Originally posted by deerplanter
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Time you won’t recover
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One thing I learned by watching my dad is don't live to work. Work to live. We didn't have a lot when I was young but we spent a lot of time hunting and fishing. I lost my dad when he was 60 to cancer but he was sick for several years before .. give them memories not material things.. they will thank you later..
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Originally posted by Tony Pic View PostThe best thing you can spend on kids is... time.
The wife and I raised 3 sons and could not be happier. Took many pics and videos.
We had them outdoors every minute we could and now the part of waiting for Grand kids. Hunting/fishing trips, motocross tracks for them to ride. Of course all the shooting and archery. None of it would have been possible without the cooperation of my wife.
All the best to you and your family. Time does fly. Enjoy life as best you can.
Because we all die. It is how you live that matters.
My son will be 17 in December. I spent about 17 years of my near 20 year career working evening shift and weekends. I missed A LOT of mon-fri stuff, baseball, tae kwon do etc.
But we always did a summer vacation and took him. We've done several states and even Alaska and the last 2 years we spend 3 days dove hunting for his b-day. Day after Christmas we leave for Estes Park so he can see real snow. We fish and hunt a ton so I hope he remembers all that stuff when Im gone. I hope to get him half the memories I have with my dad
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Memories
There is one thing I wish I had done. Most of my photos are on digital media, taken and stored on SD cards and computers. Over the past 60 years computers have crashed, jump drives and SD cards have been lost or misplaced; many were on floppy drives etc that I cannot even view anymore because my newer computers can’t read them. I wish now I had had my pictures printed and put in photo albums. The Cloud is nice and easy but at the time those little 4inch floppy’s were easy too, so were 8 tracks and such. My suggestion would be print your most valuable visual memories and put them in albums. You won’t regret it I promise. If you get lucky and live to be my age, those albums will be invaluable to you and your kids and grandkids. Take the time to preserve your memories as hard copies.
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Originally posted by jdelago67 View PostYou can never get back time, make the most of it with your kids while you can
He spent most of our childhood in a bottle, and any time spent with him , was also spent with some fluzzy he was hanging with
My grandpa and uncle were around but both have now passed away,
Even today he really doesn’t make much time for my sisters children or my family ( kinda sad really)
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This
Originally posted by TENRMORE View PostWe planned a vacation every year, something out of state, a cruise, a snow trip, fishing trip in the mountains, or Disney or something like that. they will remember the trips more than they remember a weekend at the lake, select baseball, basketball or any other sport. I'm 50 and my kids are grown, and it goes so fast, just try to have a balance between work and family.
Plan accordingly
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