• @bob_wiley
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      8 months ago

      Removed by mod

      • @[email protected]
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        3211 months ago

        Rather than losing my loved ones, I think I’d be more scared of losing my love for them. Either via a cold heart or dementia.

        • @bob_wiley
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          8 months ago

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        • @[email protected]
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          911 months ago

          Dementia scares me too. I’ve seen it with two people now. It’s like they’re living in dreams all the time. Turn a corner or something changes and it’s a whole different scenario and you don’t know what’s going on.

          I get night terrors. Some dreams seriously feel like they last for days and it’s next to impossible to wake up. Living like that 24/7 at the end of my life sounds horrifying.

    • @[email protected]
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      3711 months ago

      This. No one realizes that your probably not gonna make it to 100 in perfect health. If your body doesn’t go, it will be your mind. Either way, it does not sound appealing.

      If nothing else, the arthritis has gotten so bad, you wanna off yourself anyways.

      Hard pass.

      • @Urbanfox
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        1411 months ago

        I’m 37 and already broken.

        My back is killing me, the sciatica makes sitting down hard. My ankle is fucked from too many injuries doing shit like tough mudder because when you’re young you’re invincible. Top that off with an immune disorder and asthma and it’ll be a miracle if I make it to 50 with a good quality of life.

        • @[email protected]
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          211 months ago

          Dude. Sciatica is the worst. Every once in a while I injure myself and can barely stand for days.

          The only thing that helped was this old, Hispanic “healer man”, that massaged the nerve back into place. It’s not like woo woo healing and its not an actual massage. This man just knew anatomy really well and could feel everything out by touch alone. It took 15 mins and I was pain-free, although I had to go back a few times until it set. Hiking helped the muscles get strong enough to keep it in place.

          I’ve gone to several other people that say they do similar things, including ones near the boarder, but they’ve never been able to fix it. Western Doctors were completely useless, they couldn’t even diagnose me properly. The next closest thing would probably be a sports massage therapist.

          This man was apparently known far and wide, with people comming from other states to see him. Any one in my local hispanic community i mentioned it to, was familiar with him.

          Sadly, he was old and stopped working his magic around the time covid started, due to him and his wife’s, unrelated, ailing health. I’ve been searching for someone else ever since. I’m sure there are others like him, there are definitely imitations. I have to assume someone else has excelled at this practice, and this old man wasnt just a one off.

          If you have any contacts in the hispanic community, that may know of someone like him, I’d say it’s definitely worth a shot to at least ask around.

      • Ser Salty
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        411 months ago

        I don’t wanna get to the point where it seems miserable just to, like, walk or something. I don’t mind taking heart medication, walking with a cane, stuff like that, but I don’t wanna live in near constant agony just trying to get through the day.

  • @HeyThisIsntTheYMCA
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    8211 months ago

    We have robots. It’s the future now. We should be retiring at 85 while the robots live in luxurious sky cities.

    • @Sanctus
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      10911 months ago

      We should be building a society where the concept of retiring is alien because the entire point of living isn’t to work.

      • Saik0
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        411 months ago

        because the entire point of living isn’t to work.

        But the point of living is simply to survive and procreate. There’s no innate requirement of “living” to be not working… we worked hard for thousands of years just killing things to eat.

        • @Sanctus
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          111 months ago

          It is. We are chasing an egregore all the while destroying our planet. We need a mentality change, one that realizes we never removed ourselves from the same rat race for survival the rest of the life on this planet is in. We act like we are above our ecosystems, we are not. If our main focus was something else besides money, we might make it. But if we are only chasing the dragon, we will follow it to our deaths.

      • @electrogamerman
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        311 months ago

        That is almost impossible. Even if we had machines and robots, there will always be the necessity for people to work

        • @Sanctus
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          311 months ago

          I didn’t say nobody would have to work. I said that working shouldn’t be the point of life. This mentality that we are all stuck in should not be the defacto modus operandi of our society. What is the purpose of all of this if not to set us free from the mundane? What is the point of any of this if it is not to square the circle? Might as well have never climbed down from the trees if we are not reaching for infinity.

          • @electrogamerman
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            011 months ago

            And I said that it is almost impossible because there will always work to be done

            • @Sanctus
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              111 months ago

              No shit, but at one point we are gonna have to stop extorting each other to work. At some point our society is going to have to actually care for us. So we can stop producing people who seek money and start producing people who advance our species.

