FIRE.097 Churmoil

I find I truly enjoy my extraordinary life.  I feel I’m lucky in so many ways.  It’s so simple, yet so satisfying.  “Find the Positive.”

There are people I know who always seem to have some mess of craziness (cluster*!@#) going on.  Their life seems to have so much turmoil and complication, just frequent stress-inducing drama.

The constant churn of turmoil must be overwhelming, exhausting, stressful, unbearable and not good for one’s health.  It’s entirely possible the overloaded person doesn’t even know they are in a state of churmoil—the constant churn of turmoil.

As people, we seem to adapt to the situations we are in at present.  For some of us, our life creeps up slowly and ongoing small changes set the basis of our level.  We adjust to the new basis and live the best we can.  I think of the poor frog in the pot of water example. 

The slow progressive increase in stress and turmoil is not much different than the hedonic treadmill lifestyle creep many households encounter.  I wonder if some of the lifestyle creep is related to the “I deserve this” for all the stress I have to deal with. 

What if you can remove some of the stress?  Can you then remove some of the lifestyle spending used to combat that stress…which may in turn cause additional stress from finances?

Let’s be clear, I have no answers for anyone.  I have a path that has worked well (so far) for my family and I’m conscientious to try and maintain that great path. 

What I think about is all the people who are in a constant grind.  Worse, I think about the people who should have a great life in many aspects: health, family, employment, home comfort, and their spiritual-self.

How can people recognize that their stress may not be forced upon them?  How can people who have constant life craziness resolve some of that overload?  Can some of these people remove the external stressors that are pulling them down and lighten themselves?

Is it in our nature to be bombarded with problems?  Does that go all the way back in our DNA to hunting/gathering/farming?  Is life so “easy” for many now relative to food and water, possibly shelter and health, that we find other reasons for churmoil?

I’ve asked so many questions above because I wonder why I try to avoid most turmoil, thereby avoiding the churmoil state.

I was listening to a podcast stating how poor people around the world, kids, in particular, seem to happy—smiling, laughing, playing—yet we struggle in the U.S.  Recently I was in Peru and saw relatively poor people smiling and looking happy.  Their concerns and stresses are far different from our own.

Is it probable that the people you surround yourself with—those with happy and joyous attitudes —can elevate your well being?  Do the stressed out, end-of-the-world type people drag you down into their stressful world?  If you do get locked in with the stressed-out people, can you help resolve their issues…for the long term, or are you just fighting an endless stream of churmoil?

My final contemplation:  Can increasing one’s gratitude level decrease one’s churmoil state, significantly?  in FIRE I have found an abundance of gratitude…see sentence one above.

Show me who you hang out with and I’ll show you your future.

*** Nothing in this article is to be construed as financial advice.  I am not a financial planner, nor do I pretend to be.  You should always consult your own professional when seeking advice.

FIRE.096 Retirement costs 80% of Income?!

I think I’ve had it with this statement.  Oh yeah, life in retirement—kicking back, or go-going—will be amazing and you only have to plan on living off 80% of your pre-retirement salary.

Ok, I will concede that normal retirement after the long 9 to 5 to 65 work cycle, living paycheck to paycheck, keeping up with your neighbors/peers/etc may fall into this category.  However, I think that structure may cost normal folk more along the lines of the 90% plan—the 100% of income minus 7.65% to employment tax, save a few percent and spend the rest, living the way people feel they “deserve” to live.

But I write my random thoughts about LifeInFIRE.  I write to those reading who live a little different—or maybe drastically different—thought process than the common fold.  Those of us with the FIRE mentality do not have any concept of living off an entire paycheck—unless of course, we save the other paycheck that month (50% of income). 

Us FIRE folk instead seem to live life with intention of happiness and enjoyment and fiscal control.  We give serious consideration to the future—some are fully engrossed in the future—while enjoying today prudently.

Let’s say for example a dual professional household.  So in my time, these folks may have been called “yuppies.”  That sounds really strange to me now, and even stranger typing the word “yuppies.”  So anyway, these two professionals earn great incomes of $60k, or $75k each (maybe even more with wage inflation).  This household income could earn $150k+.

