this post was submitted on 17 Jan 2025
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As a kid, I learned to “pause” my true self. School was the pause, and my hobbies, dreams, and passions were the unpause—something I’d rush back to during lunch or after class.

Over time, the pauses got longer. Tiredness and responsibilities crept in, leaving little energy to unpause at the end of some days.

At work, sometimes the pressure and the demands were so relentless that I couldn’t unpause for weeks or months at a time.

Then came marriage, fatherhood, and the joy—and work—of raising a child.

I want my son to get to know the real me but I worry that by the time he is grown I won’t have any “self” to unpause to.

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[–] cobysev 18 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago) (2 children)

This is a compartmentalization technique seen in a lot in people with ADHD. Not saying OP has ADHD, but it's something to look into if they have other signs.

I did this for literal decades. I was excited to start my adult life after high school, but an opportunity I couldn't pass up dropped into my lap, so I chose that route instead.

Joining the US military was that opportunity. My uncle explained how the Air Force had taken care of him for 30 years, giving him free food, free lodging, free education, free travel around the globe, free medical and dental, and a steady, decent paycheck on top of it all. It sounded too good to be true, so I signed up as well. I figured I could get back to my plans for adult life later, after I'd taken advantage of all the benefits the military could offer me.

20 years later (3 years ago), I retired from the Air Force. It was a pretty stressful career, in a positive way, so I was glad to get home, relax a bit, then finally pick up my life where I left off.

The things is, a lot happens in 2 decades. All my friends had left town and moved on to new lives, new careers, created new families, etc. my own family had mostly moved away, except for my dad who was still living in my childhood home. He offered to let my wife and I stay with him rent free as long as we wanted. He passed away last year and I inherited the house from him.

So now I'm back in my childhood home, just starting to really get settled back in and trying to figure out what to do with myself. I feel like my life has been on hold for so long, I don't even know where to start in picking things back up again. I'm not young anymore, so a lot of the physically active jobs and hobbies I was previously interested in are either difficult or impossible for me now. I also changed a lot mentally with 20 years of military service. I'm not the same person I was at 18, so I have to readjust my interests and hobbies.

Fortunately, I have a lifelong pension from the military. I was grandfathered into the old pension program before they switched to a 401K-type plan, so I get paid half my final paycheck every month for the rest of my life. I also got the coveted "100% Permanent & Total" disability rating from the VA, so that is an additional monthly payment for life that's about double the size of my pension. Plus free medical and dental for life. My wife didn't retire from the military, but she also got the 100% P&T disability rating, so she gets the same medical pay and benefits as me.

So with all this passive income, we can actually be retired, as of 38 years old, and have the free time every day to focus on rediscovering our lives. I don't feel like I need to put my life on pause while I work a job I don't necessarily care for, or save up enough money for something I really want to do. I can live my life fully now, unpaused, for the first time in my life. It's been very liberating, both mentally and physically.

[–] SupraMario 5 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

38 isn't old at all. I've got nearly a decade on you and run a farm and have a normal 8-5 job. You sound like you just need to stop thinking you're to old. The saying "you're only as old as you think" is really true. I feel more fit now than when I was in my 20s.

[–] cobysev 1 points 6 hours ago

True, 38 isn't that old. But keep in mind, I'm 100% disabled according to the VA. Two decades of military service has wrecked my body, so I'm unable to work any physically demanding job. Heck, I struggle just to go up and down stairs in my own house without pain in my knees and back.

Which is a shame, because I was an extremely fit and active person in my youth. That's part of the reason I joined the military - I was in the best shape of my life and could keep active all day without breaking a sweat. I'm actually frustrated now that just walking from my house to my mailbox takes me out of action for an hour or two.

I keep telling myself I'm young, but my body's acting like it's 80 years old. That's the one downside to military service; it can easily overstress your joints and physically age you much faster than normal.

[–] vatlark 10 points 14 hours ago (1 children)

Wow reading about pensions my mind just assumed you were properly old. YOU ARE ONLY 38?! Congrats on the financial stability!

I also have moved around a lot, mostly for work, all exciting opportunities. The first few years going home feels like nothing ever changes but I recently went to my home town for a wedding and saw some friends for the first time in 15 years. Wow did the passage of time hit me like a truck. The years add up.

I was in the mountains hiking with an 85 and 82 year old a few weekends ago. They crushed. We may be older but we are still a lot closer to 18 than 85.

[–] cobysev 2 points 6 hours ago

YOU ARE ONLY 38?!

I was 38 when I retired three years ago, actually. I'm about to turn 41 in a few months. Sorry if I didn't write that clearly in my comment.

The first few years going home feels like nothing ever changes but I recently went to my home town for a wedding and saw some friends for the first time in 15 years. Wow did the passage of time hit me like a truck.

I feel this. In my early years of the military, I used to take a month off every year and go home to chill with family and friends. The first few years of that, it was like nothing changed. But then I started dating my future wife and spending my time off traveling and honeymooning with her. When I did finally go home again, I almost didn't recognize it. My friends and family had moved further away, my hometown had changed, everything was suddenly different.