The only clock needed after retirement

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  • Allen
    Moderator
    • Sep 2009
    • 10583

    #1

    The only clock needed after retirement

    I usually know the time or about what time it is but have to think sometimes about what day it is.
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  • Oyaji
    Very Senior Member - OFC
    • Oct 2009
    • 4372

    #2
    Everyday is a holiday!

    Comment

    • Allen
      Moderator
      • Sep 2009
      • 10583

      #3
      Originally posted by Oyaji
      Everyday is a holiday!
      +1

      Well said.

      Comment

      • S.A. Boggs
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2009
        • 8568

        #4
        I have two medicine dispensers that tell me the date and morning/nite.
        Sam

        Comment

        • PWC
          Senior Member
          • Aug 2009
          • 1366

          #5
          Never need the word "vacation" after retirement. That implies going back to work. Every day is Saturday except Sunday.

          Comment

          • Major Tom
            Very Senior Member - OFC
            • Aug 2009
            • 6181

            #6
            Sometimes tho, "Every day is just another bite out of the sh!t sandwich"!! LOL

            Comment

            • Oyaji
              Very Senior Member - OFC
              • Oct 2009
              • 4372

              #7
              [QUOTE=Major Tom;658690]Sometimes tho, "Every day is just another bite out of the sh!t sandwich"!! LOL[/QUOTE

              You're not having lunch at Subway, are you? Might wanna try Jimmy John's or Jersey Mike's.
              Last edited by Oyaji; 08-13-2024, 01:38.

              Comment

              • Mark in Ottawa
                Senior Member
                • Sep 2009
                • 1744

                #8
                I had a colleague who retired. A few months later, he came back to the office for a going-away party and I asked him how he was finding retirement. He said that "every day is a Sunday" and that he was amusing himself by building a small house for his daughter (He is an engineering technologist). Turned out that after he had finished the house, he was so bored and without focus that he had a nervous breakdown that lasted until he went back to work.

                I fully understand this. I retired at age 57 and then went back to work twice and finally retired at age 67. It took me about 5 years to fully accept that I was not going to go back to work again.

                Comment

                • PWC
                  Senior Member
                  • Aug 2009
                  • 1366

                  #9
                  For at least 6 months after retirement, when .y wife and I were out during the day, I kept feeling guilty because I wasn't at "work".

                  For 2 yrs after I retired from the USAF every Sept or Oct my wife and I both got antsy feeling like new orders were coming.

                  Comment

                  • JohnMOhio
                    Senior Member
                    • Aug 2009
                    • 1545

                    #10
                    When I retired after 45 plus years of sales I never looked back. Felt great not to have to consider/worry as to keeping a client and or finding another replacement. Always looking for a new client. It felt as of a really heavy load was removed. Especially the mental one.
                    Peace is that brief glorious moment in history when everybody stands around reloading.
                    Author unkown.

                    Comment

                    • Oyaji
                      Very Senior Member - OFC
                      • Oct 2009
                      • 4372

                      #11
                      After I retired from the Navy in 1988, I had to go to work for a living.
                      Last edited by Oyaji; 08-16-2024, 06:15.

                      Comment

                      • Former Cav
                        Senior Member
                        • Sep 2009
                        • 2241

                        #12
                        when I retired I looked to my full time hobbies and claimed "I have 6 Saturdays a week and my job is to have FUN"
                        So, I embraced the shooting sports, Pistol, bowling pin matches, RIfle, NRA OTC and Palma, Old Muscle cars, Making homemade beer, DRINKING home made beer with all my shooting friends after a match or just a fun match etc.
                        I worked my life as a mechanical (CAD) designer, Manufacturing Engineer, and Mechanical Engr. I was always SALARIED and that meant "lots of FREE overtime" and when it came time for a raise (catch up with inflation) the companies always went into the "austerity mode". I worked half my career as a contractor (temporary or "rent a pencil" or "day & night engineering")
                        I NEVER looked back after I retired. I had FOUR GREAT bosses in all those years. That is 12 percent!!!!!!!!!!
                        The rest of the time, companies were being bought, sold, outsourced etc due to our wonderful "free trade policies".
                        Trump was RIGHT. We had NOTHING BUT DUMMIES negotiating with all the other countries. We gave away A LOT of our good jobs.

                        Comment

                        • JB White
                          Senior Member
                          • Aug 2009
                          • 13371

                          #13
                          The day I retired I flung my wristwatch and didn’t watch to see where it landed. After decades of clock watching I wanted nothing to do with it.
                          Still there was no joy. I volunteered for children’s charities. Meetings here. Events there. Phone calls and text messages are a constant. Serving on three boards and President on two of them simultaneously. More stress now than when I was running construction projects and meeting deadlines. Body clock still awakes me at 4:30 am no matter which day of the week.
                          Since receiving Fellowship I must wear regalia when I’m at the podium. Can’t bundle up enough in the cold and can’t shed enough layers in the heat.

                          Months ago I tried to pass the torch. Still trying to back away from the stress. Get some things done around the house that were put on the back burner. Buying a new concrete mixer this week. Replacing concrete steps, patio, and walkways. Just so I can finally relax. Back to where I started. Being a laborer. But this time I can do it at my leisure without watching the clock.

                          Retirement. Every day is Sunday?
                          Oh, I get it. It’s just a joke!
                          2016 Chicago Cubs. MLB Champions!


                          **Never quite as old as the other old farts**

                          Comment

                          • S.A. Boggs
                            Senior Member
                            • Aug 2009
                            • 8568

                            #14
                            8 years ago I was retired medically due to cancer and "learned" a different clock of med taking. Now I get up at 0 dark 30 when my two children need to go find a tree. Can't go back to bed as it might wake the boss, so I snuggle with Elwood in my recliner or go play in the toy room.
                            God getting me out of the clinic was the best thing that could have happened to me or most likely I would still be there.

                            Comment

                            • Johnny P
                              Senior Member
                              • Aug 2009
                              • 6258

                              #15
                              Every night is a Friday night, and every day is a Saturday.

                              I really enjoyed my job, but never missed it a single day.

                              Comment

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