(Let’s ignore income taxes for now)

So I break out my mental calculator and find that 80% of $150k equals a $120,000 per year lifestyle.  That seems like a GREAT, $10k/month, lifestyle.  I’m thinking wow.  In retirement, that family can live an amazing life of spending.

Switch thoughts.

If you are a FIRE mental person (I think that phrase stands strong) earning $150k household income in a fair cost of living location, do you spend $120k or do you try and pack away $40-50k+ per year for an RE lifestyle?

Gee, if you’re in a position to earn so well, do you see the opportunities of changing your work structure in the future and using your financial wisdom (saving) to buy your life/time back for yourself?

Do you think there are FI planning households earning $150k/yr that live on $60-75k/yr while working in their careers?  Is $5-6k/mo feasible in a fair cost of living locations?  So roughly, what is that, living off 45-50% of their income?

I am 110% sure I believe the cost structure in retirement should be based on the amount of expenses your household incurs.  I don’t feel “income” has anything to do with how you will live in a wisely planned retirement.  Yes, it can be true that some people are required to live off just their pension (?) + social security income if they do not have savings.  But again, that has nothing to do with “80% of salary.”

Know what your lifestyle costs over time.  Build a retirement spending plan based on those historical, and future goals of spending.

One final thing, I stated “110% sure” above, it’s very possible you will spend more money in retirement than you do working since you have so much available time to live your dreams.  This is a very important concern to plan for.  A super great plan has you crushing your GoGo years instead of sitting around not able to afford any experiences.

Live your dreams, enjoy each day!

*** Nothing in this article is to be construed as financial advice.  I am not a financial planner, nor do I pretend to be.  You should always consult your own professional when seeking advice.

FIRE.095 ChooseFI Organized

This list I received is a great Table of Contents to get to some great organized FI information.

For this post (my random thoughts), I could not have created anything nearly this great.

Enjoy!

Gateway to FI

Entry Level

How to Slash Expenses | How to Double or Triple your Savings Rate

For Specific Cohorts

Advanced FI

Mindset

Earn More

2nd Generation FI

The FIRE is spreading!

Brad and Jonathan

*** Nothing in this article is to be construed as financial advice.  I am not a financial planner, nor do I pretend to be.  You should always consult your own professional when seeking advice.

FIRE.094 Your Friends…Your Future

Many quotes are floating around the interweb—some of the quotes even come from actual books or speakers.  The main quote I hear is Jim Rohn’s “You are the average of the five people you spend the most time with.”  That makes sense, you all get along, they are similar to you, etc etc.

The quote I heard recently was “show me your friends, and I’ll show you your future.”  That shifted from Jim Rohn’s idea from the present to the future.  Or as I think of it, from the now to your future amazingness.

I wondered about my friends—the people I get to hang out with—and gave this idea a lot of thought last weekend when I went to money-nerds camps, i.e.  CampFI Joshua Tree California.  A special 3-day period where financially astute people—of many ages—join together to share life, stories, experiences, and learning.

I’ve written about this before 062  and 085 as I’ve been to three CampFI’s.  Each weekend offered an amazing look at life’s perspective and possibilities across such a diverse group.

In Joshua Tree—surrounded by natural desert beauty, high energy vortexes and zen zones—50+ people ranging in ages from late ’20s to late ’50s discussed

Topics:

  • purpose
  • goal
  • vision
  • interests/activities
  • health, real estate
  • side hustles
  • tax planning
  • life after FIRE
  • beverages of choice
  • family growth/support/enrichment

Some of my takeaways:   

