TIME IS FADING FAST

Topic by Awakened

Awakened

Home Forums MGTOW Central TIME IS FADING FAST

This topic contains 52 replies, has 24 voices, and was last updated by SpiderHerder  SpiderHerder 9 months, 3 weeks ago.

Viewing 13 posts - 41 through 53 (of 53 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #896762
    +2
    Hermit
    Hermit
    Participant


    You will never see a new boat hitched on the back of a hearse. You can’t take it with you gents!

    Where do you find these beautiful corpse wagons?

    The evil in women’s hearts leaves them no moral bounds as to inhibit them from descending to the lowest levels of darkness to acquire their self entitled desires.

    #896763
    +1
    Ranger One
    Ranger One
    Participant
    16836

    I don’t doubt there is a person who has some kind of super slow metabolism, or some other kind of medical issue where they do not age like others do.

    You would be correct:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3134000/Man-26-looks-like-boy-suffers-condition-means-s-unable-grow-up.html

    All my life I've had doubts about who I am, where I belonged. Now I'm like the arrow that springs from the bow. No hesitation, no doubts. The path is clear. And what are you? Alive. Everything else is negotiable. Women have rights; men have responsibilities; MGTOW have freedom. Marriage is for chumps. If someone stands in the way of true justice, you simply walk up behind them and stab them in the heart-R'as al Ghul.

    #896764
    +5
    Gravel Pit
    Gravel Pit
    Participant

    I google “new boat behind a Hearse” lol, and click “Images”. That f u c king Hearse is made by Maseratti bro! At 130mph, you bust right through the Pearly Gates!

    That “Korean Peter Pan” article. [bursting with laughs] That HAS to be total bologna bro.

    Arent Telomeres responsible for aging? They wear down and cellualar rebuilding gets weaker and weaker… literally the process of aging. Cant be helped unless you had tiny quantum robots repairing your telemeres.

    I dont know. If we could escape aging via science, they sure as shi’te wouldnt tell us paupers.

    Telomeres are the caps at the end of each strand of DNA that protect our chromosomes, like the plastic tips at the end of shoelaces.3

    Without the coating, shoelaces become frayed until they can no longer do their job, just as without telomeres, DNA strands become damaged and our cells can’t do their job.3

    © What is a Telomere? | Human Cellular Aging | TA-65 TA Sciences
    Source: https://www.tasciences.com/what-is-a-telomere.html
    © Protected by WebToMed

    #896768
    +5
    Narwhal
    narwhal
    Participant

    The point is that it doesn’t matter how rich and famous you are or you’re not. Those years tick by so damn fast. I see these people at work that are in their 60’s, and they have enough resources to retire, but some just can’t get enough. Do they think they’re going to live forever?

    For a lot of folks, celebrities or otherwise, they’ve developed a dependency on their job that goes beyond just finances. Either they enjoy what they do so much that they’d rather keep doing it then retire, or they don’t know who they are if they are no longer working. It could even be that they hate their job, but the alternative is scarier than remaining where they are.

    I don’t think I’ll have that problem. I’m actually more concerned about the opposite case, as I seem to be enjoying my job less and less as times go by. The idea that I might still be doing this 20 years from now is rather disturbing to me. Chances are that I will be though, as I’ve been at other companies enough to know that it’s not likely to get better than this, and my company has a bonus policy that rewards years of service…hard to give up. I might be able to retire early, but I likely will not unless risk is very low.

    As far as saving money goes, I think the key is to defer raising your standard of living as much as possible. This is where people get lost. They trade in the old car for a new car, and have trouble going back to an old car for the rest of their lives. Once you’re used to a certain way of living, its’ very hard to go back. I think I’ve been moderately successful at this. I can easily live within my means, but I’ve gotten spoiled in a few areas that I wish I hadn’t. Still, I see many people with some rather bad spending habits, that they’ll struggle to stop, that I’ve managed to avoid.

    Ok. Then do it.

    #896776
    +2
    Hermit
    Hermit
    Participant

    I google “new boat behind a Hearse” lol, and click “Images”. That f u c king Hearse is made by Maseratti bro!

    That’s awesome.

    The evil in women’s hearts leaves them no moral bounds as to inhibit them from descending to the lowest levels of darkness to acquire their self entitled desires.

    #896801
    +3
    Ogre
    Ogre
    Participant
    5863

    As a man with a plan, I set things up 12, 10, 8 and more recent years ago to ALWAYS work out in my favor. My wife said she was waiting for the other shoe to drop in 2011.

    I’m beyond patient, I’m a ninja.

    Tick tock, tick tock.

    I made a million, and I can live on pennies. She sat in the dealership while I bought my walkaway.

    I failed to realize in my youth that I was the prize. I was going to work. I was going to earn. Little did I realize that due to feminism, that no longer meant I had to share. Road soon, Desert after.

