it. They did, along the way, mention in "passing" that they had discovered they needed "more capable" (aka more experienced) employees. And he tells me he's not even close to being the oldest one there.
Hiring recent kiddy kollege graduates just doesn't work all that well in the end, unless it's a company that does nothing more important than Amazon does. When it comes to national security, we actually need people who know what they are doing.
We of course know it's not permanent. Can't be - we're in our 70's, so we are making hay while the sun shines, and hoo boy does it ever shine in Arizona these days!
I had a similar choice years ago. If I'd "gone back" my bank account would be fatter, but already having one "fat enough" turned out to be good enough. I'm busy all the time, just not busy doing what I'm told by others. My job would have me flying all over the country and world living out of hotels working 12 hours a day 6 days a week and I'd already missed out on the people I loved more than the average bear. For me, I would not increase happiness going back. I made a good choice for me. You need to decide for yourself.
do not plan to
saw what it did not my parents
If so, I'd move to a country that doesn't tax world wide income immediately.
You could then get about $120,000 Foreign Earned Income Exclusion
against your taxable income living overseas, and up to about $120,000
more write-off against US taxable income for living expenses overseas.
(iirc, you must live outside the US for 330 days of 12 consecutive
months to get those reductions of income.)
So you can still avoid supporting your enemies in D.C.
After many years of long hours, I stopped working to support my enemies (D.C.) in the 90's. Thanks, Ayn.
Mentions that as the Global World Order Collapses, we (USA) will have to be self-reliant again.
I think many companies are realizing that they don't need warm bodies. They need actual brains making decisions.
I think this is the beginning of the shift over the next 10-20 yrs when America either FAILS, or becomes a willing isolationist country that succeeds...
FWIW, I've had a few of the biggest quotes I've ever put out in the last 2yrs and it's increasing. I am not even looking for new/more clients. Although I am over a decade behind you.
I would, however, HATE to have to depend on it to live on. As a "bonus," though - it's pretty nice.
I am in medical software: sold a company I co-founded to a bigger guy during Covid. Work is not so fun any more.
Wm (ex-co-owner, also in Gulch) and I intend to start another company, with complexity added by the fact we now live 3K miles apart. Also by the fact that I intend to go back to school and get a PhD in Genetics (entry level quals) and seek work in that field.
I talked to a fellow Med Tech a couple of months ago and she is unable to get a job that is not management. She wants to go and do bench work part-time, but when they see her resume, they only offer her management positions. So that is happening in another field than engineering.
I am 71. The major input I can add to this conversation is that I reasonably expect to be able to work for another 20 years. (I can still do quasi-full-contact Medieval broadsword fighting against all types of opponents, which I did not expect I would be able to do at my current age, when I thought ahead, 40 years ago.)
I really like the feeling of 'stretching the universe' with the work that I do and do not want to consign myself to the rocking chair.
Jan
I still hike, lift and do several rounds with the boxing gloves on: double-ended bag, heavy bag, etc. Good workout. I intend to keep active until the bones and joints completely fall apart...hoping that technology will allow for easy rework when it's needed.
But before I got out the door of my engineering job, I was offered a work-from-home consulting position (and this was in 2009, before it was so popular). I also taught some classes, and even did a couple of gigs at my former employer, who suddenly discovered I knew something after all.
I did that for about 6 years, made way more money than the original plan, and "fully" retired.
Remember, time is irreplaceable. If you have things you want to do in retirement, (hobbies, travel, etc) you might want to do that while you are still fit. However, far too many people get bored in retirement and would actually be happier working.
Right now my time is split between traveling, and planning the next road trip. No time for boredom!
Good luck with whatever you decide. Since you are here in the Gulch, you will obviously think it through and make a thoughtful decision. That puts you way ahead of the pack.
Had everything planned, and when.... just has never worked out. Still working my company and another job... Have to keep in mind..."time is irreplaceable".
Unless your hobbies are real good, why not keep going a bit? Need to keep mind and body active!
I really have to get out of the full-time grind. Pay and IC are really good, but am responsible for too much scope. It is consuming my mind all day & night. Consulting or part time sounds REALLY good.