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Posted
50 minutes ago, Prubangboy said:

He shared that his wife's back door is so distended from over-use that "he could barely even touch the sides". And then he offered me a go.


Sounds like torture. Who would want that? That isn't what friends do to one another. That's as bad as supporting Trump and thinking that it's all a great idea. Bob should be punished for that. 

  • Agree 1
Posted

I'm 67 pretty healthy and still working as a Chef... I could potentially see hard times ahead... Made some bad decisions a few years ago starting from scratch so to speak twice.. Not much cash.. But could make it up very fast.. Now living in Texas and EVERYWHERE is so expensive.. But I had a great life traveling and working in Thailand and SE Asia.. and if I had 3 months to live I could deal with it.. 

Posted

 

I've just turned 67. Against my wishes, I brought a Japanese wife back to Canada after a wonderful decade in Tokyo during the Eighties - once in Canuckistan, I had big problems matching my previous salary, but she had no problem spending like a drunken sailor, eventually culminating in a huge fight that featured her smashing several heavily framed old Ukioye prints over my head. That was the lowest point for me.

 

After we split up, I went to Grad school and returned to work in Singapore for a couple of decades, ultimately ending up here in Chiang Rai with a wonderful lady I've been with thirty years. None of this would have occurred without the big breakup, and I'd be back in Montreal, shivering. 

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Posted
2 hours ago, b17 said:

returned to work in Singapore for a couple of decades,

I envy you. I have fond memories of Singapore from the 70s. I'd like to have lived there longer, but I chose to go live in Thailand instead. Certainly more affordable.

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Posted
On 1/28/2025 at 12:34 AM, Sandboxer said:

Age 29, broke, freshly divorced, angry, nearly homeless, drunk with a gun in my mouth for a few seconds before I realized I didn't have the nuts to do it. Pretty much went up like bitcoin from there. Made my first million 8 yrs later (50% luck, 50% clever idea) and retired to SEA.

 

What I realize now is that had I actually pulled the trigger, the world would not have been any worse or better off than it is now.  No one except for a very few people in the world is really special.

But that clever idea of yours brought value to other people's lives. So you did matter.  Same goes for the kindness you shared along the way..Your taxes paid for operations on children.

 

Posted
On 1/27/2025 at 12:23 PM, The Cobra said:

Many of us are getting on in years, and I was wondering about different things in the past as you tend to do as you get older.

 

I was thinking back to the time I first left home. I'd had a big fight with my mother over a girl amongst other things I was getting into as I became a legal adult.

So, I decided that was it—moving out! The following months about 18 were probably the hardest I had ever known. The positive side was I learned an awful lot too and it made me grow up pretty fast.

 

The lowest point, living in a bedsit area was ok but it wasnt easy adapting to being totally "on your own" and coping and doing everything for yourself. I had work that wasnt great pay but enough to get by and pay my bills and I ate out most of the time, usually from the chippy. I got laid off from my job a few months later; I was "on the dole" for awhile; that period was really rough with almost no money. I remember going out early morning to get milk off the doorsteps; if I struck lucky, I got orange juice and even some eggs in those days. I had just enough money one time for a bowl of soup in the transport cafe.

 

Pretty low and rough times for awhile.

 

How about you ?, what was your roughest or lowest time for you as a young adult, or maybe you hit bottom at another time ?

The "worst" time of my life was in 1985.
The Belgian Government decided to close the Coalmines (I was working in a coalmine at that time) and the coalminers went into a strike.
Beating up the "Rat's" who were trying to sneak past the strike posts to go to work.
As the strike was not supported by the Union's, we did not received a penny from the Union.
The coalmine was not paying a salary as well as we were on strike.
As the strike went on and most of us had no money to keep supporting a family and pay the bill's, many coalminers wife's went into a divorce, creating additional suffering and misery.
I was sentenced to pay about 250 USD alimony for my children whilst I had no income at all.
The only food and clothes we had were donated by the local shops who supported the strike.
Luckily, after the rain came the sunshine, and in 1986 the coalminers received a "big" sum of money, and the possibility to be relocated to other jobs. 
That was a year where I saw "Black Snow".
Many coalminers commited suicide while in that situation.
 

Posted
5 hours ago, Confuscious said:

The "worst" time of my life was in 1985.
The Belgian Government decided to close the Coalmines (I was working in a coalmine at that time) and the coalminers went into a strike.
Beating up the "Rat's" who were trying to sneak past the strike posts to go to work.
As the strike was not supported by the Union's, we did not received a penny from the Union.
The coalmine was not paying a salary as well as we were on strike.
As the strike went on and most of us had no money to keep supporting a family and pay the bill's, many coalminers wife's went into a divorce, creating additional suffering and misery.
I was sentenced to pay about 250 USD alimony for my children whilst I had no income at all.
The only food and clothes we had were donated by the local shops who supported the strike.
Luckily, after the rain came the sunshine, and in 1986 the coalminers received a "big" sum of money, and the possibility to be relocated to other jobs. 
That was a year where I saw "Black Snow".
Many coalminers commited suicide while in that situation.
 

Why did you strike? 

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