        • @Kage520
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          211 months ago

          Do you mean this as in robots cannot do it all? Because I’m pretty sure they soon will be able to. Or do you mean it in that humans need challenges to make their lives feel complete? Because I would agree with that.

          • @electrogamerman
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            111 months ago

            I meant the first one. Someone will have to create/update/maintain robots.

            • @Kage520
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              111 months ago

              For awhile they will. But still, that would mean one engineer could handle several restaurants, for example. We won’t have nearly enough jobs for all the people, unless we invent some busy work. Maybe that’s what pumping gas jobs in certain states always has been though 🤔.

    • @Deca
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      511 months ago

      Women in China retire at age 50, men at 60

        • @Deca
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          511 months ago

          Pretty good. My mum’s living in Shanghai (most populous city in China) and has been a pensioner for 20 years. It’s enough money to get by and now that she’s 70 she also receives monthly coupons for her neighbourhood canteen (although food is already very cheap)

      • @tallwookie
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        011 months ago

        really? that seems unsustainable, but would explain a few things I suppose.

        • Cyborganism
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          711 months ago

          Unsustainable??? Have you seen how many people there is in China? They could probably retire at 30 and still have enough people to fill in the jobs.

          • @[email protected]
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            411 months ago

            China has a bad ratio of young people to old people. They have a lot of people, but as the population ages there will be fewer working people supporting more retired people. It’s not just about money either. There are a finite number of nurses or caretakers in a country at any given time, so it will mean higher ratio of people needing care to those able to give it. It’s a complex issue that almost every country is going to be dealing with more in the future, but China will probably feel it more than average.

            • @Deca
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              11 months ago

              Keep in mind China has a much tighter family structure where children look after their elderly parents (and often live under the same roof), and in return grandparents provide free childcare so both parents are able to work full time. Nursing homes are not incredibly common but it might become a bigger problem as more and more young people move away from their family in the countryside to work in the bigger cities.

        • @[email protected]
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          -111 months ago

          Oof. Check out what retirement ages were in the USSR. They were very similar to China with options to retire earlier if you worked more physically demanding jobs.

          Turns out retirement ages in the imperial core have always been worse and since there is no big bad red to be scared of, the capitalists don’t feel the need to make the same kind of concessions they needed to make to prevent similar uprisings in their country in the past.

          Your life is being stolen from you for someone else’s profit. It will always be this way under a capitalist system.

          • @SCB
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            11 months ago

            imperial core

            How does this not describe the USSR and China? Two literal empires that increased expansionist policies after going communist?

            • @[email protected]
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              -211 months ago

              How many countries have Russia and China, combined, bombed in the last 10 years?

              How many countries has the US alone bombed in the last 10 years?

              It’s a shame you don’t really wonder why people don’t describe Russia or China as part of the imperial core, because if you bothered to engage in arguments in good faith, maybe you could finally get the taste of boot off your tongue.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        People love to have something to live for, but they end up making work their personalities because they have no time or energy for anything else. Turns out if you give people time to actually build a life, they don’t want to go to work constantly.

    • blanketswithsmallpox
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      11 months ago

      You can retire at any age you want lol. Most people didn’t live in their means nor did they save for retirement starting at 18/22. This was possible 30 years ago. These days? Not so much.

      It doesn’t mean you can’t leverage it way better than most though. Starting a Roth IRA saves more money than even paying off your house loan in half the time. That’s saving an extra $70,000 for most. Putting into retirement early triples that lol.

      Compound interest via stock/bonds is a bullshit money generating hack made up by rich people to get richer though. The poors literally get their dregs from riding on their coattails then acting like they invested well. Nobody wants to admit that you should be able to retire indefinitely by what amounts to hoarding above a certain dollar threshold though lol.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        Is it really just a simple matter of living within your means when you are constantly bombarded with the idea that you are inferior for not having that shiny new thing and banks are constantly trying to push you into predatory debt schemes like credit cards?

        At that point, I don’t blame people for not having a retirement fund. This is a systemic problem, not an individual failure and we should look at changing those systemic failures rather than pointing the finger at people and saying, “you fell for our bullshit and now you are poor. Shame on you!”

        • @SCB
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          -111 months ago

          Tell me you have bad credit and a spending problem without telling me you have bad credit and a spending problem

            • @SCB
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              -111 months ago

              That doesnt really fit here bro sorry. It was a solid meme attempt tho. Keep practicing!

      • Cyborganism
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        111 months ago

        I just want wages to increase to a point where people with a decent education can afford a home without any major financial stress.

        It’s not normal to have professionals with bachelor’s degrees not being able to afford a home.

