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  3. If you won the lottery...

If you won the lottery...

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  • F Forogar

    ...and had enough to retire comfortably, would you? I have often thought that the job I am doing is sufficiently interesting in its own right that I might not give it up straight away. On the other hand I am developing other software for fun so would have more time for that. I had also always wanted to travel the world (difficult at the moment) and have done a fair amount already having been to places as different as Tunisia, Hong Kong, Barbados, Crete, Corfu, Great Britain, most of Europe and a fair amount of the USA and some of Canada. Could I fit this in with sticking to my existing job? What would you do, money no object? (Within reason, no Moon or Mars trips, etc.)

    - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

    B Offline
    B Offline
    Bruce Patin
    wrote on last edited by
    #35

    I already have enough to retire comfortably, and I am still working until my wife retires.

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    • F Forogar

      ...and had enough to retire comfortably, would you? I have often thought that the job I am doing is sufficiently interesting in its own right that I might not give it up straight away. On the other hand I am developing other software for fun so would have more time for that. I had also always wanted to travel the world (difficult at the moment) and have done a fair amount already having been to places as different as Tunisia, Hong Kong, Barbados, Crete, Corfu, Great Britain, most of Europe and a fair amount of the USA and some of Canada. Could I fit this in with sticking to my existing job? What would you do, money no object? (Within reason, no Moon or Mars trips, etc.)

      - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

      A Offline
      A Offline
      agolddog
      wrote on last edited by
      #36

      Turns out, I didn't even have to win the lottery. Just had a combination of decent skill in a pretty high-paying industry and a simple lifestyle. (Hint to the younger folks. It's not how much you make, it's how much you spend). The intention was to travel, but coronas. I hope to get back on that path after vaccination. For now, I'm finding enough to do around the house, fixing, cleaning, yard work, projects, etc. If I enjoyed my job, I would still be working. The last place I worked was populated by willfully ignorant consultants (branching too hard, MVC too hard, we'll just hard-code values, etc, etc). Plus, I hated the WFH/teams process COVID forced upon us. I don't recall what specifically caused me to do the analysis, but at some point last summer, I actually looked at my expenditures vs my resources, and concluded I'm never going to spend the money I already have. So, why go to a job I don't particularly like? I suppose it's possible I'll re-enter the workforce at some point. I'm not looking, so it would have to be some kind of coincidence to hear about the "right job" I'd be willing to take, seems pretty unlikely.

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      • L Lost User

        I'm retired and have visited quite a few parts of the world; but there are still places I would like to see. I, and SWMBO, are fairly comfortable financially, but our children less so. If I won a lot of money it would mostly be shared out amongst them. Oh, and coding I still learn and do for fun. One day I might even be good at it.

        K Offline
        K Offline
        Kirk 10389821
        wrote on last edited by
        #37

        Curious question... What is the difference in how you value money and how your children value money? I often find that people like you think of money in terms of effort required to acquire it, and people who can't seem to hold onto it seem to think of it as "a medium of exchange", meaning "something I must give up, in order to get what I want". I say all of this, because throughout my life, I can say that this seems VERY TRUE to me: The last thing a person with financial problems needs is more money! This is why most people who do win the lottery are worse off 5+ years later. The problem is usually their value system... That must be fixed first. I am proud to say my daughter values money like I do. "A storehouse of prior work effort", and at a young age has a retirement plan, owns a little BITCOIN, and only has a car payment to develop her credit after college. While using Covid as an excuse to live in as many states as possible, willing to pay that rent vs. staying at home for free (so, not being stingy, but extracting maximum value)... I hope your children find their footing. Dave Ramsey, The Wealthy Barber, FIRE are all things I would share with them. (I usually start by explaining Net Worth vs Monthly Expenses, LOL)

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        • F Forogar

          ...and had enough to retire comfortably, would you? I have often thought that the job I am doing is sufficiently interesting in its own right that I might not give it up straight away. On the other hand I am developing other software for fun so would have more time for that. I had also always wanted to travel the world (difficult at the moment) and have done a fair amount already having been to places as different as Tunisia, Hong Kong, Barbados, Crete, Corfu, Great Britain, most of Europe and a fair amount of the USA and some of Canada. Could I fit this in with sticking to my existing job? What would you do, money no object? (Within reason, no Moon or Mars trips, etc.)

          - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

          K Offline
          K Offline
          Kirk 10389821
          wrote on last edited by
          #38

