- Messages
- 10,839
- Location
- vancouver, canada
I too never had any grand goals or even ideas on the 'what' of adulting. University for me was a grand adventure in pursuing the 'big ideas' not as vocational training. 5 years of drinking coffee, discussing philosophy, solving the world's ills and smoking cigarettes is not real career prep. At one point I figured I would just continue the work I started at 12, in the carnival, and that would be my life's work. Not a bad gig with winters off. But at some point I acquired loftier ambitions. Depending on one's definition of career or the length of time a job needs to qualify as a career I just might be on my 7th or 8th different one. And I am totally fine with that.......it has been an interesting ride so far.I never had any concrete aspirations for an adult career when I was a youngster (no realistic ones, anyway), and I’ve been somewhat less than specific in that regard ever since. And here I am at what we used to call “retirement age” and I’m still passing much of my time working, but I wouldn’t call it toiling. I’m still bringing in some scratch and I have no plans for quitting any of my money-making activities. It’s not that I couldn’t “retire,” but work gives me some sense of purpose. It’s not such a bad existence.
A friend came into a wad — more than a million — when certain of his relatives croaked. He tried retirement and found it didn’t suit him. And I found that totally understandable.
Hat making likely will be my last until my body fully breaks down and I am relegated to fulltime sitting in my easy chair watching baseball on the telly.