I was born and brought up in Miri  an oil town in Sarawak (Borneo). I  attended Pujut Chinese Primary, St.  Joseph's Miri and Tanjong Lobang  School. (I was at Tanjong for two  years as a boarder doing 6th form,  63/64)   I worked for Shell Lutong  for 23 years and have lived in NZ for 15  years. I am married to  Christine Wong. We have 3 grown children: Kevin,  Pearl and Eugene.
I  retired from full time work at age  58 in Hamilton (2002). After a few  months, the prospects of looking at  20 years of annual leave got to me  (I became bored with doing nothing). I  enrolled as an English tutor,   did a short course in Hamilton and taught English to new migrants for 3   years (2-hour/week) During this time I was also involved with working   for the Salvation Army   (5 hrs every morning on Mon, Tue, Wed). During this initial retirement   period, I also played golf in the afternoons. There was a gap of 25   years during which time I have not touched a golf club. I took up   sailing as a hobby in the early 80's and played some tennis.
Soon, in NZ I became a serious golfer   again, playing 3 or more rounds a week. In the end, I found that the   volunteer work interfered with my golfing schedules and it was also too   warm in the afternoons to golf. I stopped doing all volunteer work in   the mornings and decided to play golf full time. I found that golf was   not enough to fill all my free time. I intensified sailing   as a second hobby and took part in regattas every Sunday and exploring   the many lakes and harbours in the North Island. When the weather was   not suitable for golfing and sailing, I blog. I became a very active   blogger with more than 50 blogs.
Missing the volunteer work and the human interactions, I have now replaced that with cyber volunteer work on the internet helping new bloggers all around the world. I am now a blogging guru. This work is less demanding; but just as satisfying as the previous type of volunteer work. The interactions with different bloggers was very rewarding for me and satisfy a deeper need inside all of us to make contact with other people on a common ground, blogging. I am also an active participant on the extanjong forum (human interactions) and have formed another Google group for ex-Shell employees (SSB). I am constantly looking for new ways to fill my time. I have even considered taking up photography seriously as a hobby.
Sharing my own retirement experience with you, will hopefully help some of you, who are my friends, during this difficult transition period from full time work to no work. Please remember that it is a fact that you do not need money to retire. The secret is in keeping busy and learning to phase out the extravagant life style (5 stars hotels) and begin to live within our reduced budget and accepting our new identity as a retired person.
The simple truth is this: No one is able to save enough money to maintain the same standard of living for retirement because we do not know exactly how long we will live. It is therefore impossible to plan financially for our retirement. For this same reason we must retire now, today; and not work until we die. This can happen tomorrow!
Missing the volunteer work and the human interactions, I have now replaced that with cyber volunteer work on the internet helping new bloggers all around the world. I am now a blogging guru. This work is less demanding; but just as satisfying as the previous type of volunteer work. The interactions with different bloggers was very rewarding for me and satisfy a deeper need inside all of us to make contact with other people on a common ground, blogging. I am also an active participant on the extanjong forum (human interactions) and have formed another Google group for ex-Shell employees (SSB). I am constantly looking for new ways to fill my time. I have even considered taking up photography seriously as a hobby.
Sharing my own retirement experience with you, will hopefully help some of you, who are my friends, during this difficult transition period from full time work to no work. Please remember that it is a fact that you do not need money to retire. The secret is in keeping busy and learning to phase out the extravagant life style (5 stars hotels) and begin to live within our reduced budget and accepting our new identity as a retired person.
The simple truth is this: No one is able to save enough money to maintain the same standard of living for retirement because we do not know exactly how long we will live. It is therefore impossible to plan financially for our retirement. For this same reason we must retire now, today; and not work until we die. This can happen tomorrow!
David
(according to Chang Yi, a friend)



 
