What's on your bucket list?

Exterous

Super Moderator
Jun 20, 2006
20,553
3,714
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There are still tons of places I want to travel to and see but there isn't anything specific that rises to the same level as these four things:
  • Visit somewhere in Asia for continent #6 but there are a ton of options for visiting Asia that I would be happy with
  • Visit Antarctica for #7. And no not just for the sake of being #7. I personally find desolate landscapes with minimal human presence beautiful and relaxing
  • Experience Zero G. Something like the Vomit Comet
  • Go to space. Could obviously combine this with the previous one although the price tags are a tad different.
 
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Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
69,756
13,362
126
www.betteroff.ca
I don't have one set in stone, but off top of my head I'd like to go skydiving one day. Going to space would be cool too, but kinda unrealistic and I don't think I will see it come within reach in my life time. I think it will come to a point where it's going to be within reach for rich people and be kinda like a high end cruise/hotel package, but it will still be a lot of money.

I also want to eventually live off grid. I feel I could get more life enjoyment for my money. More land, more room for toys, etc while having lower carbon footprint and less dependence on "the system". The pandemic kind of reinforced my desire for that. This is the next big step in my life I want to seriously start working on. Already been scouting for land but it's hard since they sell so fast. The transition to off grid will be tricky from a financial standpoint, since I will still want to have a source of income, so those are all details I will want to figure out. I have a good job now as well so don't really want to quit. I think my best bet is for the off grid property to be more of a camp at first. Then eventually make it year round usable, then eventually when I feel it's the right time and I have the finances figured out, then I would just move there permanently and sell the house. I'm getting old, so I want to at least find land and start building sooner rather than later. Crazy to think I'll be 40 in like less than 6 years. :eek: The years go by so fast these days so 6 years is not really much.
 

ultimatebob

Lifer
Jul 1, 2001
25,134
2,450
126
Funny... I used to have a bucket list item where I was going to buy a Ford Mustang and drive it all the way to Vegas.

I got the Mustang... and found that the seats aren't all that comfy for distance driving. I ended up going from Connecticut and Atlantic City instead, since I couldn't handle a longer trip than that :)

I went to Utah this year to see Zion National Park and Arches National Park. I'd recommend putting that one on a bucket list. It's more scenic than the Grand Canyon.

I think that I'd like to plan a trip to Europe at some point, and I'd also like a see a big tech conference in Las Vegas like CES or Re:Invent at some point. You know, hang out and party with some tech industry titans and cool folks like brianmanahan.
 

ponyo

Lifer
Feb 14, 2002
19,688
2,810
126
Visit all 50 states and US territories. Visit all 62 national parks.
 
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highland145

Lifer
Oct 12, 2009
43,973
6,336
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Nothing. I just want to do what I already do, but better.
Or the same. Getting the rotator cuff fixed on the 17th. Popped something in the forearm shoveling gravel today. Not 1" gravel...the 1/4" stuff in the drive. Beginning to understand when old peeps say something is too heavy or that they can't open.

But still did my hour bike ride after I mowed the grass. Win.
 
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lxskllr

No Lifer
Nov 30, 2004
59,113
9,548
126
Yup, I was just cleaning out the poopy box, and my back felt like it was ready to go out. I was playing with my climbing setup yesterday, and I think my time in the saddle's what did it. I wasn't doing anything particularly hard, but my body's mad at me now :^(
 

KMFJD

Lifer
Aug 11, 2005
31,673
49,740
136
1 more trip to Oz , South America , Eqypt , Serengeti Safari
 

Svnla

Lifer
Nov 10, 2003
17,986
1,388
126
Working on my first million, then billion, then trillion, then....gazillion?

I love to travel and so far, I have been to several continents. Waiting to visit Europe, Africa, and Antarctica.

The rest of my bucket list is too much to list.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
50,077
6,346
136
There are still tons of places I want to travel to and see but there isn't anything specific that rises to the same level as these four things:
  • Visit somewhere in Asia for continent #6 but there are a ton of options for visiting Asia that I would be happy with
  • Visit Antarctica for #7. And no not just for the sake of being #7. I personally find desolate landscapes with minimal human presence beautiful and relaxing
  • Experience Zero G. Something like the Vomit Comet
  • Go to space. Could obviously combine this with the previous one although the price tags are a tad different.

On that tangent:

1. Having a bucket list increases the odds of checking things off on your bucket list because you have clear targets to shoot at. No targets = no direction = no progress = hard to hit a target you can't see.

