Global Sports: Life After Retirement: Career or Hobby Choices for Retiring Law Enforcement Officers

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Life After Retirement: Career or Hobby Choices for Retiring Law Enforcement Officers

By Waylon Reisch


Retirement is great, but all the relaxing and lazing around can get old fast. Taking one holiday after another is excellent, but in between these visits you may find yourself idle and listless. What else is there to do if you're a bored retiree in search of a new hobby? Here are some recommendations...

1. Go hunting. - Your marksman expertise need not go to waste. The members would be glad to have a gun expert and marksman like you with them. Additionally, you can apply your expertise in a way that is fun and thrilling. To challenge yourself, you can switch from guns to long bows and apply the same marksman principles that have served you well in past times.

2. Be a consultant for gun retailers. - Users who want to own guns stop by weapon outlets all the time, and they have all sorts of questions. If you have spent your entire life cleaning your guns for utilization in target practice, then no person is more skilled to teach others about these things than you.

3. Casual consultant - You know from experience that owning a firearm without learning the basics of proper maintenance can be lethal. You can help address concerns in relation to the maintenance and proper use of weapons in online discussion boards if you know so much about these things.

4. Talk at conferences. - You can open yourself to speaking arrangements and invitations to conferences. You can make the chat about handguns more lively if you can speak in front while the multitudes of attendees listen to your stories and pointers. Imagine spending the day with individuals who share your interests.

5. Self-publish - If you have been looking for a book that any beginner can really use and you still haven't found one, maybe you can publish it yourself. Your expertise can be immortalized in a book that will be read by new and veteran users of guns. You can publish firearm articles or manuals specifically for new gun owners.

6. Seek out and join organizations that promote responsible ownership of firearms. - Issues about weapon possession and carry are always there, and there are organizations that address these issues. Responsible gun ownership groups are all over the place, and they organize several events to promote the responsible use and storage of firearms.




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