Just thought it would make for an interesting discussion. As per the title, do you save hard for retirement at the expense of living your life quite the way you wish you could currently, or do you spend a lot now at the expense of later, knowing that tomorrow is never guaranteed?
I used to save a lot more than I do now.
However, starting about 6 or 8 years ago I had a real perspective shift after watching a number of my coworkers never make it to the "enjoyment" stage of life despite being the types who saved every penny, worked 70-80 hour weeks, and never seemed to really splurge on anything.
One guy worried endlessly about his stocks and how much it every little bear run would cost him in retirement. He died a few years before he was due to retire.
One guy worked every single hour he could possibly legally work, and even some that he wasn't technically legally able to work (but fudged so he could) 46 weeks of every year, only stopping for his 6 weeks of vacation which he took in one big shot. He finally retired, headed off into the sunset seemingly prepared to enjoy it, and died 3 weeks later. Never collected a single pension cheque.
Several others made it 2-5 years and passed away. I know one guy I really enjoyed working with who retired about 4 years ago who now has cancer and is counting his days.
A few have made it decent lengths of time, but several ended up so crippled from the realities of my industry that they've struggled to enjoy retirement because their bodies have become a jail to them.
So, knowing that I might very well be in the same boat as several of these guys (The trucking industry is physically hard on your body, & the average lifespan is 61!), I had a perspective shift and decided to live my life now, not later. Because later may never happen. And even if I do reach "later", the rigors of ~40 years in the industry may, by that point, have me so banged up that I won't be able to enjoy myself.
So we vacation, a lot. We travel with our RV, a lot. I ride, a lot. My wife rides too, albeit less lol. We think nothing of throwing a money at fun weekends away, dinners out, having fun with friends, and spur of the moment vacations and getaways. Yeah, we're lucky to be in a situation where we can afford to do that, but I know that some think we're pissing it all away now and won't be able to enjoy life perhaps to it's "fullest" in retirement as a result.
But what if you never actually reach retirement?
I used to save a lot more than I do now.
However, starting about 6 or 8 years ago I had a real perspective shift after watching a number of my coworkers never make it to the "enjoyment" stage of life despite being the types who saved every penny, worked 70-80 hour weeks, and never seemed to really splurge on anything.
One guy worried endlessly about his stocks and how much it every little bear run would cost him in retirement. He died a few years before he was due to retire.
One guy worked every single hour he could possibly legally work, and even some that he wasn't technically legally able to work (but fudged so he could) 46 weeks of every year, only stopping for his 6 weeks of vacation which he took in one big shot. He finally retired, headed off into the sunset seemingly prepared to enjoy it, and died 3 weeks later. Never collected a single pension cheque.
Several others made it 2-5 years and passed away. I know one guy I really enjoyed working with who retired about 4 years ago who now has cancer and is counting his days.
A few have made it decent lengths of time, but several ended up so crippled from the realities of my industry that they've struggled to enjoy retirement because their bodies have become a jail to them.
So, knowing that I might very well be in the same boat as several of these guys (The trucking industry is physically hard on your body, & the average lifespan is 61!), I had a perspective shift and decided to live my life now, not later. Because later may never happen. And even if I do reach "later", the rigors of ~40 years in the industry may, by that point, have me so banged up that I won't be able to enjoy myself.
So we vacation, a lot. We travel with our RV, a lot. I ride, a lot. My wife rides too, albeit less lol. We think nothing of throwing a money at fun weekends away, dinners out, having fun with friends, and spur of the moment vacations and getaways. Yeah, we're lucky to be in a situation where we can afford to do that, but I know that some think we're pissing it all away now and won't be able to enjoy life perhaps to it's "fullest" in retirement as a result.
But what if you never actually reach retirement?