2. Some of the most effective people I know always keep a detailed 5-year plan & almost always accomplish it in half the time. This is because (1) it's fairly short-term, which forces you to move ideas into the goals column, which means you take a grand, fuzzy idea & make it concrete and doable, and (2) because life seems to drastically change every few years. Most people have told me that where they are today was not where they thought they would be 5 years ago. So simply making a detailed 5-year plan & then committing to working on it means you're integrating some bucket-list items & converting them into actionable projects, and then actually making progress on them.

3. "Believe you can, believe you can't, either way, you're right!". One quote I heard regarding this was "the thing you really believe always happens". Not in a phony kind of way, but in a foregone-conclusion type of way: if you want to do something but deep down think you can't, you'll never take the first step, which means you'll never take the second step, and so one. As Waynze Gretzsky said, "you miss 100% of the shots you don't take". If you have a wish but don't really believe you can achieve it, or never bother clarifying it to the point where it's something you can really do, then it's kind of hard to get into motion on & get that motor turning because you're already defeated before you've even started. We tend to box ourselves in with our personal beliefs & worldviews, not realizing that we are, in fact, our own biggest barrier: not our situation, not our limitations, not our current financial story, but rather just being willing to clearly defining what we want & then not allowing ourselves to take no as an answer from ourselves. If you can't get over the mountain, go around the mountain! There's always a way to do something you want to do if you're willing to explore more than just one path forward!

The problem is that most people are content with what I call the BrainSnap, which is where you look at something & think "seems hard, I quit", whether it's making a bucket list or a 5-year plan or deciding that you're going to do something & decide you're not willing to give up until you achieve it. Everyone does this in at least some situations; the key is recognizing that we have control over our reactions to things & that just because the BrainSnap happens doesn't mean we have to believe it or let it define our behavior or our thinking. This was a huge step forward in maturity for me when I figured it out a few years ago...there were a lot of things I wanted to do, but would basically rage-quit before I even got started. This meme illustrates it perfectly:

1599544098288.png

Once I let go of my ego & accepted the fact that I was the one intentionally putting the stick in the bike wheel of my life & stopping all forward progress on an idea (whether I was aware of it or not), I gained the courage to get back up & gave myself permission to find another way to attack it, rather than just quitting. From personal experience, this level of responsibility is something that most people immediately reject & refuse to even consider (because we all want to play the victim), but the bottom line is that the only person you're short-changing is yourself. Giving yourself the permission to achieve great results, maintain great states of living, and obtain great assets is simply a person choice that requires grit, aka not giving up until you've found a way to get what you want, which is more or less the key to success:


We can blame everyone else, we can blame our situation, we can quit, we can give up, but none of those things will give you the results you want; as soon as you realize you have the power to keep chipping away at things & to look at things from a new perspective & try new things, then suddenly you have the power to do things like make a bucket list & check items off your bucket list. I wasted a lot of time (still do!) on nonsense growing up & it took me a really long time to get my act together & realize that no one was going to spoon-feed me what I wanted other than me. It's incredibly easy to sit around & do nothing all the time, but it's waaaaay more fulfilling to work on great things that you really want to do!
 

pmv

Lifer
May 30, 2008
14,635
9,509
136
I need to complete my bucket collection. There are still a few colours and styles I don't have.
 

TXHokie

Platinum Member
Nov 16, 1999
2,558
176
106
Well that went downhill quickly....

Mine would be to hike the Grand Canyon, eat street food in Taiwan/Japan/Singapore/Thailand, and see the Pyramids with my own eyes.

Stretch bucket list would be going to Mars. If they need a human canary volunteer for a one-way trip I'm in.
 

shortylickens

No Lifer
Jul 15, 2003
80,287
17,080
136
Well that went downhill quickly....

Mine would be to hike the Grand Canyon, eat street food in Taiwan/Japan/Singapore/Thailand, and see the Pyramids with my own eyes.

Stretch bucket list would be going to Mars. If they need a human canary volunteer for a one-way trip I'm in.
I think your list will have to wait for the pandemic to slow down.
 

repoman0

Diamond Member
Jun 17, 2010
5,116
4,423
136
Mostly just stuff I want to learn and other things I want to learn to do better. Couple skills that I always respected growing up were classical piano and working on / knowledge about cars, so I've since learned both well (and continue to work on the former because it's a lifelong development). I don't really have a travel list because I'm just as happy hiking in local mountains and taking a real trip to wherever strikes me at the moment once a year or so.