Corsair wrote:My goal is to be done by 50. I know it's some serious wishful thinking, but I've found that there's no reason to go through life, let alone a week, without having a goal. So, for now, I'm out at 50.
AGCoinHunter wrote:From early on my goal is to retire at 45. I began saving for retire at the age of 12.
This is why it infuriates me to think that everything I have saved and worked so hard for could ultimately get seized by the imperial federal government. As I have said before I will pull it all out and burn it in my driveway before I had one red cent to this corruption. I do believe its real and its coming. I can’t pull it all out and put it into PM's but am slowly positioning myself for life after the great burn.
IdahoCopper wrote:I was never a good saver. During the 1980s run-up of Ag, with each weekly paycheck I bought $100 worth of bullion rounds or bars for about $8 to $10 per oz, then sold them a few days before the peak at $35. But I eventually spent that money down to nothing.
I bought my 1st house at 19, my 2nd at 21, then sold both of them to buy a bigger house on 1/2 acre with a pool. All of them were roommate/party type houses. I had a great time. When I was 25, I sold the big house and hitchhiked on sailboats from California to Australia, blue-water sailing for 8 months of island-hopping, then living in Oz working casually for another 10 months.
I came to realize that I had enjoyed partying away my 20s and also knew that a cluey guy could put a retirement together in his 40s decade, and retire at 50. So I partied away my 30s as well, always living close to the beach in San Diego, and/or living on my own sailboats.
When I was 38, I began my Internet business and by the time I was 48 I had quit my day job and relied solely on my Internet biz. I now consider myself to be semi-retired, working about an hour per day, checking emails, stuffing packages, and visiting the post office. I reckon I can do that into my 80s and still consider myself retired.
So long as I put a lot product in the vehicle, can get my email daily, and visit a post office; I can travel anywhere in the US for 10 to 14 day road trips. When I want to exercise my passport, I can put the biz on hold for a bit more than a week, without a lot of real consequences.
And finally, when the SHTF, I will have between 100 and 200 pounds of fresh & tasty beef jerky on hand. I'll quit selling it on the Internet and trade it for silver or other goods from my neighbors, or eat it myself. The Ring of Fire red-hot pepper flavor jerky will be sold first.
That is how I got to my retirement plan, with http://www.beefjerky.com I'm 53 now.
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