RoamerRV428 I was able after I became aware of what was happening to basically invest the money that would have gone to Social Security and teacher retirement into buying a house. I was able to purchase a house while teaching and by switching to being a bus garage supervisor ( no longer a teacher but a county employee which did participate in social security). That did allow me to cash in my teacher retirement and pay off the house which later I sold to buy early county retirement credits. If I had kept the teacher retirement and gotten a teacher retirement check which I could have chosen to do I would have lost a large portion of the Social Security earned even after I quit teaching! Because I worked several low paying jobs while teaching to get by that didn’t meet the minimum requirements of Social Security my benefits today are well below what I possibly could have made in a career field that participated in Social Security. The only thing that saved me was the state/county retirement program that allowed me to basically buy years of service for retirement credit and not only “retire” early but get a pension pretty much equal or a little better that what Social Security would have been. Even with both my wife and I working for school districts and second or third jobs buying a house was difficult. Having three children was impossible to pay for for us while doing so and resulted in a bankruptcy hence looking closely at our future and changing career fields. If you are independently wealthy education is a very rewarding but time demanding career, in my opinion you spend the majority of your time raising other people’s kids. Not knowing is how people end up living on less than $700 Social Security in my case I consider myself lucky I went bankrupt and found out! Who says tests aren’t a learning experience! Lol!!
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