mellowtigger (
mellowtigger) wrote2008-09-02 10:44 pm
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worth more broken
year | taxed SS earnings | job description |
1986 | 3,050 | college. tried co-op programming at IBM. tried part-time jobs. discovered i was no good at work and school simultaneously. |
1987 | 6,376 | |
1988 | 3,878 | |
1989 | 4,008 | |
1990 | 2,518 | |
1991 | 6,266 | escaped school. temp job for nearly a year. |
1992 | 14,264 | started a night job as mainframe operator. averaged one promotion every 7 months. eventually left at highest grade of mainframe programmer (without having to become a supervisor). |
1993 | 18,583 | |
1994 | 19,614 | |
1995 | 22,966 | |
1996 | 25,952 | |
1997 | 31,877 | |
1998 | 38,838 | |
1999 | 42,270 | mainframe programmer. also made switch to unix operating system. wrote a few bash shell scripts to replace mainframe jcl. wrote a small c program to deliver email. dabbled in java support. got some great raises until the last 2 years when plans were in place to shut down my platform and get rid of the old programmers. |
2000 | 50,676 | |
2001 | 60,060 | |
2002 | 62,772 | |
2003 | 62,988 | |
2004 | 18,245 | various tech support jobs. want to retrain for a new career, but there'd be the same old simultaneous work/school problem. my theory is that this part-time schedule might work, if i can just accumulate the necessary money. |
2005 | 22,063 | |
2006 | 22,586 | |
2007 | 20,305 | |
2008 | 13,000 (?) |
If I retire at age 62, I get $859/month.
If I retire at age 70, I get $1512/month.
If I become disabled today, I get $1535/month.
Except that I won't live to 70. I don't expect to live to 62 either. And I don't even want to see the paperwork necessary for a declaration of disability (of any variety).If I retire at age 70, I get $1512/month.
If I become disabled today, I get $1535/month.
It's a little disturbing to think that I'd be taking home more money on disability than with my job. I remember being slightly angry back around 1989 when I saw old people on tv complaining about how little money they received from social security. Angry not on their behalf, mind you. I was angry that they were shown living in better conditions than I did. I was angry that they were taking my scarce money to live a better life than I had. I don't expect to see any of the dollars that I've paid to social security over the years. Meh. Such is life.
Snerk
Unless your speaking of some undisclosed medial condition, it's really really good to have some manner of fallback in place, just in case. S'the whole point of it, really.
Re: Snerk
T'Reese (my cat) likes her kibble. I will continue working (and avoid walking off into the forest without coming back) to keep her content. Having obligations to dependents seems like a good way to add benefits to the equation when measuring the costs/rewards of preparing for the improbable.