What’s your plan to achieve this objective?

  • GarrulousBrevity@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My understanding of why a lot of people come to communities like this is that… We could be living in a post-scarcity society. There is enough. We just don’t distribute it. We prioritize growing the wealth of a few dozen insanely rich people with the labor of everyone else. Which means we prioritize making the majority of people work shit jobs for next to nothing doing jobs of dubious value to society.

  • Carsonian@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Here’s a few options I have…

    Save as much as possible and take it all to much cheaper countries. Vietnam, Indonesia, etc you can live for years on the savings from a year or so of work.

    Buy cheap land and homestead

    Monastery or communal living

    Volunteer with WWOOF or workaway long term

    Work seasonally take the rest off. Firewatch, ski bum, etc

    FIRE as mentioned in another comment. Takes a longer time but if you are super frugal and have a high salary actually very doable in 5-10 years. I suggest looking at mr money moustache.

    Also dropping out. Look up how to drop out there’s an old famous article about it.

    Overall read Early retirement extreme it gives lots of good ideas too.

    After looving at various possibilities for a few years I am much more hopeful cause I realized there are tons of realistic options!

      • Carsonian@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Yeah fire definitely requires a good salary as I said.

        I think it depends, you’re not always hurting the locals. Often there’s expat areas in cities that are more expensive but more local areas stay cheap. Also you can support locals by buying from there businesses. I’ve been travelling southeast asia lots and the majority of locals tell us they like the tourists and expats because they allow them to make much more money.

    • MiddledAgedGuy@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I would think long and hard about spending years in a foreign country. While admittedly I haven’t done so myself, I’ve traveled to some of the kinds of countries you’re thinking of and talked to and observed expats in those places and it seems awfully lonely. There’s a cultural and, I assume, language barriers that’ll make you feel like an outsider. You may find a community of others like yourself, but still you’re likely to struggle to make meaningful relationships. Sure, working for the man sucks. But I’d argue crushing loneliness might be worse.

      Of course I’m applying my wants/needs and my experiences to your situation. Maybe that’s not a concern for you. Maybe it’ll be the best thing you ever did. But it warrants consideration. The grass isn’t always greener on the other side.

      Also something to be mindful of is in some countries foreign individuals can’t own land.

      • Carsonian@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Yeah that could definitely be an issue. On the other hand though its a great way to learn a language and meet people living very different lives. Also most young people nowadays speak english and want to speak it with foreigners so its easy to mave friends that way. Plus there’s lots of expat groups and meetups so actually pretty easy to find likeminded people.

  • Yote.zip@pawb.social
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    1 year ago

    One of the more realistic answers that isn’t a get-rich-quick-scheme is to invest your capital and retire early, aka “financial independence”. If you’re young and don’t have a super low salary, you can invest as much as you’re able into index funds every year and still retire way before 65 (even with a salary of e.g. 50k). It takes commitment and a little bit of frugality though. On a semi-related note, “LeanFIRE” describes an even earlier retirement where you retire with just enough to live off of, and probably make some concessions in return for retiring sooner.

    Not a very “immediate” answer, but if the thought of working yourself to death your entire life is the primary concern, then this is an early way out.

      • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        Depends on how seriously you take it - you can make it a job or be a bit more casual about it. A friend of mine has started man-whoring at the age of 50 and I doubt he’d claim to be a gigolo, he just does what he’d probably do for free but gets paid for it. Most people might insist on cash if the husband wanted to watch but I can’t imagine he’d ever be bothered by an audience.

  • einfach_orangensaft@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Well germany has this thing called “bürgergeld” aka citizen money, it covers rent, healthcare + about 500euros for food and stuff.

    Once a year u get hussled by the agency that pays it to ‘get a job or provide reason why u cant’.

    And well one reason can be, that u have mental problems. In fact not wanting to work can be considered a mental problem by some.

    Just treat the thing as a very low universal basic income, with the catch that u only get it if u become ‘sick’ by societys definition.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    You don’t need a job, but you do need revenue. Nobody is self sustaining.

    So at what point do you generate revenue without a job?