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Month: November 2011

Boomers Get Ready for a Happy Retirement

Boomers Get Ready for a Happy Retirement

As we get ready to retire, and spend for time with our kids and grands kids, and to travel, there are lots of factors to consider. 

Allstate has a good blog to refer to from time to time.  Here’s a post I find interesting.  Hope you do to.

 

79384616_4.jpgIf you thought that preparing for a happy retirement just consisted of making sure that you have a dependable retirement income, then you are mistaken. No matter what your age, money is important, but it’s not everything. Here are seven things you should prepare well before you call it quits to make sure that your retirement can be the best that it can be.

 

Make sure you are healthy

You can’t travel in your retirement if you don’t have the energy to sight see, and you won’t be able to enjoy the company of your family and friends if you are always sick. You need your health to enjoy anything, but most people don’t think about it until it’s too late. Maintain a good diet and exercise regularly starting… NOW!

 

Keep close ties with your whole family

Family seems to become more and more important to us as we age, but many often neglect the people closest to them in pursuit of wealth. Don’t make this mistake. Make an effort to call your siblings regularly to check in on them. Take care of your parents, and do your best to create a loving environment for your children so they can grow up to be the best that they can be so that when you are retired, your family will be there for you.

 

Make friends

Our social support system is a significant source of happiness, and it’s even more important in our golden years. Having a social circle to hang out or have lunch with is crucial to a happy retirement. If you do it right, your twilight years will be as happy as those carefree younger days!

 

Nurture a hobby

If there’s anything you have more of when you retire, it will be time. There aren’t many better ways to spend your time than doing what you love, so start learning something that you will enjoy for the rest of your life.

 

Develop a good attitude

When we are young, we tend to have more ambitions, expectations and try to force situations that end up stressing our life and those around us. Now that you are preparing yourself for retirement, practice patience, learn to see the good side of things and see your life magically become better because you and everyone else around you are less stressed.

 

Own your own house

You will find tremendous comfort in knowing that you own the place you call home. In your twilight years, having to pay a mortgage is just more stress than you need to deal with. While you are preparing your retirement, work hard to retire that mortgage when you retire!

 

 

Get your retirement income in order

No brainer there. Learn to save money every month by spending less, and make more money so you can put more towards your latter years. Given enough years, spending less than you earn is all you need to become financially free.

 

Do all the steps well, and you will be living a happy retirement!

 

David is a guest blogger from MoneyNing. In exchange for sharing this content, the Allstate Community has compensated him via cash payment.

No, You Can’t Have My Zip Code!

No, You Can’t Have My Zip Code!

Court rules your Zip Code is considered “personal identification information”

As a Boomer, now Grandpa, I  don’t want to give out any more personal identification information than I have to.  I want my privacy, I don’t want advertisers knowing where I live, hence the ZIP Code request, or anything else.  Giving up this little tidbit of personal information, can lead to other information about me that could lead to reveling how many kids I have, and how many grand kids I have and other information that could put us at risk for identity theft.  I want my family information to be as private as possible, protected from all the ‘boogey men” that want to do us harm.  The world has changed since we started our families.

This isn’t paranoia, it’s personal protection.  Below is what’s going on:

When the Cashier Asks for Your Zip Code

by Kate Rogers

Published February 17, 2011

| FOXBusiness

In California the cashier can no longer ask for your zip code during a purchase. But even if this isn’t the law in your state, you should know if they do ask, you don’t have to answer.

Last week California’s Supreme Court ruled that asking for a zip code infringes upon consumer rights. The Song-Beverly Credit Card Act of 1971 prohibits stores from recording a consumer’s “personal identification information” during credit transactions – and the ruling labeled a zip code as personal information. Since the ruling, consumers have filed class action suits against major retailers in California, including Target, Wal-Mart and Victoria’s Secret. The penalty for requesting such information can be anywhere between a penny and $1,000.

Matt Valdes, senior associate attorney at Kaufmann Englett & Lynd Attorneys in Orlando, Fla., said nearly a dozen states already have laws in place against recording consumers’ personal information, like zip codes, and the ruling may prompt these states to reevaluate their own policies. Credit card companies like MasterCard and Visa also have their own rules about such information.

“This will open up the door for similar actions in those states,” Valdes said. “This allows zip codes to be considered personal identification information.”

