A retiring sort of chap...
Well, here's an announcement...
The day before yesterday, I retired.
Not a particularly exciting announcement for my readers, but, as you can imagine, a fairly significant one for me! Though it's a rather black-and-white statement for something which in fact involves rather more shades of grey. I decided that a binary transition from not-retired to retired was perhaps not entirely healthy, and so nearly two years ago, I informed my consultancy clients that I'd like to retire about now, and I've been gradually reducing my workload since then, until I was down to just one or two days per week.
I definitely recommend this approach, if you can do it. For one thing, it gave me confidence that I wasn't going to have any trouble filling my time when I was no longer working. And secondly, during that period, we've been living pretty much on the budget we expect to have in retirement, and have found it quite doable. Both of these make the transition much less scary than it might otherwise be!
If you had told me, in my youth, that I might retire before I even hit 60, I would have been surprised. I have always enjoyed my work, and been blessed with some great jobs and splendid colleagues, so I had no particular desire to leave that world behind. I've also spent most of my 'career' in start-ups or in junior part-time academic posts, which has made for a more modest income than that enjoyed by many of my friends, and correspondingly smaller pension contributions, never quite benefitting either from big corporate schemes or the (also often rather generous) ones enjoyed by many full-time long-term academics. So I assumed early retirement would be unaffordable for me.
But when it became apparent a few years back, to my surprise, that it was a real possibility, without either excessive luxury or frugality, I started to think about the trade-offs between time and money. I have always had many more hobbies than I have time to spend on them, and much as I've always enjoyed my work, I enjoy doing some of these even more! So I started doing a lot of reading, and YouTube-watching, on the subject of early retirement and retirement finance planning. Some of these had comments from people saying things like, "I retired in my early 50s and I'm so glad I did!", which made me feel a bit less decadent about considering it at my rather more advanced age.
There was also a persuasive argument I read somewhere that went roughly along these lines: If you retire in your mid-to-late 60s, as many people do, the chances are that you'll have 10-15 years of reasonable health; maybe rather more, if you're lucky. But if there are two of you, and you want to do things together, the probability that both of you will be fit and healthy drops significantly: perhaps the balance of probabilities might put it closer to 10 years. There's an acronym I've seen used by pension advisers: JOMY, which is short for the rather common 'Just One More Year' syndrome: "I'm going to retire very soon, but I think I'll give it just one more year before I do." If you consider that every 'just one more year' might take 10% of the time you have to enjoy significant retirement activities with your spouse... well, you can do the maths.
Anyway, all of the above explains, to some degree, why we are now in our little campervan, in unexpectedly glorious sunshine, just a short walk from the charming old harbour of Honfleur on the Normandy coast. And we're doing something which I've always wanted to do: leaving home for a vacation without knowing exactly when you'll be coming back...
Comments
Congratulations! I'm more or less taking the same gradual approach as you, rather amazed at how the days manage to fill themselves though I don't really have much on the calendar each day. I find that having the free time is such a joy that I'm loathe to trade it away for something else, at least at the moment, whether it be volunteering or whatever it might be. I hope you'll enjoy the time along the coast there! We'll be in St Malo in June, can't wait.
Congrats, Q! The YouTube algorithm (realising I'm now > 50) has been feeding me quite a few "Why you should retire now" videos, all advocating for early retirement. Many of them mention JOMY.
Trouble is, I've still got 5 children to get through uni (Josiah goes in 2 years time, but Micah, my smallest, doesn't finish A levels until 2036) and I'm also having far too much fun at Arm currently. Especially now I can "vibe engineer" some of my code. Don't worry, it's very thoroughly reviewed, but it just is easier to tell codex to "templatize this method" or "refactor in this style" than typing it all yourself. No doubt you had the same experience rewriting statusq.org.
So I suspect I'll work another ten years or so, but I'm already only on 90% FTE, and I could see that dropping to 80%, perhaps 70% in a few years, especially if Arm stock continues to do well (did you see we're now actually producing silicon again, so I can honestly tell people when they ask me what I do that I work in a chip shop! ;)
Ha, yes, I think the best financial decision we ever made was not having kids! You went rather to the opposite extreme...!
Looking forward to having a device with an ARM-branded chip in it soon.
Wait a moment - that was April Fools' Day! Did you really retire? Really? I bet you have a Raspberry Pi lurking in your camper van....
Actually, I don't (have a Pi). I do have a mobile router running OpenWRT, though...
Congratulations. Retirement is the best job I've ever had and I hope you get as much from it as I have.
I wish I had been able to have a phased retirement, but I couldn't. One day I led a team of 700 in a super high stress environment, the next day I had nothing. Took some adjusting to.
I have never regretted it; I was younger than you are now. Frankly work is far inferior to retirement if you have an enquiring mind and retain your wish to learn and are able to keep occupied. I have no fears for you. Too many friends retired, decorated the house from top to bottom and then three months later were waiting on the settee for Countdown to start. They lacked imagination and ended up back at work in inferior roles to those they had left.
My maxim for retirement is: everything starts later, finishes earlier and takes longer. But in a lovely way.
Would the router be a Gl.inet Ax3000? I have one in my camper van and it is superb. Essential kit for staying online on the road.
Well done, well deserved.
Hi Jim - and thanks! Your comments much appreciated.
Yes, well guessed on the router! It seems to work very nicely, though I'm having problems getting their physical eSIM to accept any actual esim profiles. Otherwise seems excellent!