I keep looking at this thread and wondering ....
I think there are two questions here: 1) what made you pull the trigger on retirement and 2) what if I hate the camping/travel thing.
I "retired" at 57. It's been 5 years and I'm still not sure what "retirement" means for me. There were many reasons why I walked away from spending my life doing things I didn't want to do for people I didn't respect. Some of those reasons were personal and some professional and some financial. The short answer is that I was in a long delayed and much deserved meltdown and I needed to make some big changes. The only definition I have for retirement is that now I'm in charge. I enjoy working, so I might work for $ again. But I won't do anything I don't want to do and I won't work for people I don't respect. I don't have to like them, but I do have to respect them.
Well, what if you do hate the rv/camping/travel thing? What I tell myself is that if I hate it I just point the rig toward home and start dreaming up the next adventure. What's important to me is that I know why I'm doing it. What desire do I think this experience will fulfill. I lost that for a while, but I have it back, fully articulated and visualized. So even though I've really wanted to just walk away from the whole thing (I still haven't gotten to the camping/travel parts of the trilogy), I think I'm back on track. If I get out on the road and find that I'm not accomplishing what I set out to do, I'll head home, gnash my teeth for awhile and then celebrate that I took the chance, count up the lessons learned and apply them to the next adventure. Most important, I'll always have money for a plane ride home (puppers too) and a change of clean underwear.
On Edit: Was reading thread again and it occurred to me that you might have equated retirement and the rv/camping/travel thing. They aren't the same. I know that when you've worked as hard as you have to get ready and you join this forum where there's so much enthusiasm and knowledge that it's easy to get a bit of tunnel vision. At least it was for me. But I am quite certain that being retired, whatever that means to you, and this whole rv/camping/travel adventure are not the same. You could retire tomorrow, decide to drive the van off a cliff, and still create a very happy retirement phase of life. You could drive off into the sunset and find a job you love in the next town or work online from wherever you park for the day. Whew! I've worn myself out with all this deep insight.
Last edited by Olive600 on Mon Sep 02, 2013 6:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.