Novak Conversions Jeep Wrangler TJ radiator

The simple life?

Westtown Willy

TJ dummy
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Joined
May 10, 2018
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Trumpsylvania
As I creep towards retirement I've started examining which direction I'm going with every other aspect of life. I've always been a bit of a minimalist but even so I've still managed to compile a lot of things over the course of life, most are remnants of the hands-on phase of being a husband and a father, things left behind in the family house I've occupied mostly or completely solo for nearly 10 years. I recently sold my office building and downsized to a nice tight rental 1/4 the gross size and I've never been happier office-wise, it has prompted me to look at my living arrangements with the same eye. I've known for years I'm living fairly inefficiently holding onto the family home, but for a bunch of those years I justified it as a landing pad for my kids that flew the coup in the event something went south for them, when those possibilities dwindled in likelihood I simply became lazy, avoiding the giant pain in the ass it will be to find a new spot, get rid of things I really no longer need, packing, moving & so on, having just done that with my office I'm not too keen on repeating it so soon. However, it really needs to be done because I know that what waits on the other side is the same feeling I have every time I step foot into my little office, just contentedness knowing every square inch is useful with no vampire drain on the finances. It's similar to vehicles, I could drive a quad-cab F250 but I choose to drive a tiny Subaru, the minimum amount of vehicle I need has always served my purposes.

I travel light, I've hopped on a plane with nothing more than a Jansport bookbag for a week away on vacation, I'd like to do the same with life in general, dump all the unnecessary crap & seize total minimalism. This leads me to the renting vs. buying conundrum; having been a homeowner for over 30 years it's always been the way, it's always made more sense particularly when raising a family, not so sure anymore. It gives you flexibility in many ways renters don't enjoy, yet it also binds you in other ways renters avoid.

I took the first bite out of the elephant by getting in touch with my old realtor that found this house for me a long time ago, I was a bit surprised he was still in business age-wise, but he's alive & well. We'll meet soon to discuss all of these things.

Anyone here travel this minimalist home ownership to renter road that cares to weigh in would be appreciated. I'll say this, I'm not committed to renting, it's a relatively new idea to me that has only come up since the office situation opened my eyes, I'd also downsize to an appropriately sized purchase too, the primary goal here is downsizing. Sorry for the ramble, just looking for any input from anyone that's traveled this road.
 
Paris Hilton Thats Hot GIF
 
Going on five plus years in a 27' Airstream with a 1,500 pound weight capacity. I (we) don't rent. Well, OK, we do rent RV spaces about half the time.

Being a minimalist is completely doable. I fish, reload and shoot, cast bullets, take pictures (landscape and astrophotography)...and otherwise occupy my time.

It's possible to live very comfortably with very little. I have a university on an SSD drive, and a laptop with all needed software.

The hardest part I've found is to separate what you need, from what you think you need. The second hardest thing is to figure out what makes you happy and keeps you satisfied vs the social expectations of those around you.

Minimalists can constantly reinvent themselves.
 
I am still in the collecting crap stage...lol, 6 vehicles, 2 houses and Amazon coming almost everyday....I think about starting to pare it down but......

My collecting crap stage ended the day the ex packed up 90% of the contents of our house & rolled back in early 2012, I've since added barely anything except the TJ. The stuff I'm talking about is mostly the residual furniture she left behind plus a bunch of kid's stuff they left behind & some other odds & ends. My actual contribution to the contents of the house is negligible at best. I envision dragging the kitchen table, chairs, & a few other pieces of furniture out to my bonfire pit & tossing a match in rather than drag it with me. I have 4 recliners, they come with, and that will be the only seating in my new crib

Going on five plus years in a 27' Airstream with a 1,500 pound weight capacity. I (we) don't rent. Well, OK, we do rent RV spaces about half the time.

Being a minimalist is completely doable. I fish, reload and shoot, cast bullets, take pictures (landscape and astrophotography)...and otherwise occupy my time.

It's possible to live very comfortably with very little. I have a university on an SSD drive, and a laptop with all needed software.

The hardest part I've found is to separate what you need, from what you think you need. The second hardest thing is to figure out what makes you happy and keeps you satisfied vs the social expectations of those around you.

Minimalists can constantly reinvent themselves.

that sounds interesting, not sure I can live the nomad lifestyle though. The things I can't live without are a relatively large variety of cooking implements, given it's my favorite hobby since the beginning of time. And some exercise equipment, I refuse to go to 'gyms', always been the home workout type. Other than that, everything else can go, and that includes the TJ 😳, all it does anymore is take up space, I barely drive it.
 