  • Be aware of the good/great things in your life and recognize them with a strong sense of gratitude
  • I thought I made a mistake for years contributing to a Roth IRA instead of a traditional deductible IRA thereby  losing out on a 10% tax windfall after converting to a RothIRA in FIRE, but it turns out—thanks http://www.FItaxguy.com—that we were never eligible to contribute to a traditional deductible IRA because we had retirement” plans at our workplaces.
  • I really doubled-down on understand my list of 10  favorite things to do each day/each week
  • I know that I really should do a personal mission statement.   Yeah, I’ve heard this touchy-feely stuff that helps you focus, but I already know my strong opinions, desires, and plans.   After more thought, I realize I should create a succinct mission for my future.  
  • The idea of using Warren Buffet’s “5/25 plan” to prioritize 5 items and discard the other 20 does not seem to compute in my brain.  I love having a list of many things to tackle in my future—of course, I prioritize my tasks/interest list, but I don’t see any reason to discard most of the list because some items are not the highest, immediate priorities. (?)
  • I found the speaking style of a storytelling presentation-versus-a-topic/slide-driven presentation to be very interesting.  Painting a picture with a story and moving towards a lesson was quite interesting.  I want to try this someday, but it sure seems hard, and outside my natural experience—which is the exact reason I should do this.
  • I thought the idea of identifying 10/14 target traits/words was quite interesting.  This sounds appealing to me as a challenge to fit it between my 10 favorite daily things and my overall personal mission statement. 
  • I now seem to understand the rental real estate leveraged return through depreciation a little more, and I found that  chart showing it lessens over time  quite interesting.  
  • I witnessed something that blew me away from a breakout session—which is not something that happens to me too often.  As the breakout was moving from person to person, one of the campers( #1) was sharing their story of future FI/FIRE and that their partner had a less healthful outlook for the future.  One of the more experienced campers (#2)  offered to share their phone number and be available any time camper 1 needed to talk through something.  I know camper 2 is a very busy person who must know hundreds and hundreds of FI people and the 1 to 1 offer struck me deeply.  The genuine giving of oneself to another (almost stranger) if needed.  That’s powerful.    

Over the weekend I was reflecting on the stages of the bonding period.  I could see how the  <8 hrs “hi, where are you from” grew into the   16-32 hrs “how do you tackle, what do you think about..”  to the 38+ hrs “I was thinking about our discussions, do you think I can, If you were me, if you are headed near my home… ”  I can’t even imagine what the future weeks/months/years will be like with dozens of friends who are sharing a similar life path all around the county.

So back to my original thought on this post— “show me your friends and I’ll show you your future.”  I can’t wait to stay in touch with people from the camp and see how their futures grow into an even more amazing life. 

As Doc G said, “bring a little piece of heaven to earth.”   Yes, bring some of your great future to your now by building amazing friendships today.

*** Nothing in this article is to be construed as financial advice.  I am not a financial planner, nor do I pretend to be.  You should always consult your own professional when seeking advice.

FIRE.093 I Can Wait

I was riding my bike today and that entails listening to podcasts and a LOT of thinking/calculating.

Often I’m thinking so hard (and scanning the roadway) that I don’t pay attention to the podcast playing.  Do you ever find you are thinking and not paying attention to the sound of the TV or device playing? 

It occurred to me mid-hill as my legs were burning and my lungs were trying their best to refill my legs with oxygenated super-blood (well, actually normal Kevin blood) that this ride—this effort— is a payment toward my future health, to my future movement ability, to my future happiness.

It’s no secret from my writings that I’m very happy and find so much positive and gratitude in my life each and every day.  On the bike ride podcast in my ears, the interviewee said “say thank you each night and every morning and you will live a better life.  It’s that simple.”  It’s those two words, twice a day that can make a massive difference for everyone.  Yeah, zen-talk, blah blah blah.

I deeply believe in enjoying each day.  No matter what is going on, we are lucky to have each day.

Back to my ride: so I was thinking about the effort on my pedals, the burn and the “this hurts” thoughts, and I realized how I was trying to better myself, not only for the now but for the future.

In the next moment, I realized how my future events may be better because of today’s effort.  I thought about delayed gratification and the ability to do something now—changing something now—in an effort to receive something (better) in the future.

I believe so much in the ability to delay gratification to achieve goals.  Placing targets—even higher targets—in the future are much harder than getting little items in the immediate.  [for some reason building a skyscraper just came to mind—all that foundation work underground that nobody in the future will ever see]  Today’s concept is much more than the simple “you will save money if you wait to buy something until you have the money saved up, and/or you are really sure you want to purchase the item.”  Planning, preparing, and working towards the future in many different ways will be rewarding should we reach the future.  Most of us do not have unlimited resources and will have to invoke some level of delayed gratification.

