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vander_elst | 1 month ago

If I could I'd retire tomorrow, I have so many projects I would like to take on, I have the feeling I could fill 3 lives with them: gardening, learning math, system programming, wine tasting, carpentry, sport, traveling etc... There are *so* many interesting things to do and so little time. I guess time will tell but at the moment I have a hard time imagining myself getting bored.

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leptons|1 month ago

In my old age I'm learning that this is rare. I take my projects for granted, because I guess I'm just very creative, I have way more "projects" than I have days remaining. But it seems like most people have no projects, and nothing in their lives but watching television, playing video games, or doom scrolling.

leoedin|1 month ago

Yeah, my main worry about retirement is that I’ll spend all my money on tools and projects.

jacquesm|1 month ago

That's going to be the main problem for me heirs: where do all the tools go :)

abracos|1 month ago

It's about scale, when you built something as grand as google you don't want to spend time building a garden

driverdan|1 month ago

For some people that's the case. For others after working on something so large they want to do something small that is wholly theirs.

prawn|1 month ago

Could at least try building a bigger garden!

fuzztester|1 month ago

for me, it would be bread and cheese making (easier cheese varieties), vegetable fermentation, more cooking of various cuisines including indian ones, drawing and painting, carpentry, permaculture (i did organic gardening earlier, which is a subset), wood carving (done some before), and maybe tailoring (making clothes, by hand or by sewing machine, for own use).

only a few at a time, of course, maybe only two, and by rotation. and then maybe i would narrow it down to two or three for long term.

would try to make money from a few of them too.

lionkor|1 month ago

Arguably Sergey should have just gotten into Sourdough.

darkwater|1 month ago

Same here. It's no a big surprise that the article is addressed to CEOs which are usually the embodiment of workaholism.