Many consumers have no idea that there is no law stating stores need the zip code to complete credit transactions and they are not obligated to comply with such requests, he said. A retailer can request an ID to complete a credit purchase, but it is illegal to record any information from the ID.

“People just do it uniformly,” Valdes said of giving their zip codes to stores. “People think that they are doing it to confirm it’s their card and protect you, but in reality they are doing it for their own marketing.”

Retailers often run a reverse check on the shopper to obtain their address information, and then proceed to send them marketing information, according to Valdes. These mailing lists are often duplicated and sold to other retailers.

New blog for Baby Boomer Grandpas and Grandmas

New blog for Baby Boomer Grandpas and Grandmas

The other day I woke up and realized I currently have 7 grand kids! Wow, when did that happen? Was I too busy working to notice or what. The “what” is I am truly blessed to be a Boomer Grandpa.

Like it or not, the rebel, activist, forward thinking, “we can change the world” generation have had their kids and are now blessed with grand kids. They are the greatest. They are the future of our world and Universe. Besides that, they’re fun to play with.

This blog is about how life changes when you are a Baby Boomer and when you turn into a Boomer Grandpa (or Grandma). It’s about new, unwanted physical changes, about how to retire, how to travel, where to travel, new or improved products for us, how to have the most fun with your kids and grand kids.

I’ll review travel destinations, products, movies, arthritis medicine (ha) and anything else that comes into the Boomer Grandpa’s life.

Basically, as I live my new life as Grandpa, I’ll give you stories, ideas, tips, reviews about anything and everything that happens to me and my family. I figure my family is pretty typical so hopefully, you’ll learn with me how do be the best aging Boomer and Grandparent we can be.

So, as I start this daunting task, be patient with me, check back often, and if you have ideas for the blog send them my way.

Thanks, Boomer Grandpa John

Wild Grape Bistro

Wild Grape Bistro

With an approaching storm in the air, it was time from a great meal down in Salt Lake City at the Wild Grape Bistro.

On their website they say, “You may know local restaurateur, Troy Greenhawt from Flemings Prime Steakhouse or Ruby River Steakhouse. Troy & Jessica Greenhawt have created the Wild Grape, New West Bistro, with a vision and a conscience.

Wild Grape is an award winning restaurant.”

We met Troy and saw and heard his commitment to fresh and local. He’s running a fine, local bistro, not a national chain.

Our wonderful waiter Eric, explained they describe their food as New West. It’s fresh from local purveyors, support your local farmer, and cooked and served in hearty ways. Eric made the meal special with his knowledge and enthusiastic answers to our endless questions.

We began our meal with the “Local & Artisan Cheese Tasting, Fresh & Dried Fruit, Toasted Pecans, Warm Artisanal Bread”. The choice if cheeses and fruit was perfect. There was only one cheese that wasn’t from Utah. It was from Point Reyes area North of San Francisco, as special “fresh and local” area worth supporting.

Then a delicious hot squash soup. Very tasty. Perfect on a overcast, showery evening.

And “here’s Johnny!” Actually, this is friendly line chef John. You can tell he enjoys his life and work.

Ah, now for the Ballard Pork Chop, Grilled Pear, Warm Fingerling Potatoes. A hefty, thick, cooked evenly, pork chop with a nice sauce, with the mixed squash and potatoes. It makes me hungry just looking at it again.

If like to pair you meal with a fine wine they have substantial wine list and will help you choose the best for your taste.

We haven’t had chocolate mouse in a long time, but we enjoyed it twice in a month. First at Pastis in Cannes, France served in a short canning jar, and now here at home at the Wild Grape. I must say they were both decadent and the perfect way to end the night.

I can easily recommend the Wild Grape Bistro. It’s small and popular so you might have to wait, but it’s worth it. And it’s open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. At certain times they have brunches and live jazz.

What are you worth in this economy?

What are you worth in this economy?

Live Your Dreams!

The answer is simple.

It’s up to you!

“Our self-worth and identity are not determined by mysterious, outside forces.
They are determined by our own powerful self-talk.”

Now, more than ever, it’s important to be your own best friend and always use positive words when thinking or talking about yourself, your health, happiness, and future.

Stand up strong and be brave and great!

©John McFadden