My collecting crap stage ended the day the ex packed up 90% of the contents of our house & rolled back in early 2012, I've since added barely anything except the TJ. The stuff I'm talking about is mostly the residual furniture she left behind plus a bunch of kid's stuff they left behind & some other odds & ends. My actual contribution to the contents of the house is negligible at best. I envision dragging the kitchen table, chairs, & a few other pieces of furniture out to my bonfire pit & tossing a match in rather than drag it with me. I have 4 recliners, they come with, and that will be the only seating in my new crib

My neighbors had an estate sale over the weekend. Put nearly everything they had up for sale from what I'm told.

They had half used jugs of cleaning chemicals and even had $1.50 on a used tube of chapstick.

Rumor is they are moving to a smaller place with no yard to take care of. Which is kind of funny to me since they had two robot lawnmowers anyway.

Point is, you could do something like that.
 
I'm kinda going down the same road. It's not the house and furnishings, I need practically nothing in that area, it's my garage/shop and my 4 vehicles I'm having a hard time getting rid of. I'm thinking of a barndominium.

Probably the greatest concentration of crap that I'm actually responsible for is likewise in my garage, mostly the TJ & a ton of parts and tools, plus a couple bikes, lawn tractor & other yard stuff, wood working stuff, and so forth. By volume there's probably more out there than inside the house, my old girlfriend brought her daughter here once & she whispered to her something like 'mom, is this guy a serial killer, there's nothing in his house' :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:

All of which by the way can be left behind depending on where I land, and I'd be ok with that.
 
I'm kinda going down the same road. It's not the house and furnishings, I need practically nothing in that area, it's my garage/shop and my 4 vehicles I'm having a hard time getting rid of. I'm thinking of a barndominium.

This is the way.
 
I started planning my retirement in my 20s with the goal of retiring at 55. I missed that by 1 yr and have been happily retired for over 10 yrs. Luckily I married well and my Wife’s goals align with mine. For me my main retirement concerns were what will I do with my time and will I have enough money to do them.
I’m a big list maker because I find it helps me be objective. Get yourself a pad of paper and a pen, then sit down and start writing your thoughts down. First off money. How much will you have in savings and income? What does your home actually cost you vs renting? What do you anticipate your future living expenses will be? This leads to the question of what you’ll do with yourself after retirement? You’ll have a lot of time on your hands. If you just sit around you won’t last long. In my case I have several rentals that keep me busy and the Wife and I travel a lot. I also have a lot of friends that I take off road trips with on a monthly basis. Mainly I putter around my shop doing various projects.
Write down what you want to do. Hobbies, travel, hunt, fish, part time job or volunteer work? Again the key is to be active in retirement. For many people the downside to retirement is that you have no set schedule to follow and have too much time on their hands.
Do you want to stay where you’re at or move to a different part of the country or world? What makes you happy? The bottom line is that life is short and we need to get the most out of it.
When I decided to finally retire it was scary but it’s been great so far.
 
My wife and I are in the process of downsizing. We’re building a new small home with 1 bedroom on 40 acres that we’ve owned for quite awhile. The main reason for the one bedroom is to keep any of our kids from wanting to move back home. We have a barn and shop also for all of our damn animals and other toys.
 
I have a big house, a bigger beach house, a few other houses and a slew of cars. I have however, had my architect draw plans for my final house. When I get to the point of throwing in the towel I will be ready to sell most everything. I am a tinkerer and currently that has a habit of following me into the house. My final house will be a 1,200 sqft single story house with a big detached garage and the two shall not cross paths.

But idohave a suggestion for you @Westtown Willy . There is an entire industry of house sitters. You in essence take care of wealthy people's homes while they are not there and you live for free in them or even sometimes you get paid to occupy their homes. If you want to travel and need very little in life, this might be the ticket for you.
 
I started planning my retirement in my 20s with the goal of retiring at 55. I missed that by 1 yr and have been happily retired for over 10 yrs. Luckily I married well and my Wife’s goals align with mine. For me my main retirement concerns were what will I do with my time and will I have enough money to do them.
I’m a big list maker because I find it helps me be objective. Get yourself a pad of paper and a pen, then sit down and start writing your thoughts down. First off money. How much will you have in savings and income? What does your home actually cost you vs renting? What do you anticipate your future living expenses will be? This leads to the question of what you’ll do with yourself after retirement? You’ll have a lot of time on your hands. If you just sit around you won’t last long. In my case I have several rentals that keep me busy and the Wife and I travel a lot. I also have a lot of friends that I take off road trips with on a monthly basis. Mainly I putter around my shop doing various projects.
Write down what you want to do. Hobbies, travel, hunt, fish, part time job or volunteer work? Again the key is to be active in retirement. For many people the downside to retirement is that you have no set schedule to follow and have too much time on their hands.
Do you want to stay where you’re at or move to a different part of the country or world? What makes you happy? The bottom line is that life is short and we need to get the most out of it.
When I decided to finally retire it was scary but it’s been great so far.