          It depends on the size of the lottery. I have a buddy with a charity to help "at-risk" kids get their hands on technology in after-school time! [Think Computer Camp, Daily until mom/dad can pick them up. Build Robots, Fly Drones, write software] I would fund that, and volunteer a bit. == Just big enough to cover the bills... I would keep doing what I am doing. == Really Large Lottery? I would work with KahnAcademy on virtualizing school even more. Using AI to mentor kids, change topics, repeat questions, develop their confidence in learning. Integrating Physical/Mental breaks into their days. == Massively Large Lottery? I would bring public attention to the Health Crisis, and the root cause of "Corrupted Feedback" in the system that keeps us Fat, Sick, and Tired. [The #1 cause of blindness is Complications from Type 2 Diabetes. A Disease that is caused by consuming excess carbohydrates. WRONGLY Described as TOO MUCH Glucose, but really "Too Much Insulin", and if you use the latter definition, you WOULD find it ~10 years in advance, and fix it with Low-Carb Lifestyle (the most studied diet, in history, FWIW)] The only reason I would bother to do this latter, isn't my passion, per se. It's because it's the leading root cause of MOST of our chronic diseases. If you have Arthritis, Joint Pains, Skin Conditions, you must look at processed foods in your diet. Instead we are being PUSHED to eat MORE grains (a clearly processed food), seed oils (inflammatory), sugar (makes it all taste great). Going carnivore. I've lost 100lbs, reversed my pre-diabetes, lowered my Blood Pressure, resolved my psoriasis, eczema, dandruff, joint pains, SNORING, sleeping problems, and cognitive decline. The word is SLOWLY getting out there. Lots of programmers/engineers in the groups that go Keto/Carnivore. Because we like things that work, and dislike Dogma!

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • K Kirk 10389821

            Curious question... What is the difference in how you value money and how your children value money? I often find that people like you think of money in terms of effort required to acquire it, and people who can't seem to hold onto it seem to think of it as "a medium of exchange", meaning "something I must give up, in order to get what I want". I say all of this, because throughout my life, I can say that this seems VERY TRUE to me: The last thing a person with financial problems needs is more money! This is why most people who do win the lottery are worse off 5+ years later. The problem is usually their value system... That must be fixed first. I am proud to say my daughter values money like I do. "A storehouse of prior work effort", and at a young age has a retirement plan, owns a little BITCOIN, and only has a car payment to develop her credit after college. While using Covid as an excuse to live in as many states as possible, willing to pay that rent vs. staying at home for free (so, not being stingy, but extracting maximum value)... I hope your children find their footing. Dave Ramsey, The Wealthy Barber, FIRE are all things I would share with them. (I usually start by explaining Net Worth vs Monthly Expenses, LOL)

            L Offline
            L Offline
            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #39

            Kirk 10389821 wrote:

            What is the difference in how you value money and how your children value money?

            They have the same set of values as we do. I think you made a mistaken assumption from what I wrote. When I said they were less financially comfortable, I just meant that they still need to work for a living. A lottery win would give them the freedom to choose whether to continue or not. ps Why the huge text? We are all capable of reading standard size font.

            K 1 Reply Last reply
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            • L Lost User

              Kirk 10389821 wrote:

              What is the difference in how you value money and how your children value money?

              They have the same set of values as we do. I think you made a mistaken assumption from what I wrote. When I said they were less financially comfortable, I just meant that they still need to work for a living. A lottery win would give them the freedom to choose whether to continue or not. ps Why the huge text? We are all capable of reading standard size font.

              K Offline
              K Offline
              Kirk 10389821
              wrote on last edited by
              #40

              First, apologies... Glad to hear that. Second, thank you, I don't usually work with Markdown, and my "==" separator is some kind of MD to use a big font, not my intention, I fixed it!

              L 1 Reply Last reply
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              • K Kirk 10389821

                First, apologies... Glad to hear that. Second, thank you, I don't usually work with Markdown, and my "==" separator is some kind of MD to use a big font, not my intention, I fixed it!

                L Offline
                L Offline
                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #41

                Kirk 10389821 wrote:

                Markdown

                It is a bit of pain, and often catches me out.

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                • F Forogar

                  ...and had enough to retire comfortably, would you? I have often thought that the job I am doing is sufficiently interesting in its own right that I might not give it up straight away. On the other hand I am developing other software for fun so would have more time for that. I had also always wanted to travel the world (difficult at the moment) and have done a fair amount already having been to places as different as Tunisia, Hong Kong, Barbados, Crete, Corfu, Great Britain, most of Europe and a fair amount of the USA and some of Canada. Could I fit this in with sticking to my existing job? What would you do, money no object? (Within reason, no Moon or Mars trips, etc.)

                  - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

                  S Offline
                  S Offline
                  sasadler
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #42

                  Explore the US in an RV and anonymously donate funds to soup kitchens, homeless shelters, etc that I discover on my journeys. I'd still need an internet connection and a few computers to play with.

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                  • F Forogar

                    ...and had enough to retire comfortably, would you? I have often thought that the job I am doing is sufficiently interesting in its own right that I might not give it up straight away. On the other hand I am developing other software for fun so would have more time for that. I had also always wanted to travel the world (difficult at the moment) and have done a fair amount already having been to places as different as Tunisia, Hong Kong, Barbados, Crete, Corfu, Great Britain, most of Europe and a fair amount of the USA and some of Canada. Could I fit this in with sticking to my existing job? What would you do, money no object? (Within reason, no Moon or Mars trips, etc.)

                    - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

                    S Offline
                    S Offline
                    SeattleC
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #43

                    When I was younger, and was the most employable person I knew, I would have said no. I would have kept working and banked the lottery winnings. Now I'm closer to the end of my career than the beginning, and it's hard to get hired, and I've seen 30-year-old managers make the same rookie mistakes enough times to call the outcome correctly practically all the time, I would definitely retire.

