Tuesday, June 15, 2021

"That's Just The Way It worked out" Another Tale Of Woe

A very interesting phrase that screams true reality is, "That's Just The Way It worked out." While we often think the world is directed by those given the task to make decisions and guide our direction, in truth much of our direction is made up by stumbling along accompanied by missteps and misunderstandings.

In our individual lives, certain minor events can become watershed moments and the slightest variation in the outcome can have a massive impact on our futures. Events such as losing a job, sickness, a failed marriage, or being called upon to support a struggling family member can turn life upside down. These are just a few of the reasons so many people enter their "golden years" with little in the way of savings. This does not mean that they planned to do so only that along the way, something happened.

An older couple I know furnished me with some real-life numbers and they were not pretty.

He gets a social security check of $980 and she receives $792 that leaves them with a meager $1,772   to live on, this is not the kind of retirement income most people want to be forced to exist on. Fortunately for them they have over the years cobbled together around one hundred thousand dollars in savings to supplement this, however, today's interest rates have turned their expected 5 percent stream of interest from $5,000 a year into a mere trickle.  

Playing into this is the reality that even though they planed ahead, this is just the way things worked out. This couple reminded me that others in the same boat but without the saving from which they will have to draw upon are in a real pickle.

A Revolting Development For Her
Whether a person believes in fate or that each of us has control over their life, is something we must each decide. When asked, most people will concede life seldom plays out the way we plan it. An older friend of mine often used the term, "This is a revolting development" to describe some of the events that unfolded during the day as things slid off course. The picture of a girl in a white dress trying to push a car stuck in the mud stands as an example of this.

Still, we can look forward to when things do go our way, this is sometimes known as serendipity. This means the occurrence and development of events by chance in a happy or beneficial way: The term was coined by Horace Walpole in 1754, Serendipity means a "fortunate happenstance" or "pleasant surprise." Most people would agree we could use a lot more of these events.

The lack of total control over our lives is something all of us face. It is clear that many people feel pressured by the trade-offs we face by living in a free market-consumer-based society and it wears away at them. The fact is economic growth is accompanied by wheel-spinning, inefficiencies, and waste.  While the benefits of our system often outweigh the negatives we find society is paying a toll through increased rates of addiction, depression, and economic inequality. 

Our modern consumer-based society has made us slaves to material objects and producers of waste.  Many economists urge us to consume, even when we must borrow to do so, saying it creates more jobs. We follow Governments and leaders that we often neither like nor trust.  Today’s youth growing up besieged by marketers are now vilified for being materialistic, marred by too little perspective, they find themselves angry and disappointed. With this in mind, it is little wonder many people are not achieving the degree of being content or happy they had hoped for and are left with feelings of insecurity.

It is fair to say that on occasion, more than one of us has felt they "could have been a contender" or accomplished more had things gone just a little more the way we had wished. This can leave us wondering whether it the fickle finger of fate or something more internal and basic  that caused some of the opportunities life offered to simply slip away.

Interestingly, many people particularly those that are younger seem to think that one big or lucky break is what it takes to achieve a life of happiness and this is the way life works. Much of the responsibility for this falls on big tech and social media, they have a lot to gain by promoting such myths. The idea they empower individuals is a biggie. 

The illusion big tech can transform our lives is invaluable to many average people struggling to get through the day. The thought that at any time we might become famous or rich gives a false impression of reality that is harmful in cultivating positive work ethics and makes a mockery of those who toil to produce a better life. The simple fact is, often our choices are limited by things we cannot control so we should just try to make lemonade out of lemons when that is all your given. 

Abraham Lincoln is credited with saying, “folks are usually about as happy as they make up their minds to be.” Much of this may center around being able to accept what we cannot change or simply focusing on the good things in life. People that see themselves as victims often lack this trait.

