On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 11:26 PM, Sandhya aka Sandy <
sandhya.varn...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Brilliant thoughts. Jumping back in with some personal perspective:


​I enjoyed this thread very much, as a person who's never had a full-time
career; I've been lucky to have a spouse earning the bread, and I've worked
part-time at very different tasks, most of which were not very financially
remunerative (yabbah, that word always gives me trouble...reMuNerative or
reNuMerative? my mind keeps asking.) I agree with Sandy....there's never
any lack of things to do. The point is to also have enough in the bank to
live as one wishes to do (also providing for a few emergencies along the
way.)

Sometimes, the retirement can be thrust upon one. I'd like to share the
experience of a very young friend of mine, Priyanka.  She worked full-time
for a (what else, in Bangalore?) software company until she was diagnosed
with a hole in the heart, which could not be laparoscopically treated.
Prior to surgery, she was also diagnosed with (I forget which type of)
diabetes which had to be treated and stabilized. So...without any prior
planning, it was a double whammy. She gave up her job, and the expenses, at
the same time, shot through the roof. Even now, she has am  injection each
day, that is very expensive indeed.

But since she and her husband have always been "give back to society"
people, she took all of it in a =most positive way. After she recovered
from the surgery,
she took up photography, which both of them were already reasonably
proficient at; she did not have to invest in more expensive equipment. She
cycled long distances.​
  She'd always volunteered for several organizations, working with deprived
children;
​she writes about recipes, particularly ones that she's deve​loping for her
present state of health.

Eg.

http://wanderingtastebuds.com/2014/06/11/wandering-with-healthy-taste-buds/


​She and her spouse, help run a group that organizes screenings of
ideology-based movies and documentaries every week in Bangalore. (It's
called Khula Manch, and everyone is welcome to the screenings.)

https://www.facebook.com/khulamanch



She's probably 22 or 23 now. She's set such a remarkable example for me,
and for anyone else, on how to handle "retirement". In comparison to her,
those of us who can plan ahead for our non-corporate job careers are
remarkably well off, I think.

Hats off to everyone who can turn their back on "careers" to pursue what
they want to do. But a special tip of the hat who make the most of even the
reverses in their lives, to do the same thing!

Cheers, Deepa.

​

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