lot of good advice in there, I've been studying the larger picture of retirement for a while now and I hear a lot of those themes. The thing I'm most uncertain of is what to do with the time, I get bored fast without something to occupy a decent chunk of the day and I really don't have a lot of hobbies. I've given a lot of thought to part time work, not really sure what type of thing I'd do though. There's an awful lot related in my current profession but the whole point is to retire from that field.

As far as where I'll land, that's up in the air, I have no one to consult so the entire planet is really on the table. But like many I have ties to this area, mainly my kids & eventual grand kids. Not really sure I want to be too far from them so that's a big consideration.

I have a big house, a bigger beach house, a few other houses and a slew of cars. I have however, had my architect draw plans for my final house. When I get to the point of throwing in the towel I will be ready to sell most everything. I am a tinkerer and currently that has a habit of following me into the house. My final house will be a 1,200 sqft single story house with a big detached garage and the two shall not cross paths.

But idohave a suggestion for you @Westtown Willy . There is an entire industry of house sitters. You in essence take care of wealthy people's homes while they are not there and you live for free in them or even sometimes you get paid to occupy their homes. If you want to travel and need very little in life, this might be the ticket for you.

It's funny, the final house you describe is literally exactly the type and size I've informally been looking for, the 'ranch' style. They're very hard to find in my area, at least ones that aren't 50 feet from another one... I need more elbow room than that. Most larger plots have much larger homes, so I'd likely have to find a nice piece of ground and build it also.

The house sitter idea is interesting. I need to get over the hump of getting rid of what remains. As I said above, a chunk of the residual stuff here is my kid's stuff, I've asked them to take it if they want it but it's still here years later. I've been unable to toss it for sentimental reasons, but I think I'm just going to deliver it to their houses & then they can figure it out.


My wife and I are in the process of downsizing. We’re building a new small home with 1 bedroom on 40 acres that we’ve owned for quite awhile. The main reason for the one bedroom is to keep any of our kids from wanting to move back home. We have a barn and shop also for all of our damn animals and other toys.

Speaking of barns, I'm on the perimeter of the largest Amish community in the US, beautiful farmland, I've envisioned living in a barn like Swayze :LOL:

swayze.jpg
 
I'm thinking of a barndominium.

Essentially you need a carriage house. Large shop/garage with efficient living accommodations attached. I've designed a number of these over the years, it's kind of my perfect home.

Seems many municipalities don't like them as primary structures on a property, at least not around here.

Anyone here travel this minimalist home ownership to renter road that cares to weigh in would be appreciated. I'll say this, I'm not committed to renting, it's a relatively new idea to me that has only come up since the office situation opened my eyes, I'd also downsize to an appropriately sized purchase too, the primary goal here is downsizing. Sorry for the ramble, just looking for any input from anyone that's traveled this road.

There's a certain freedom afforded by living light. I had this forced on me when the banks tanked the housing market back in '08-'09. I found myself instantly unemployed and unemployable, and sold most of my shit (including a partially renovated house). Currently on year 15 of financial recovery (as a renter), but I don't really miss having a bunch of shit. Certainly easier to move if I need to.
 
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Essentially you need a carriage house. Large shop/garage with efficient living accommodations attached. I've designed a number of these over the years, it's kind of my perfect home.

Seems many municipalities don't like them as primary structures on a property, at least not around here.

My cousin recently built a barndominium about as simple as you can get. Guessing it's an 80' x 100' steel building with a one floor living area inside that's probably 20' x 60'. Finished really nice and it's about all you need.

He's going to move into that while he sells his 15k sqft place out west.

Eventually he'll probably build another house near his barndominium. I'd be happy with his barndominium.
 
My cousin recently built a barndominium about as simple as you can get. Guessing it's an 80' x 100' steel building with a one floor living area inside that's probably 20' x 60'. Finished really nice and it's about all you need.

He's going to move into that while he sells his 15k sqft place out west.

Eventually he'll probably build another house near his barndominium. I'd be happy with his barndominium.

15k sqft?!? Dang. I’m feeling guilty for not downsizing and still buying tools at the drop of the hat.
 
Novak Conversions Jeep Wrangler TJ radiator