Yala
New Member
If there is one common element in most liveaboards' decisions to take the plunge, it seems to be some kind of health scare - either to themselves or to someone they know.
In my case, I could tell that the stress of corporate life was slowly killing me (unfit, over-tired, chest pains, etc). In my wife's case, it was the tragic death of her first husband in a car accident at 33 that reinforced her conviction that 'life is now'.
For many, it is the premature death of a close friend or relative.
Then there is the tragedy of retirees who plan and work towards a measured escape, only to leave it too late.
For example, we met one cruiser who spent ten years building his dream boat (beautifully) only for his wife to die of cancer at 60, just as they were about to set sail. A couple of years later he had married a woman of 35, on the rebound, acquired a young child and was forced to give up his dream of escape, sell the boat to go back to work at nearly 70 to support them.
The more successful cruisers seem to have set off younger, when they are far fitter and more flexible, but often with almost no money, to create a new life for themselves.
In my case, I could tell that the stress of corporate life was slowly killing me (unfit, over-tired, chest pains, etc). In my wife's case, it was the tragic death of her first husband in a car accident at 33 that reinforced her conviction that 'life is now'.
For many, it is the premature death of a close friend or relative.
Then there is the tragedy of retirees who plan and work towards a measured escape, only to leave it too late.
For example, we met one cruiser who spent ten years building his dream boat (beautifully) only for his wife to die of cancer at 60, just as they were about to set sail. A couple of years later he had married a woman of 35, on the rebound, acquired a young child and was forced to give up his dream of escape, sell the boat to go back to work at nearly 70 to support them.
The more successful cruisers seem to have set off younger, when they are far fitter and more flexible, but often with almost no money, to create a new life for themselves.