So what you are saying is, after 19 wives and 5 Jeeps or is it 5 wives and 19 jeeps(i get confused easily) @TheBoogieman ain't never gonna be able to retire![]()
Kinda sounds like me, but retarded (retired), same thing
So what you are saying is, after 19 wives and 5 Jeeps or is it 5 wives and 19 jeeps(i get confused easily) @TheBoogieman ain't never gonna be able to retire![]()
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.
I feel like Austin Powers post-thaw, I can't believe how much the market has changed in a few decades, my head is stuck in the 90s when there was a shit-ton of houses on the market all the time, prices weren't laughable & 'bidding-war' wasn't a term anyone used.
If it is any consolation, some rumor mills predict a 2008 style real estate market crash in the next couple years. If you're a betting man...
I remember when I first proposed to my wife that we should move to Idaho. I'd get on sites like Zillow, punch in my price range and other requirements, and there'd be a dozen pages of homes available that fit the criteria. Punching in those some requirements, but with an adjusted price range that I would still be comfortable with, now will net me maybe four or five pages. During the "plandemic", there were times where there was less than a full page of listings available.![]()
Yep. years ago we planned to move to ID from CA. But once my retirement time came 3 years ago, the homes with decent property size in ID went from $200K to $850K or more... in a few years.
If it is any consolation, some rumor mills predict a 2008 style real estate market crash in the next couple years. If you're a betting man...
Agreed. Problem with that is that the house he's selling will also take a hit on "value" and potential for a sale. At least, that's the way I understand it. It seems that unless he's in an area that doesn't suffer the effects of a real estate crash quite as much as others (the area I'm in is one such place, due to the types of jobs available in the area, though that could also change this time around due to political influences). If someone knows my evaluation of the market to be flawed, please feel free to correct me. I'm no expert, by any stretch of the imagination.
If one is a betting man... Maybe sell the house while you still have a market, then buy 'IF' the bottom falls out and you'll have pick of the litter and can 'go up'. If the real estate market doesn't crash, you may lose a bit and be lateral or a bit less than that.
Sell when the tide is high and buy when the tide is low. Live in an RV for a couple years, But capital gains may get you if you can't shelter the equity somehow temporarily. I don't know if buying an RV or mobile home qualifies as a capital gains shelter. Pardon the pun. Real estate tax folks with far greater knowledge than I is needed. IDK, but in a perfect world...
Of course if the interest rates don't come down. Or even go up, It's a HUGE factor. Bought my first home for 130K at 8% interest (1980s).. Bought my current farm for 3X more at <3% interest. The monthly payment (PITI), is less for my farm than my 1st house!
The best thing you can do is not waste money - now or after you retire. I certainly wasted my share of it, but not nearly as much as many do.
here’s a message here for the younger guys
This isn't exactly on point for this thread but tangentially related. Part of my game-plan at this stage in life is a greater emphasis on health, it will continue being a large focus in the coming years. I've never not exercised but about a year ago I stepped up the game a bit, hired a personal trainer last summer to design a strength training program for me following my grasp of the evils of sarcopenia. I've been following that for almost a year now & I've seen pretty steady gains and results, feeling very much better physically.
I've done some studying on nutrition as well, which is the other important half of this whole operation. I've come to realize the importance of protein, something I've always struggled with getting enough down. To that end I've been slowly altering the balance towards higher protein intake by adding more lean meats, chicken & fish. I've also added protein shakes following workouts which are 3x/week. Not much of a fan of just randomly drinking a protein shake however, so the other 4 days I just get it in the form of whole foods, better anyway as far as I can tell.
Until I stumbled onto this contraption, the Ninja Creami. Apparently these things have been around for years yet somehow they didn't cross my radar until a few weeks ago on YouTube. I just happened to be visiting my daughter two weeks ago & asked her if she had heard of these, she laughed & pulled one out of her cabinet, pulled a ready to go pint out of her freezer & made it. Blown away.
There is an entire world of protein 'ice-cream' recipes out there. Who knew you could make a pint of something that tastes just like ice cream but rather than being a 1200 calorie tub of fat & sugar is instead a 300 calorie tub of 60 grams of protein & no fat that tastes nearly the same.
So far I've made vanilla, chocolate, strawberry, peanut butter, & currently I've got a batch of coffee ice cream in the freezer to try tomorrow.
This thing will be helping me boost the intake of protein for sure
View attachment 616202
My first shot a strawberry, after the batch was done I mixed in a pile of fresh strawberries, it was excellent
View attachment 616203
This isn't exactly on point for this thread but tangentially related. Part of my game-plan at this stage in life is a greater emphasis on health, it will continue being a large focus in the coming years. I've never not exercised but about a year ago I stepped up the game a bit, hired a personal trainer last summer to design a strength training program for me following my grasp of the evils of sarcopenia. I've been following that for almost a year now & I've seen pretty steady gains and results, feeling very much better physically.
I've done some studying on nutrition as well, which is the other important half of this whole operation. I've come to realize the importance of protein, something I've always struggled with getting enough down. To that end I've been slowly altering the balance towards higher protein intake by adding more lean meats, chicken & fish. I've also added protein shakes following workouts which are 3x/week. Not much of a fan of just randomly drinking a protein shake however, so the other 4 days I just get it in the form of whole foods, better anyway as far as I can tell.
Until I stumbled onto this contraption, the Ninja Creami. Apparently these things have been around for years yet somehow they didn't cross my radar until a few weeks ago on YouTube. I just happened to be visiting my daughter two weeks ago & asked her if she had heard of these, she laughed & pulled one out of her cabinet, pulled a ready to go pint out of her freezer & made it. Blown away.
There is an entire world of protein 'ice-cream' recipes out there. Who knew you could make a pint of something that tastes just like ice cream but rather than being a 1200 calorie tub of fat & sugar is instead a 300 calorie tub of 60 grams of protein & no fat that tastes nearly the same.
So far I've made vanilla, chocolate, strawberry, peanut butter, & currently I've got a batch of coffee ice cream in the freezer to try tomorrow.
This thing will be helping me boost the intake of protein for sure
View attachment 616202
My first shot a strawberry, after the batch was done I mixed in a pile of fresh strawberries, it was excellent
View attachment 616203
I'll have to mention that to my wife and make sure we don't have one haha. I had cancer/chemo 14 years ago and now can't eat many things because they will upset my stomach. Ice cream is one of them. So curious if I'd be able to eat this.
also good for frozen margaritas and Piña coladas...lol My daughter has this and is always making high protein mixes.
I'll have to mention that to my wife and make sure we don't have one haha. I had cancer/chemo 14 years ago and now can't eat many things because they will upset my stomach. Ice cream is one of them. So curious if I'd be able to eat this.
