- Rkg Consulting
Your Exit
Key Metrics
- Rob Dunn
- Rkg Consulting
- Paperback
- 9798223900870
- 8.5 X 5.5 X 0.18 inches
- 0.24 pounds
- Business & Economics > Personal Finance - Retirement Planning
- English
Book Description
How often have you thought to yourself that there has to be more, and that at this point in your life it may be time to discover what that something else is?
None of us are getting any younger, and perhaps for some it is time to make that change...that Exit...from the current day to day.
This book provides some insight into what an Exit is all about and what it may look like, written by someone who has himself just taken an Exit and moved overseas. It is not about bucket list trips, but in fact living your bucket list, at an age where you can still enjoy doing so.
The focus is not just the Exit itself, but also how a move overseas might shape up. Becoming an expatriate, especially on your own at your cost and without HR support, can be difficult, but certainly far from impossible.
Take control of your life, and make that change you have always thought about!!
Author Bio
Most of the living world remains poorly or totally unknown. In my lab we study the species around us in our everyday lives, species we tend to think of us as well known. Most of those species are not well known and so there are many things to discover in your backyard, in your bedroom, or even on your roommate.
Some days I work to study these species myself, bending down to figure out whether the fungus on my neighbor’s foot is a new species. More often I spent my time working with students and other researchers to help along their own discoveries. I also write about the world around us, which is a chance to share the stories of the scientists who have devoted their lives to understanding species, organs, cells, genes or ecosystems that influence us every day. In my building alone I am surrounded by biologists who study prairie voles, rare butterflies, fish ovaries, dinosaurs with long, long, claws, the decisions we make when threatened with death, alcoholic fruitflies, fungus farming beetles, and much, much more.
It is a good job, this thing called science, silly at times, serious at others, but nearly always good.
Source: North Carolina State University
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