For"He Went To Paris" On YouTube click here
In a song titled, He Went To Paris, songwriter-singer Jimmy Buffet highlights just how fast life goes by. In the song, he used the line, "the summers, and winters scattered like splinters, and four or five years slipped away." Buffet then goes on to sing about how another twenty years slipped away. In the end, the old man moved to an island to live out his days and sums up his life by saying, "Some it's magic, some of it's tragic, but I've had a good life all the way." Had Papa Hemingway heard this story, I suspect there would have been a book and a movie. 

In some ways, you could describe the world as quirky. In truth, I'm not keen on how I expect the future to unfold. While I realize that doom porn gets a lot of hits, this article has been written more in the spirit of reflection and because I enjoy pointing out some of life's idiosyncrasies. Looking across the places where I go for news, currently, I see little that makes me feel optimistic. Much of what I see bodes poorly for our children and their children. Hype and spin can only mask reality for so long. In many ways, it seems like the world is again suffering from the bad news is good news syndrome, and that is not a good thing.

 
(Republishing of this article welcomed with reference to Bruce Wilds/AdvancingTime Blog)

3 comments:

  1. Bingo! As a septuagenarian who has encountered all the ups and downs that life usually throws at us it has only been in the last several years that I have actually been able to read more history and take the time to think about the vagaries of life and more importantly the importance of luck, both good and bad. I consider myself lucky but it has little to with material wealth (those two things are probably connected!) As you imply, most of us have far too high of regard of our skills versus our luck. In modern life, even with all its marvels, it is a very demanding and difficult existence with much more out of our control than our egos will acknowledge. People by nature are optimistic but I think that is simply a requirement to deal with mortality. That said, it's hard to be optimistic about an America that is clearly just clinging to its collective mind. We will surely get through this but it is not clear what the country will look like or if many of us will want to live here.

    In any event, thanks for this thoughtful "reflection."

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    1. Doug, I appreciate your kind and insightful comment, thanks.
      May you enjoy the best of "luck" going forward.

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  2. On the idea that young people think they need just a big break, many of them had their lucky break, but they are just not taking advantage of it.

    In the year 2000, I graduated with a degree in computer engineering. The one thing that made no sense to me was why all these people were still going to work. The average engineer who had started in the eighties or earlier made a killing in the stock market. A lot of companies practically forced their employees to participate through stock options and 401k plans, and we were encouraged to invest additional money on our own. Back then college kids with only a few hundred dollars to spare were putting it into tech stocks. It was obvious that many of those who had been working for a decade or longer sat on gains that exceeded their expected lifetime earnings based on their salary alone. In other words, they had just won the lottery. All they had to do was cash in and buy a 30 year treasury bond and live off of the interest for the rest of their lives. There was a very tiny percentage of people who actually cashed out. Practically everyone continued working, and many of those lost most of their nest egg in the dot com crash, and proceeded to spend the rest of their lives earning back what they already had to begin with.

    Today, in the year 2021, we're now back to where we were in the year 2000, and I mean this literally. When I started working for Teradyne in the year 2000, the stock price was at $115. 18 years later in 2018, the stock was down to $29. I quit my job in 2004, by the way. But now thanks to the pandemic blow-off in tech stocks, we're back to $128. We just hit a new all-time-high, 21 years later, with a parabolic rise in price that is stupidly similar to the 1999 run-up. I'm sure there are plenty of people who could retire today.

    There is one big difference between today and 1999. Back then, we didn't have ten thousand financial blogs and alternative media warning us about financial history and the dangers of stock market bubbles. Today, everyone is being warned about the risks in the financial system and they're still not retiring.

    There's this 29 year old Youtuber Kevin Paffrath who started with $1000 and is well on his way to becoming a centi-millionaire. He's made many videos about how to start with nothing and retire as a millionaire in no time at all. It's really ironic, if you think about it, because this guy is working 70-80 hour weeks and has made more money than all but a tiny few will ever see in their lives. If he doesn't want to retire, how does he expect anyone else to want to retire?

    It just seems obvious that the problem is that everyone wants to work and no one wants to retire. There are only so many honest jobs to do in the world, so we just create a world in which we scam each other to no end, while celebrating the result as GDP growth.

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