There's absolutely no need for me to maintain my current resume.
In a few months, it'll be nine whole years since I last stepped into a classroom. I've been collecting a pension for my former participation at the British Columbia Institute of Technology for just as long. Furthermore and more importantly, I have absolutely no intention of looking for any sort of job.
Yet, keeping my resume up-to-date was a habit for so long that I still enjoy keeping an active copy. Yeah, that doesn't make much sense but I never let something like that interfere with my actions.
One amazing aspect of the document itself is that it was first created on an IBM-compatible PC in Saudi Arabia in the mid-1980s. My resume was originally formatted in WordStar and assuredly was copied to WordPerfect as well. Over the ensuing 40 years, its word processor changed numerous times yet the original keystrokes were simply copied from one format to the next. Of course, the content increased as well.
The images above are what it looks like at the moment. Today's version replaces the odd page formatting shown below. What was I thinking back in the 2010s?