I watched a YouTube video that said that the happiest retirees have 3.6 absorbing hobbies.
My plan is to retire soon (sometime between next month and next March). I hope to "slow travel" (tho still uncertain how to make it affordable and practicable with a cat), and I don't see how I could develop more hobbies while doing that.
My ideas for hobbies are in their infancy. I bought a couple microscopes some years ago but other than spending quite a number of hours staring at interesting tiny things scooped up in puddle-water I didn't get much into it. I can't really see myself carrying microscopes on travels and studying puddle-life in various places.
I am kind of fascinated by the Mark Rober creative engineering online class, though I am not sure I would have the patience for attention to detail which I suspect it needs.
In fact I am extraordinary bad at any physical attention to detail, when I cook (rarely) I don't have the patience to measure ingredients and substitute ingredients (and then wonder why the product turns out so poorly! ha). If I measure something I get a different size everytime and just feel all tense and frustrated trying to measure things (I'm thinking the baseboards that I still haven't tried to cut to size to finish a project that has sat for more than a year).
My attempts at gardening don't do well (except in 2010 when I was out of work and still young enough to crawl around for hours weeding). I am trying this year to have vegetables in pots on my deck but impatiently put the whole package of seeds in pots, so now I have masses of squash plants, pea plants, cucumber plants and bean plants, but they require a ton of watering and so far only one little squash and one little cucumber. Lots of leaves and blooms though.
So everybody, please tell me about your hobbies, how many do you have, are you passionate about them, did you start them after retiring? Please tell all!
My plan is to retire soon (sometime between next month and next March). I hope to "slow travel" (tho still uncertain how to make it affordable and practicable with a cat), and I don't see how I could develop more hobbies while doing that.
My ideas for hobbies are in their infancy. I bought a couple microscopes some years ago but other than spending quite a number of hours staring at interesting tiny things scooped up in puddle-water I didn't get much into it. I can't really see myself carrying microscopes on travels and studying puddle-life in various places.
I am kind of fascinated by the Mark Rober creative engineering online class, though I am not sure I would have the patience for attention to detail which I suspect it needs.
In fact I am extraordinary bad at any physical attention to detail, when I cook (rarely) I don't have the patience to measure ingredients and substitute ingredients (and then wonder why the product turns out so poorly! ha). If I measure something I get a different size everytime and just feel all tense and frustrated trying to measure things (I'm thinking the baseboards that I still haven't tried to cut to size to finish a project that has sat for more than a year).
My attempts at gardening don't do well (except in 2010 when I was out of work and still young enough to crawl around for hours weeding). I am trying this year to have vegetables in pots on my deck but impatiently put the whole package of seeds in pots, so now I have masses of squash plants, pea plants, cucumber plants and bean plants, but they require a ton of watering and so far only one little squash and one little cucumber. Lots of leaves and blooms though.
So everybody, please tell me about your hobbies, how many do you have, are you passionate about them, did you start them after retiring? Please tell all!