All Content from Business Insider 10月11日
81岁老人讲述工作露营与送餐生活
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

本文讲述了81岁的Richard Smith的生活方式,他将大部分时间用于“工作露营”,即在营地工作换取免费或折扣营位,同时兼职送餐以补贴家用。Smith曾在美国电影行业工作数十年,但因投资失误导致退休储蓄不足。如今,他与妻子过着候鸟般的生活,冬季在佛罗里达州的家中,其余时间则在美国各地工作露营,并利用送餐服务来维持生计。尽管面临健康和财务挑战,他仍积极面对生活。

🚗 **工作露营与候鸟生活:** Richard Smith将一年中的半年时间用于“工作露营”,这是一种结合了工作和露营的生活方式,通常以劳动换取免费或折扣的营位及水电等。他和妻子冬季居住在佛罗里达州的家,其余时间则开着42英尺的房车在美国各地工作露营,目前已在新罕布什尔州工作露营多年,同时他还兼职送餐。

🎞️ **职业生涯与退休困境:** Smith曾在美国电影行业工作超过30年,从伊士曼柯达到好莱坞的电影制作实验室,再到加州一所大学的电影实验室担任经理。然而,由于年轻时未充分储蓄,加上后来在自管IRA中的风险投资失败,他的退休储蓄严重不足,目前仅有不到2万美元的IRA余额,并背负超过25万美元的债务,包括房贷和信用卡债务。

💰 **送餐与经济压力:** 为了弥补退休金的不足,Smith在新罕布什尔州营地担任夜间巡逻员,时薪15美元,妻子则负责营地小屋和卫生间的清洁工作。在非营地工作日,他会驾驶送餐,目标是每晚赚取约100美元。虽然送餐收入可观,但需要考虑车辆损耗和燃油成本。他坦言,即使如此,也难以偿还债务,有时甚至需要依靠信用卡支付医疗费用。

🩺 **健康状况与未来考量:** 尽管年事已高,Smith的健康状况相对较好,医生称他“非常幸运”。但他仍面临超重问题,并且最近接受了腕管手术,预计明年还将进行另一只手的治疗。他知道自己还能开车,但对高速驾驶已不再舒适。他承认,如果健康状况恶化或财务状况无法改善,最坏的情况下,他们可能会出售在佛罗里达的房产,以支持全职房车生活。

Richard Smith work camps for half of the year in New Hampshire.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Richard Smith, 81, who works part-time for the campground where he lives for half of the year and part-time driving for DoorDash. The following has been edited for length and clarity.

My wife and I have done work camping all across the country, including in New Hampshire and even Alaska. Work camping is a lifestyle that combines working and camping. Work campers often trade labor for compensation, which can include a free or discounted campsite, utilities, and sometimes wages.

We bought a house in Florida nine years ago and live there for six months in the winter. Our 42-foot Monaco Class A motor coach is our home for the other half of the year while we work camp. Since 2019, we've work camped in New Hampshire. I also do DoorDash in both places.

This year in New Hampshire, I'm working two jobs. I work at the campground Thursday through Sunday nights, and I drive for DoorDash Monday through Wednesday. I'm basically working seven days a week.

I worked for decades in the film industry

I started working back in January 1963 with Eastman Kodak in Rochester, and I worked for them for over 30 years.

I got married very young and had kids very quickly after. I had a family to support, so I worked full-time at Kodak, part-time in the evening at automotive stores, and went to night school. I wish I'd put money aside during this time and let it compound.

In the 1990s, I was offered an opportunity to work in Hollywood at a major motion picture film lab, and I moved out to Los Angeles to be their technical director. I worked for them until around 2004.

At that time, I fully intended on going full-time RVing and doing work camping; it was one of my lifelong dreams to travel the country in an RV. But a great opportunity came up at a university in California, and I worked as a film lab manager for the school's motion picture and television film lab, where they did archival restoration and preservation of all their film libraries.

I worked for them for another five years. I had planned on staying a few more years until I reached full retirement age, but then they offered me a retirement package in 2009, around the time the economy took a dive.

I accepted and invested my retirement package into a self-directed IRA.

I didn't save enough for retirement

Unfortunately, my self-directed IRA went to hell due to some stupid decisions; I made some risky investments.

Because I waited until later in life to invest, I wasn't able to set as much aside for retirement. Most people don't realize how much they really need for retirement, and more than likely, they're going to outlive their retirement funds.

In 2009, I came across Workamper News, which was a good resource for finding jobs throughout the country. I signed up as a member, and it's how I found a lot of work.

My wife and I decided to pack up everything we owned into our RV and a large cargo trailer. We headed to Alaska, where my two sons and grandkids live. We traveled around the country for the next eight years, work camping and visiting family and friends.

Richard Smith and his wife have work camped all across the country.

DoorDash and work camping help me make some money to pay the bills

Now in New Hampshire, I work as a ranger. I basically patrol the park, mainly at night. My day usually starts around 4 p.m. and ends around 12:30 a.m. I'm paid $15 an hour for my range of work.

Due to my age, I'm mostly restricted to ranger-type work camping jobs, which involve riding in a golf cart, patrolling the park or campground, and maintaining security at night. I can't do maintenance work, as my health prevents me from doing any bending, lifting, or twisting.

My wife does housekeeping while work camping and takes care of cabins, restrooms, and laundry rooms. You have to pick and choose the work camping jobs that fit your lifestyle and financial needs.

This campsite rental is deeply discounted at $200 a month.

On DoorDash days, I usually start around 3 or 4 p.m. and go until 9 or 10 p.m.; it depends on how frequently the orders come in. My goal every night is to reach about $100, and sometimes, I go well over that.

I started doing DoorDash last winter. I couldn't find a six-month, part-time job, so another work camper introduced me to DoorDash. It pays pretty well, though you have to factor in wear and tear on the car and gasoline costs. In Florida, I'm usually left with about $500 a week to help pay bills after fuel and taxes.

My health is still good, but I'm not sure it'll last

Driving is one of the things that I can still do fairly well at my age. I'm an excellent driver. I don't feel comfortable driving at fast speeds anymore, so I let people go around me if they need to.

Every time I go see my primary care physician in Florida, he tells me that I'm very lucky and blessed to have such good health so far. I don't know if that's going to last, and I'm definitely overweight.

In Florida, we live in a little town by the beach on the Atlantic Ocean. My brother also owns a place down here. We like to fish as much as we can, but it really depends on the weather. We've never stayed a summer in Florida, as it gets really humid.

In the worst-case scenario, we could sell our house

Today, I have a lot of debt. If you consider our house and all of the extended credit, it's over $250,000.

I get close to $3,000 a month in Social Security. There's less than $20,000 in my IRA, and I have basically no savings account.

I'm trying to pay down my debt as much as I can. Unfortunately, car repairs interfere with that. I also recently had carpal tunnel surgery on my left hand, and I'll probably have my right hand done next year. Those charges end up going on the credit card because I don't have the savings to pay for them.

The fuel bill for driving from Florida to New Hampshire and back usually runs just under $1,000. It's hard to pay for that and still pay down my debt.

In the worst-case scenario, we have a lot of equity built up in the house, so we could sell it and go back to full-time RV life.

My brother sends job openings that he comes across, and occasionally, I look into some of them. There may come a period in life when we'll have to stay in Florida all year for health reasons, and I'll need to find a year-round job.

I don't see any other way to get around it because winning the Powerball lottery isn't working.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

工作露营 送餐 退休 老年生活 Work Camping DoorDash Retirement Senior Living
相关文章