  • @RBWells
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    6111 months ago

    According to my kids:

    0-30 is young.

    31-60 is middle aged.

    61-90 is old.

    Over 90 is fucking old.

    • @nxfsi
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      5811 months ago

      How fucking old are your kids for them to say that? Real kids would definitely say that 25 is approaching retirement age.

      • @RBWells
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        511 months ago

        Youngest is 17, oldest is 31. But it was the younger ones when they were around 10 - I think they were just mathematically calculating the middle third. I’m almost in their “old” category now and think that because (fit) people are aging more slowly than past generations middle age is stretching out, if you are defining it as able bodied and working. That stretches it to like 75 for some people. I don’t think over 30 is “young” though, so if there are only 3 categories it’s middle aged, and no way is 75 not old, if you are fit, healthy, and working at that age you are a fit old person.

        And who can’t rock a bikini at 30? WTF, where do you live?

        • @[email protected]
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          311 months ago

          And who can’t rock a bikini at 30? WTF, where do you live?

          Yeah, wtf are these comments saying “many people have been nursing back problems for years by their 30th birthday” lmfao. Like what world do they live in? Realistically though, they’re probably 12 and think 30 is ancient.

          • @Touching_Grass
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            111 months ago

            Different generation. My dads generation had 8 kids and more banned chemicals plus decades of being hit by cars and falling out of trucks.

      • @keyez
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        111 months ago

        Same, even when I was in Jr High I thought people about to graduate college were old and may well be middle aged compared to me.

      • @EvilCartyen
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        111 months ago

        All kids are real kids. Maybe the kids you know are just dumber than this guys kids 😂

    • Beefalo
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      1611 months ago

      The whole point of calling somebody “middle-aged” is that they’re in that indeterminate space where they definitely aren’t young anymore, but they aren’t like, old, old, yet, basically they’re still able-bodied enough to hold down a job.

      Not one. Not the other. Somewhere in the middle. Middle-aged.

      30 isn’t so old, but it depends hard on the person in question, some are still in great shape, but many 30-year-olds have been nursing a back problem and/or jacked knees for years by the time the birthday comes, they sure as hell don’t feel young. Some 30s haven’t had kids yet, some of them have kids in middle school. So that averages out, and we onboard you to this shitty party at 30. If you can still rock the swimwear at 30, do it, and don’t take it for granted.

      For the record, we don’t care what children think old is. Children are insane.

    • @[email protected]
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      1211 months ago

      People don’t understand what life expectancy means, specifically because 99% of the time, people are talking about life expectancy at birth. What life expectancy st birth means is that half the babies are going to be dead before X years (in the case of OP picture that mean half are going to die before reaching 73 yo), so yeah, the majority of people is going to be 50 yo at some point of their life.

  • @protput
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    4511 months ago

    Thanks for starting my day with giving me a midlife crisis.

    • @Something_Complex
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      411 months ago

      Brah, I kinda figure education that was for you didn’t count … If it helps

  • @tallwookie
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    4311 months ago

    eh, you’re free to retire in your mid 30s. it’s easy. i retired in my late 30s, then went back to work again when I ran out of money a few years later. it was nice, i look forward to retiring again.

        • @NewNewAccount
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          211 months ago

          Death is just a sabbatical until reincarnation.

      • @tallwookie
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        011 months ago

        yeah, you could call it that. for my mental health I referred to it as a retirement.

    • @1019throw
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      511 months ago

      Did you FIRE and calculate wrong or had a bad few economic years?

      • @tallwookie
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        011 months ago

        oh no, my job was offshored by IBM - I decided I wasnt going to work anymore and did that for a few years. then I ran low on funds and found a new job. I could quit now & do the same thing for a few years but I’ve got a different plan this time around, it’ll drastically reduce my monthly expenditures allowing my next “retirement” to much longer - possibly permanent.

    • @Kage520
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      411 months ago

      Dude it is NOT easy to make enough to retire in your 30s. Congratulations to you for even making it a few years. That’s a huge accomplishment. But saying it’s easy is a bit unfair to those who are not able to make that kind of income.

      Saying this as someone who also plans to retire before I turn 40, and I DO have an income advantage. It has been very difficult even still.

      • @NewNewAccount
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        111 months ago

        What’s your retirement number to retire by 40?

        • @Kage520
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          111 months ago

          Close to $2M, but I care more about dividend income than the current stock market prices. If I can survive on dividends from VTSAX then I’m good.

