Ask HN: Anyone here retire early, how do you like it
15 points| offtop5 | 5 years ago
I then figure I could move ether to SEA or Central America and live out the rest of my days only programing for fun. Life seems too short to spend it in SCRUM calls
[+] [-] plut0|5 years ago|reply
Right now, we're at ~$1.1M net worth right now, most of it liquid.
Not too long ago, I remember taking out a $10,000 loan and feeling overwhelmed by this number. I had no idea how I'd pay off such a huge amount.
At that point, I thought $30,000/yr was enough to live on.
Right now we're building a house, that we'll have paid off in ~4 years, worth $700K.
Not too long ago, $450/month for an apartment felt like an unneeded extravagance.
All of this to say... this number is a moving goalpost. At $1M, your mindset may have changed. Your life situation may have changed. Your priorities may change.
In fact, most likely they will.
Right now I'm struggling to define this elusive number for myself. I don't know if $3M will be enough, nor $5M.
Instead, I'm turning inward to figure out what is joy in the present moment?
If I can achieve that, nothing else will matter, since joy will be my reality every day.
[+] [-] shyn3|5 years ago|reply
Inflation eats cash so I have been reading about Financial Independence and the 4% SWR.
[+] [-] grae_euler|5 years ago|reply
Perhaps I'm out of line here but it's worth asking yourself if you're thinking about this because the prospect of taking on responsibility seems too daunting for you. Perhaps the career you're persuing doesn't give you the sense of purpose you might want. Maybe you need to do some soul searching.
Don't dedicate the next ten years of your life to a meme. Instead why not spend that time persuing something meaningful that you love doing. There's no point in spending ten years doing something you hate just to end up doing nothing. If you want to just dick around, take a vacation. If you can't do that, then persue a job where you can.
I know I get extremely bored after about two weeks of vacationing. I can't imagine spending the rest of my life doing that.
[0] https://www.youtube.com/embed/G6eVVrTjNcY
[+] [-] offtop5|5 years ago|reply
If I can live off my million in savings , I’d make games and music all day.
[+] [-] jasonkester|5 years ago|reply
I started along that path in my late 20s, gradually ramping up the length of time between contract gigs as I determined that yes, in fact, I do like not working for long periods of time while travelling through Southeast Asia and Central America. For me, the sweet spot was about 9 months off at a time before, surprisingly, I'd feel like working again for a while.
So I modified my definition of Retired to mean "retired enough for me", and kept doing short contracts to save up for the next trip whenever the mood to work struck. Eventually, I built a couple SaaS products that have ramped up to the point where I don't need to work at all anymore. So I hit a point that people would more closely equate to "actually retired" when I was in my early 40s.
These days, I still do a bit of part time contract work here and there, more as a hobby than an income stream. And I keep the product stuff ticking away at as close to zero hours of maintenance/support as possible. But any day (or week or month) I choose can be off, so that's close enough to retirement for me.
[+] [-] offtop5|5 years ago|reply
Maybe I'll visit both Southeast Asia and Central America to determine which I like better. As a practical matter Spanish is much easier for me than any Asian language I've tried so far, but I think life in Southeast Asia is much cheaper. So I'll have to think about it.
What's been your favorite travel experience so far, if anything I think life is too short to spend it in America just trying to get another raise when this entire world exists
[+] [-] gt565k|5 years ago|reply
$1M of real estate investments generating $5-10k USD per month, can go a long way.
[+] [-] fiftyacorn|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dave_sid|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] giantg2|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] NoNonsense118|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] emteycz|5 years ago|reply
[+] [-] offtop5|5 years ago|reply
I’m very careful on who I let into my life , and my monthly expenses are less than half of my income.
No matter what job you have , it’s still ultimately a job. Their has to be more to life
[+] [-] psmithsfhn|5 years ago|reply
one strategy for how to deal with problems is to try to fix them.
another strategy is to run away from them.