    #896819
    +4
    Puffin Stuff
    Puffin Stuff
    Participant
    24979

    I retired at 53. Government pension making well into six figures and don’t need to leave the house. I’m 58 now. It takes a while to get the hang of retirement but I have it good now and I’m traveling before I get to old. My ex-wifes new husband is putting my son through college. She re-married well.

    #icethemout; Remember Thomas Ball. He died for your children.

    #896827
    +4
    RealityBites
    RealityBites
    Participant
    2198

    I am going to downsize…move out of state to a cheaper and smaller house. More acreage, fewer people around me, fewer restrictions. Big enough property for some garages and workshops and a good sized garden….I like being home. Home is my refuge in a pretty screwed up world.
    Been 9 months now since I retired…I’ve always had something to do, every day has been fun and peaceful without stress.
    When I was working there was a constant pressure, constant stress, lots of workplace rules, and of course BS going on with office politics, and women co-workers that I always had to be very careful when I was around them.
    The only thing I liked was the technical aspects of it, everything else I just hated…and I was so burned out on the BS going on….and then there were some of my co-workers who never made it too retirement but checked out early….with my health going down hill…I figured I would just eject….been really happy ever since.
    To be honest I was extremely worried about the finances…I knew if I retired I couldn’t come back and I couldn’t get a job that paid as well: I was too old. But that all worked out; I decided to downsize and reduce my monthly burn rate and just live very simply.

    #896831
    +1
    Ranger One
    Ranger One
    Participant
    16836

    I retired at 53. Government pension making well into six figures and don’t need to leave the house. I’m 58 now. It takes a while to get the hang of retirement but I have it good now and I’m traveling before I get to old. My ex-wifes new husband is putting my son through college. She re-married well.

    So, essentially he’s a cuckold, but in reverse, because he married her second.

    All my life I've had doubts about who I am, where I belonged. Now I'm like the arrow that springs from the bow. No hesitation, no doubts. The path is clear. And what are you? Alive. Everything else is negotiable. Women have rights; men have responsibilities; MGTOW have freedom. Marriage is for chumps. If someone stands in the way of true justice, you simply walk up behind them and stab them in the heart-R'as al Ghul.

    #896833
    +2
    Puffin Stuff
    Puffin Stuff
    Participant
    24979

    I retired at 53. Government pension making well into six figures and don’t need to leave the house. I’m 58 now. It takes a while to get the hang of retirement but I have it good now and I’m traveling before I get to old. My ex-wifes new husband is putting my son through college. She re-married well.

    So, essentially he’s a cuckold, but in reverse, because he married her second.

    I would never pay for some other dudes kid to go to college.

    #icethemout; Remember Thomas Ball. He died for your children.

    #897475
    +2
    Maverick
    Maverick
    Participant
    811

    For all those guys thinking about poor f~~~s working until they die? Guys, that is their social life. I’m sorry, but its the truth. Why stop working? What else are most people going to do? Who are they going to spend the time with? People at home that don’t give a s~~~ about them? Most of these people have no real dreams or want to do anything anymore. SO WORK is ALL that they have. THey SAY they hate it. But its all they know.

    Have you seen all the posts (here and other forums) where people complain about the toxic co-workers they deal with? Not sure where you’re at, but it’s usually not a good idea to make friends at work.

    #897476
    +1
    Maverick
    Maverick
    Participant
    811

    I am going to downsize…move out of state to a cheaper and smaller house. More acreage, fewer people around me, fewer restrictions. Big enough property for some garages and workshops and a good sized garden….I like being home. Home is my refuge in a pretty screwed up world.Been 9 months now since I retired…I’ve always had something to do, every day has been fun and peaceful without stress.When I was working there was a constant pressure, constant stress, lots of workplace rules, and of course BS going on with office politics, and women co-workers that I always had to be very careful when I was around them.The only thing I liked was the technical aspects of it, everything else I just hated…and I was so burned out on the BS going on….and then there were some of my co-workers who never made it too retirement but checked out early….with my health going down hill…I figured I would just eject….been really happy ever since.To be honest I was extremely worried about the finances…I knew if I retired I couldn’t come back and I couldn’t get a job that paid as well: I was too old. But that all worked out; I decided to downsize and reduce my monthly burn rate and just live very simply.

    Crazy that we as a society tolerate so much nonsense in the workplace. The BS is pretty much everywhere in this day and age!

    #897477
    +1
    SpiderHerder
    SpiderHerder
    Participant
    3769

    Have you seen all the posts (here and other forums) where people complain about the toxic co-workers they deal with? Not sure where you’re at, but it’s usually not a good idea to make friends at work.

    Exactly. If it goes south, you’re stuck with them until you or they get a new job.

Viewing 13 posts - 41 through 53 (of 53 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.