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  #1  
Old Jun 22, 2004, 11:49 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2004
Angry Worried about retirement

I've worked for 24 years at the same hospital, so I built quite a reasonable pension, but still. I'm divorced so I'll have to pay everything myself. So when do I retire? Any other women inhere with the same issues?

God, if the economy had stayed high, I could've retired last year. Wish Clinton was back. I bought his book yesterday on his book tour diary site. He says if you can't make it to a book signing event, you can send the book to his library and get it signed. Now that's a good guy.


Last edited by canoehead : Jun 22, 2004 at 02:47 PM. Reason: advertisement
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  #2  
Old Jun 22, 2004, 11:56 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2003
Smile my solution work till I'm 75

Yeh, the pension plans we have now days just don't cut it. I plan on burning the mortgage in 10 years. Then cutting back on work from 5 to 4 about 60; then 4 to 3 about 70; then 3 to 2 about 75 and so on. I have seen many people retire who made a mistake though some of them don't admit it.

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  #3  
Old Jun 22, 2004, 12:29 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2003

Yea, I plan on working until I'm in my 80's too.

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  #4  
Old Jun 22, 2004, 12:31 PM
llg
allnurses.com Guide
Join Date: Sep 2002

I am single. So, yes, I'll be paying for everything myself, too, and worry about retirement. I won't have a pension because I have always worked for hospitals that had 403b plans. I prefer that as I have been able to "take my retirement money with me" each time I have changed jobs and I have been able to invest it as I prefered.

However, I still ask myself "How much is enough?" At what point do I say, "This is enough and I can stop now." My sister was a public school teacher for 30 years and is retiring this year at the age of 51. Her pension (as a state employee) guarantees her 60% of her current salary for the rest of her life -- adjusted annually for inflation. She figures she will work part time as a substitute for another 10 years or so, then completely retire.

Like a previous poster, I hope to be able to phase down my work hours, dropping to part time in my late 50's, then completely retire in my mid-60's.

llg

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  #5  
Old Jun 22, 2004, 01:12 PM
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Join Date: Sep 2000

as for Clinton, HELLO! That is a marketing trick to get you to buy the book. That guy could not recall anything while he was president and now, suddenly, his memory has been restored. Amazing feat.

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  #6  
Old Jun 22, 2004, 02:02 PM
CeCiRN's Avatar
CeCiRN (Female)
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2003

Originally Posted by purplemania
as for Clinton, HELLO! That is a marketing trick to get you to buy the book. That guy could not recall anything while he was president and now, suddenly, his memory has been restored. Amazing feat.
Whatever!!!! He's still a far better president than that loon we have in the White House now...At least when Clinton was president the economy was great, we were all working. So he had an affair, what world leader hasn't??? At least it didn't cause the deaths of 800 of our troops and we had a little prestige in the world.

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  #7  
Old Jun 22, 2004, 02:27 PM
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Join Date: Jun 2003
Smile Not to mention our tax dollars !!

And deficit, though according to mr Cheney "deficits dont' matter ".

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  #8  
Old Jun 22, 2004, 02:53 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Some married women have no retirement benefits either....

I expect to work until I drop. It's a good thing that I enjoy working, huh? I'm married but for retirement purposes, I may as well be single. Actually it's a little worse than that.

In Texas, community property means that everything a wife accumulates while her husband isn't working is theirs (i.e., she has to share it with him), and the tax return goes to him. Isn't that nice? Everything he accumulated before the marriage is his. Since women finally are earning 72 cents on the male dollar, you can imagine how much I have accumulated....

Meanwhile, he hasn't rewritten his will since his first wife died, and his ne'er-do-well sister (he shares this opinion of her) will inherit everything, including this house. He believes he doesn't have to do anything, because in Texas the wife inherits everything. He will not accept that if there is a will, and the wife isn't in it, and the husband dies, the wife doesn't get squat.

It is also his opinion that I should be paying him some sort of rent for the privilege of living here, because he pays the taxes on the property from his investment income. (You guessed it, I'm not on the title to the house, either.) He does not see keeping the house clean and tidy and tending to his every whim as worth any money.

Sometimes it is a little hard to do all the little nice things for him that I enjoy doing, and to remind myself that I will have to take care of myself, because there isn't anyone else to do it.

The sad upshot is that soon I will be working as an RN, and while I won't be making the big bucks he did when he was working (engineers can't get jobs in our area), he will be expecting me to turn my check over to him. It isn't going to happen this time around.

I suspect that there will be a big fight when I don't, and a bigger one when he figures out that I am having the most minimal amount withheld from my paycheck possible.

I have considered divorce--not to live apart or because I don't love him, because I do, but because it is the only way I can actually benefit from my own efforts, and protect my own old age. It would be sad, wouldn't it, to have to go to those lengths? I'm hoping he wises up before then, but I am not holding my breath. On the other hand, that would be one way to solve my retirement crisis, wouldn't it?


Last edited by chris_at_lucas : Jun 22, 2004 at 02:57 PM.
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  #9  
Old Jun 22, 2004, 04:20 PM
Tweety's Avatar
Tweety (Male)
Admin Team
Join Date: Oct 2002

At least you have a pension. The hospital I work at has no pension. We have a savings plan that we have to contribute to ourselves. It's tough to put money away to retire. I'm very worried. I just hope my health is good so I can continue to work until I'm in my 70s. By then I might have enough to retire. Hopefully, the house will be payed for.

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  #10  
Old Jun 22, 2004, 04:29 PM
CHATSDALE's Avatar
Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2004

CHRIS you need to move out and buy a house and invite him to come and live with you, he could sell the house you live in now and 'pay the rent to you" for a change....his sister shoulc be looking out for herself...and the divorce idea is not bad...then he will know that he is one step away from being shown the door...love is not enough when there's not bacon and eggs or a roof to eat them under

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