Darlo1973
Striker
The place I was working at went through a number of voluntary redundancy phases and restructures. If I had took it, I would have left with 14 months wages tax free. I bit of belt tightening I could have not worked for 18-20 months and not worried. The restructure merged 3 jobs into mine for no extra pay and 2 years later I left to move somewhere where I could actually get something done. Did my standard 3 months notice and that was that.
About 2 weeks after resigning, they announced another round of voluntary redundancy on the same terms as earlier and anyone due to leave anyway was exempt.
Not taking it when it was first offered will go down as a regret. It was during the pandemic but the job market was just starting to move again. I suspect I could have got something in my field within 6 months. If I had wanted to keep money coming in, I could have done a bit of Tesco delivery for a while. Ironically that might have had a more negative impact on my CV than not working!
I don't think a 6-9 month gap in your CV later in your career is as damaging as it used to be if described as a "career break" or a "grey gap year"
I haven't had more than a few weeks off work at any one time since my 20s so I quite like the idea of once the mortgage is paid off in my taking a year out to do some travelling and then come back refreshed to do something totally different with what is left of my working life. I certainly don't want to be doing another 10-15 years of corporate middle management where there is yet another restructuring announced every few months. Being a Tesco delivery driver sounds great to me.