At the extreme, when we travel and are killing time at night in a hotel room (boring people) and there’s no DVR so we are forced to let the commercials play.  We’ve found after nearly 20 years of time-shifting our viewing (see our first device UltimateTV) we have no patience for TV marketing of products, foods, medication or politicians.

I just haven’t grasped the “I see it, I want it-NOW” mentality.  Oh, I definitely buy things.  I definitely buy things I do not need.  I also spend too much time making sure it’s the correct/best item for me and the best price (usually a huge waste of time) but over that research time period I often weed out the unnecessary. 

So delayed gratification is built into me.  …I can wait.

I just realized my last post was about saving the best for last.  Note to self, enjoy now AND be prepared for better in the future…assuming the future comes.  Nothing is guaranteed, so balance is critical.

*** Nothing in this article is to be construed as financial advice.  I am not a financial planner, nor do I pretend to be.  You should always consult your own professional when seeking advice.

FIRE.092 Good News or Bad News?

Have you ever thought about your personality traits?

I’ve learned over time to understand how I think.  I’ve been placed in situations where I come across information that I’ve had to evaluate and make a decision from.

It makes me wonder how other people see situations, instances, information or crisis actions.

The general questions are:

  • Good news or bad news first?
  • Half full or Half Empty?
  • The best: first or last?  

What kind of mindset do you possess? 

I’ll share how my brain/personality seems to work.  I’ll answer the question above (maybe just to learn more about myself).

Examples:

I always want the bad news first.  I want to know what is going wrong.  I find that I want to deal with the problem…now.  I want to see if I can resolve or start the process to eliminate the issue.  In a sense, I want to stop the bleeding.  Once resolved, or on track for (possible) resolution, I then feel free to look ahead and try to make things better.  Somewhere along this process, I want to “good news” to see how that fits into the current issue/process.

I generally find the glass half full, but only in the sense that I seem to have the drive to fill the glass back up.  I don’t believe I feel as though I’m missing the (top) half empty part of the glass.  Maybe I just feel there is half a glass to fill up.  Though, sometimes I also think, just because “a” glass is half full, that doesn’t necessarily mean the glass was ever, or ever will be full.  Not everything in life needs to be perfect/full.  I live by a life-calming statement of “everything has a ding.”  Nothing is perfect.  No need to try and make everything perfect.  I just try to enjoy the best of what I can do and accomplish.

No surprise to me, I tend to save the best for last.  I will get the bad stuff (work/tasks) out of the way so I can then enjoy the good stuff.  Thinking about the FI lifestyle, this is one form of delayed gratification.  I don’t believe waiting for the good stuff is required, but I do think the intentional decision in the selection process may be just as valuable.

My grandma would ALWAYS grab dessert first at any buffet.  She decided to start with what she enjoyed the most.  I always thought that was awesome.  She did something that was so far outside the norm (salad, entrée, dessert) without any regard for what others thought.  Also, she always a full selection of dessert choices.

Balance:

So I wonder, get the bad out of the way and save the best for last?  Take advantage of the best now since we never know what the future will bring, or if it will even arrive for us.

How do I balance my inherent nature for delay (wise) gratification with a life optimization mentality?

As a fairly risk-averse person, I guess I will try and continue to take care of the issues/planning and aim for the good stuff while keeping a very close eye on the future and making sure I’m not sacrificing future stability for immediate gratification.

See, nothing is easy when you try and break things down and really think about them.  Enjoy your life, enjoy your days.

*** Nothing in this article is to be construed as financial advice.  I am not a financial planner, nor do I pretend to be.  You should always consult your own professional when seeking advice.

FIRE.091 Five Years in FIRE

I was just noticing my 5-year FIRE anniversary has now passed.  What a great time to celebrate my five-year-ago accomplishment.

Wait.  How could I possibly celebrate anything related to a FIRE anniversary when I am in full celebration/gratitude mode every single day!  Think about the relationship between these statements.  Should there be a special once-a-year celebration or should you celebrate every day of the year?

I have been living my days with an “enjoy each day” perspective tied to pure gratitude.  The attitude of gratitude.  The attitude of gratefulness.