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                    • F Forogar

                      ...and had enough to retire comfortably, would you? I have often thought that the job I am doing is sufficiently interesting in its own right that I might not give it up straight away. On the other hand I am developing other software for fun so would have more time for that. I had also always wanted to travel the world (difficult at the moment) and have done a fair amount already having been to places as different as Tunisia, Hong Kong, Barbados, Crete, Corfu, Great Britain, most of Europe and a fair amount of the USA and some of Canada. Could I fit this in with sticking to my existing job? What would you do, money no object? (Within reason, no Moon or Mars trips, etc.)

                      - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

                      W Offline
                      W Offline
                      willichan
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #44

                      My wife's habits would probably change instantly, but I would keep working until normal retirement age. Then I would put together my woodworking shop, and make furniture until the day I die. Money makes the world go round ... but documentation moves the money.

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                      • F Forogar

                        ...and had enough to retire comfortably, would you? I have often thought that the job I am doing is sufficiently interesting in its own right that I might not give it up straight away. On the other hand I am developing other software for fun so would have more time for that. I had also always wanted to travel the world (difficult at the moment) and have done a fair amount already having been to places as different as Tunisia, Hong Kong, Barbados, Crete, Corfu, Great Britain, most of Europe and a fair amount of the USA and some of Canada. Could I fit this in with sticking to my existing job? What would you do, money no object? (Within reason, no Moon or Mars trips, etc.)

                        - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        matblue25
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #45

                        Been retired for 12 years. When I have time, I still code for things I think are needed. My problem is I see more things that need help than I have time to devote to it. Mostly I golf and travel. Best job I've ever had.

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                        • F Forogar

                          ...and had enough to retire comfortably, would you? I have often thought that the job I am doing is sufficiently interesting in its own right that I might not give it up straight away. On the other hand I am developing other software for fun so would have more time for that. I had also always wanted to travel the world (difficult at the moment) and have done a fair amount already having been to places as different as Tunisia, Hong Kong, Barbados, Crete, Corfu, Great Britain, most of Europe and a fair amount of the USA and some of Canada. Could I fit this in with sticking to my existing job? What would you do, money no object? (Within reason, no Moon or Mars trips, etc.)

                          - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

                          M Offline
                          M Offline
                          Mathew Crothers
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #46

                          In my previous role it would have been a 100% yes I would keep working. Now that I've moved into management it now a resounding 100% no. I would be out of here in a heart beat. However, I am still at the same company so I might give them 2 weeks notice to find my replacement. Then I would start a brewery!!!

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                          • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

                            ... I'd stop believing in the laws of probability ... :-D

                            "I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony "Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!

                            K Offline
                            K Offline
                            K Personett
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #47

                            I would likely do more Open Source Development... Most likely some extensions that I have on the back burner that would tie into the product I currently develop for my employer. Perhaps also pull out some archived shareware I wrote long ago, update it and re-release it as open source, as I've not found anything like it available on the web, but I know that there is a desire for it in specific circles. I would also start up several (4 or 5) side businesses that I've wanted to implement, unrelated to software development, and specifically beneficial to the small community that I live in (I live way out in the country on forty acres). I'd also likely try to purchase some of my neighbor's land so that I could raise more cattle.

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                            • F Forogar

                              ...and had enough to retire comfortably, would you? I have often thought that the job I am doing is sufficiently interesting in its own right that I might not give it up straight away. On the other hand I am developing other software for fun so would have more time for that. I had also always wanted to travel the world (difficult at the moment) and have done a fair amount already having been to places as different as Tunisia, Hong Kong, Barbados, Crete, Corfu, Great Britain, most of Europe and a fair amount of the USA and some of Canada. Could I fit this in with sticking to my existing job? What would you do, money no object? (Within reason, no Moon or Mars trips, etc.)

                              - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

                              U Offline
                              U Offline
                              User 14060113
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #48

                              Of course I would retire from any commercial occupation immediately. That doesn't mean I wouldn't work any more, but I would work on projects I want to work on, for as many (or rather: as few) hours a day as I want. And it doesn't necessarily have to be programming, might also be music, social projects or anything. Also, I would give the 10 most important persons in my life 100,000 € each, so they can share my joy. Yes, traveling. I don't like flying or going by ship, but maybe I would buy myself a caravan, so I can travel and feel at home at the same time.

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                              • F Forogar

                                ...and had enough to retire comfortably, would you? I have often thought that the job I am doing is sufficiently interesting in its own right that I might not give it up straight away. On the other hand I am developing other software for fun so would have more time for that. I had also always wanted to travel the world (difficult at the moment) and have done a fair amount already having been to places as different as Tunisia, Hong Kong, Barbados, Crete, Corfu, Great Britain, most of Europe and a fair amount of the USA and some of Canada. Could I fit this in with sticking to my existing job? What would you do, money no object? (Within reason, no Moon or Mars trips, etc.)

                                - I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                Matt McGuire
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #49

                                I think I would start my own business, knowing I could afford to pay the day to day bills without worry. and work on only the projects that were interesting to me, after all I could be picky at that point.

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