          • @NewNewAccount
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            111 months ago

            Home paid off? LCOL area?

            I apologize if these are prying questions.

            • @Kage520
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              211 months ago

              Not at all. These are normal questions, especially from r/financialindependence back from Reddit. South Florida but I bought my house and homesteaded it (locks the property taxes to no more than 3% increase per year) before the value doubled. Home is paid off. No other debt anymore. I can and have spent as little as $25k per year, to as much as $40k per year. This only represents my half of expenses though. My wife has her own fire plans.

              • @NewNewAccount
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                211 months ago

                Legend. You should be proud of yourself. Not sure where I’m heading but FIRE or a lean FIRE is one of the options.

  • Nioxic
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    4111 months ago

    Avg life span is 80+ in most countries…

  • Obinice
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    3611 months ago

    I’ve never heard anybody suggest that 50 is middle aged, usually it’s traditionally been 30, or nowadays with life expectancies being higher, 36 is spot on.

    Anyway, we’re all going to work until we’re dead, to keep the rich ruling class fed. There’s no escape.

  • N-E-N
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    2511 months ago

    I’ve always viewed middle aged as 40s

  • @Smoogs
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    2311 months ago

    Right cuz that’s why people work til 65. Totally just a choice/s

  • monk
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    2311 months ago

    Wait, your retirement age is less than the average lifespan?

      • @Fluffy_Ruffs
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        611 months ago

        Sure, but statistically speaking you’re as prone to dying from either as anyone else.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 months ago

        Mean Average is a dumb way to track lifespan as many people (still) die in childhood.

        Median is much more representative.

        • monk
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          111 months ago

          Good luck finding a median life expectancy for my country.

  • @[email protected]
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    2211 months ago

    Uhm, retirement was invented for the elderly who can’t really work on the fields/processing plants anymore. Work changed and people got older since then.

    • @80085
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      1211 months ago

      Most people still work manual labor jobs. Cognitive ability also declines with age. Age discrimination during hiring/recruiting is fairly common (witnessed it at nearly every job I’ve ever had, even though it’s illegal, and I’ve had a lot of jobs). There aren’t enough “bullshit jobs” like Walmart greeter for everybody. Aging population can be solved by permissible immigration (which are comparably younger populations), but there are too many racists and politicians worried about demographic shifts.

      • @[email protected]
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        511 months ago

        Since when do most people in the US still work manual labor jobs? Have we not been in a service economy since around the 80s or did I miss something

      • @solstice
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        711 months ago

        I took a year off work recently to detox and had a zero cortisol policy. Lines on my face faded, hair looks great and stopped thinning, came back nicely, lost weight, almost have a six pack for the first time in my life approaching 40. People know how stressful work is but most don’t understand what it’s like to truly live for yourself stress free. I’m super fortunate and grateful for having the opportunity to do that and highly recommend.

        The hardest part about going back to work was reentering that disgusting American corporate culture of toxic optimism. I’m fine with a lot of work and my stress tolerance/management is much better now. But that culture of toxic optimism is hard to handle.

        • @RBWells
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          411 months ago

          Yeah I had a genius boss who was an outrageous overworker. Like he didn’t always work on his job but when not he was learning to play guitar, learning languages, always “on”, didn’t sleep much and got more done than most any two regular people could do. Like at work he did the work of 3 people at least. It broke his marriage, his life but he cannot slow down. I actually like him as a person but it’s terrifying.

          On every review I got points from him for “work-life management”, limiting work so that I could do life, be with my kids, SLEEP, exercise, take all my “use it or lose it” PTO, etc. I made myself available for one late day a week and one weekend a month, am not inflexible but not so hyperfocused on work and for some reason he could see this as a good quality in an employee - others in the department tried to meet his insane standards and would burn out. By keeping my boundaries I can be creative, see solutions, not get so deep in that I lose the objectivity.

          You are not a better worker by killing yourself giving too much to work. Not even by the standards of a boss who is killing himself with overwork. Keep your objectivity. Rest, work, exercise, play, rest. Not work hard play hard, no.

          • @solstice
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            511 months ago

            Those people are mentally ill. Living in a permanent state of mania or hypomania isn’t normal or healthy. But because they are hyperfocused and sleep only a few hours a night they manage to get themselves into leadership positions and set the tone for literally everyone else. It’s fucked up.

            Setting boundaries is crucial for dealing with these people. I’m so glad my resume and circumstances are strong enough to be able to stand up for myself.

      • @Misconduct
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        511 months ago

        We’re living longer and aging slower than ever before now