Some five-year thoughts:

  • My days are awesome.  Every single day.  Even a bad day where something goes wrong is still better than in the past, not only because of my attitude, but in the ability to use my time/resources to tackle the problem, thereby lowering the stress of the situation.
  • There is not enough time to do everything, or even most things, on my to-do list.  As a matter of fact, my to do list is insanely long—which is a good thing.  It’s not stressful adding items to a to-do list when that list isn’t a burden fighting for your limited free time.  It’s a list of activities “available” for your nearly endless free time (we don’t have children).
  • Who you are before FI/RE is who you will be after FIRE.  People are all so very different, but we are who we are.  Don’t expect any great change from any milestone.  It’s true your level of stress may change, but you are still who you are.  I find I really like doing my own thing, on my own schedule, staying busy at times and other times not running around crazy.
  • It feels nice to give/help others when you can.  When I have the ability to help, I truly feel better afterward.  I find I like giving in ways that can be multiplied by the receivers.  If I can share information to one person that they can expand on, or that they can share with others, I find that most rewarding.
  • Living Off-Peak is amazing.  The ability to run errands, visit places and have adventures M-F from 9-3 and travel in the off-season/shoulder-seasons is great for your time, energy, stress and often wallet.  There’s a reason early bird dinners are at 4pm.
  • You’re not getting any younger—you will never be this young again.  That’s an important thought—similar to “you will never live this day again”—showing you really need to enjoy each day.  Everything you do in the future will be a little hard and a little slower as you age.  Maximize your life now.

To be honest, I’ve learned so much about myself, life and the universe having the past five years to take it all in, but I just do not have the time right now to put it into this post.  Life’s pretty busy.  Get out there and enjoy!

*** Nothing in this article is to be construed as financial advice.  I am not a financial planner, nor do I pretend to be.  You should always consult your own professional when seeking advice.

FIRE.090 Benjamin Franklin FIRE

I recently had a history-focused post. It seems that I’ve been gathering historical information for some reason.  Actually, the most likely reason is that I’m getting old and it seems that as people get older they become more interested in history—as they become historical figures themselves.

Today’s thoughts are on the very interesting Benjamin Franklin. 

Ben FIREd

Here’s one fact I took from my video course on Ben—he was an 18th century FIRE proponent.  Ben retired early from his hugely successful printing business at 42 years-old in 1748. 

Ben was an influencer, much like a blogger (an anonymous blogger) as he published his both factual and the often sensationalized Poor Richard’s Almanac.

Passive Income:

Ben develop passive income, the golden ring of personal finance.  Ben took on a partner for his printing company and in 1748 retired from the day-to-day business letting his partner take over and splitting the profits 50/50 with Franklin…a PASSIVE INCOME franchise for the next 18 years.

Followed Passions:

This is where things continue to get more interesting.  Ben, as I like to call him, then transitions to new passions.  His “early retirement” from his daily career was not a path to leisure, but rather an opportunity to delve deeper into his passions. 

It’s believed Ben planned to dive into science—which he did of course— but he took on a huge civic role and was part of creating a new country.  I would also like to add, he clearly was enjoying his FIRE (wealth/status/lifestyle/ladies) on slow travel to France, etc.

More Powerful:

Can you accomplish more in FIRE than in your career?  Could your passion include scientist, inventor, politician, philanthropist ) and being a founding father of a country (or company)?

The power of FI/RE can allow anything to happen.  The possibilities are endless.  Maybe you just choose to become a better, happier person within yourself, or toward your family and friends, and community or on a much larger scale. 

So many FIRE internet police state that people retiring young hurt the workforce and degrade the country’s economy.  I can tell you that my company didn’t skip a beat when I left.  They simply placed another person (who was looking for work) in my position and the work was completed.  Maybe the two of us performed differently or even different tasks, but nothing stopped, not at all.

I can tell you that I give of myself and my time a LOT more than I ever did when I was working.  I feel I contribute to society more than I did when I was “a worker.”  Benjamin Franklin showed on a massive scale what could be done when your time and brain are dedicated to the larger picture.

Find your Benjamins!

Source 1 Source 2 Source 3

*** Nothing in this article is to be construed as financial advice.  I am not a financial planner, nor do I pretend to be.  You should always consult your own professional when seeking advice.