clubchamp98
Journeyman Pro
I miss some of the lads but not all of them.!
Miss work ? It’s a four letter word
Miss work ? It’s a four letter word
The big thing to worry about is time.
You will start getting fed up with golf quicker than you think ,especially when having a bad spell.
You need other things to occupy you ! Grandkids ,diy stuff. Holidays etc.
I think I play less golf now than when I was working
Don’t know how I fitted work in![]()
I've never been made redundant, been divorced though but thankfully she didn't take my pension, thank God.Some solid advice Brian. I think pulling the trigger and when is a very personal and hard decision to make. I can access private pension from Aug and it is now in a good place so that has certainly eased the stress but i don't plan on retiring at 55. However, i am very much in the wind down to retirement phase and am letting bosses know that is my priority and saying 1 want to be able to retire at 60 and am saving like mad for it. I have been worried about redundancy over the years and it has caused a lot of stress, especially after an expensive divorce in 2018 putting me in a much more vulnerable position financially. I have been saving like mad for past 7 years to rectify. I have been made redundant twice and both times caused extreme anxiety and depression - 9 mongths looking for a job from start of 2008 in bad financial markets and then getting a job but having to commute to Dublin for 3.5 years - and it was a week before Lehman Brothers collapsed - and my role than in Marketing/ Finacial Communications was on fire! Hopefully the stress of this happening again is now significantly eased and tbh a good redundancy even this year or especially in 2-5y would be more than welcommed as should be a good payoff after 17 years service!! I wold never get another similar job as a fund manager but if i did go in next 5 years i would have to think if i wanted a less stressful complete career chaneg job, maybe part time
Yes me to.Very true. The reason I gave up golf as a teenager was because I got bored with it. During my last summer holiday before I started life as a working man, I played five days a week, 36 holes most days and occasionally 54. The weekend was reserved for cricket. By the end of that summer I was absolutely golfed out, and didn’t pick up a club for another fifteen years.
I left full time employment in 2021, the plan originally being golf, golf and more golf. The problem I had was two fold - the weather often didn’t allow it, and very few of my golf mates were retired themselves, so my plans changed very quickly. And as my wife is younger than me, and as I type still has another 5/6 years to work, I needed to fill my time in other ways.
So I opted for a self employed, part time pension top up. I work when I want, play golf when I want, and have time to do other things, primarily walking and photography.
Retirement is great, but retirement as a solo when most friends and contemporaries are still working can quickly become a little monotonous.
If you can retire and be your own boss, do it, don't hesitate.....you may not have good health for ever
I’ve got a two year fixed ISA maturing in a few weeks, I feel like I am already exposed enough to the stock market and the Crypto markets so I intend to just build up a cash pot. Probably in some National Savings product. Doesn’t earn much but risk free.Had a great run on the investments in past few weeks and hit the next one of my milestones. Most markets are now hitting fresh new highs/ close to recent peaks, and even gold and equities are doing it in tandem, which is quite unusual. With the multitude of risks on the horizon and no idea of which ones may strike and at what time, i am getting edgy about being fully invested here and considering scaling back and going more into cash/ short-term bonds. A hard decision to make when things have gone so well. We are living in very strange, volatile and unpredictable times which makes investing a tricky job - and that is day job as well as looking after the pension!
I’ve got a two year fixed ISA maturing in a few weeks, I feel like I am already exposed enough to the stock market and the Crypto markets so I intend to just build up a cash pot. Probably in some National Savings product. Doesn’t earn much but risk free.
Yup FOMO is a real problem. And managing your emotions is half the battle with investing. You have to go with your gut and hope it’s the right call. At least you fully understand what you are into… I don’t understand the stock market so I have my money in a Quilter product. It does well for me but I have no idea on the mechanics of it.i have 2 very volatile and quite big bets that i am waiting to sell - both are around 5% each of total assets. One is a 3x leveraged ETF on Emerging Markets that has had a nice run over the last month but i am still significantly under water and emerging market equities are far off highs and have been a real dog for 5 years. Today i trimmed it by 20% and may do more over coming days as hopefully the US-China thawing in trade talks today may give some momentum. I want the whole thing gone but the thing has the capacity to double over the next year of EM comes back in favour. The other "dog" is JP Morgan Emerging Europe, Middle East and Africa Trust - this was renamed from JPM Russia that i held before the invasion! To say it has been a dog is an under stateent as all the Russian holdings, which are most of the fund, have been written down to zero. The fund dropped to less than 50p. It is now 230 and hit 300 a couple of months ago in the hope of an end to the war and unfreezing of Russian assts etc. I trimmed a bit last month but i am way down on th investment (circa 70%). Hard to know when to sell as an end to the war could see this thing rally to maybe 700 to 1000 (hard to tell) but having quadrupled or more from the lows it is a hard decision knowing if i should sell here or wait for glory if it comes! Can't wait to see the back of both of these as i have lost a massive amount on them and look forward to reinvesting in high yielding bond trusts or bond-proxy infrastructure funds
LOl, yeah right........Very true. The reason I gave up golf as a teenager was because I got bored with it. During my last summer holiday before I started life as a working man, I played five days a week, 36 holes most days and occasionally 54. The weekend was reserved for cricket. By the end of that summer I was absolutely golfed out, and didn’t pick up a club for another fifteen years.
I left full time employment in 2021, the plan originally being golf, golf and more golf. The problem I had was two fold - the weather often didn’t allow it, and very few of my golf mates were retired themselves, so my plans changed very quickly. And as my wife is younger than me, and as I type still has another 5/6 years to work, I needed to fill my time in other ways.
So I opted for a self employed, part time pension top up. I work when I want, play golf when I want, and have time to do other things, primarily walking and photography.
Retirement is great, but retirement as a solo when most friends and contemporaries are still working can quickly become a little monotonous.
LOl, yeah right........
Are you retired?
Because I know I’m far from being alone in having found going from my time being fully occupied whilst working to completely the opposite a very difficult adjustment.
Each to their own. When I retired 3- 4 years ago I had no problems whatsoever about adjusting to retired life.Are you retired?
Because I know I’m far from being alone in having found going from my time being fully occupied whilst working to completely the opposite a very difficult adjustment.