Hello and welcome to Scotch Street!

Today, I’m happy to share an article from, My Early Retirement Journey.

This is a unique Scotch Street article in that it is a niche beverage –  Moscato Spritzer – and a a creative pro and con list of early retirement.

 

New to Scotch Street?

We write stream-of-consciousness articles on the topic of money while drinking scotch (or an alternative beverage, in this case, Moscato Spritzer).

At the end of the article is a link to all the great Scotch Street articles.


About My Early Retirement Journey

My Early Retirement Journey chronicles an early thirty-something’s road to retirement.  You can read about her journey, and read her financial calculations/budget to get to retirement at myearlyretirementjourney.com


Scotch Street Guest Post – My Early Retirement Journey

 

Intro.

Just last week a  sour day at work got me back to thinking about the exit ramps I had recently discovered on My Early Retirement Journey.   Basically, when I first discovered FIRE, I calculated that I could reasonably leave the work place in 10 to 20 years in my 40s or 50s.  A few months later I did some more calculations  and realized I could probably take a mini-retirement in 2 or 3 years, and I’d still be in my 30s. I would have worked full time for about 5 years by then.

 

What would be better?

That got me thinking, what would be better:  take a Sabbatical in 5 years or FIRE for good in 10 years?  On a day like the one I just had, my immediate thought  was get me out of here. The sooner the better! These humans suck!

 

Here’s what I came up with.

Ultimately, I keep saying my primary objective for a break is: HEALTH. I want to be able to heal. I want my body to heal on its own when I get sick. It’s not as though I won’t get sick ever just because I’m retired but a) I want to minimize these occurrences and b) I want to have the time for my body to get there in its own time instead of trying to get back to work so I don’t use up all my vacation days. So in typical Scotch Street fashion, I streamed the pros list for Sabbatical in 5 years based on the previously stated objective.

 

Pros list for Sabbatical in 5 years:

  • Health overall
  • Health seems to be declining
  • Enjoy good health while I still have it
  • Recover stress on body from last 5 years of work, school, heartache…
    • Carpal tunnel (e.g. gives hands/wrist a break)
    • Gut health
    • Mental health (relationships, family, society, friends, etc…)
  • Repair any damage already done (seen and unseen)
  • Prevent any new damage
  • Keep any minor damage from worsening
  • 5 more years may cause irreversible damage or make any chronic conditions worse
  • Get close to whole vs. farther away
  • Other: spiritual growth;  nurture relationships; build community; do good works
  • Given the field I’m in where I do adverse event reporting for prescription drugs, it’s become evident that sometimes your body just doesn’t recover and it’s not always in a predictable way. Someone has to be the 1% in which some of these serious adverse events occur.
  • I’m fighting a biological clock – but for life, not baby making.
  • Given the last 12 months of my health history, I don’t seem to be getting better health wise. I’ve never been sick so many days in any time frame or paid so much for healthcare.
  • Lots of people take time off from work to nurture their family; in this case I can take time off to nurture myself. And besides, 5 years seems to be the going rate for care-giving, anyway.

 

Pros list for FIRE in 10 years (aka big cons for Sabbatical in 5 Years):

  • In 10 years when I have to go back to work because I took five years off, I would probably regret that I wasn’t already FIRE’d.
  • Also, would I really be able to relax on a 5-Year Sabbatical knowing I still had to go back to work?

 

But then…

The real wrench in the situation is I still don’t know what exactly to do once I retire. In fact, once early retirement became a possibility, I found myself retreating a bit. I had  gotten used to this idea that I’d have to work for the rest of my life. It was my security blanket of sorts. I had gotten comfortable in my mediocrity and my pursuit of nothing. I got comfortable having work be a time-suck and energy-drain.  Because if work was sucking all the life out of me, no one could blame me for holing up in my house every night and weekend, right?

I mean who says just because I have time to do it that I’m suddenly going to start eating more vegetables; exercising more; flossing twice a day; communing with nature on nature walks; be a service to my community; end world hunger;  bring about world peace; find a church family; find my purpose; or experience life altering, past hurt-erasing joy?

So maybe I’m just covering.  Perhaps the question isn’t whether to FIRE in 5 years or 10 years, but rather what if I do all this, and it doesn’t work?  What if after 2 or 5 or 10 years, I’m still just as aimless and discontented as I am now?  I’ll be out of options, then what?


Thanks to My Early Retirement Journey for sharing her pros and cons for early retirement!
Don’t forget to read, My Early Retirement Journey, and her road to retirement.
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