Retirement Realignment
Ken Cutler | Jan 12, 2025
I retired from my 38-year career as an electrical engineer with the country’s largest operator of nuclear power plants on September 5, 2023. I’d often dreamed about having an enjoyable encore career, and a week after retirement I began working part-time as a Chief Engineer in a consulting firm with a few hundred employees. The job has largely been true to my dream. In the roughly 16 months since I retired from full-time work, my wife Lisa and I have undergone many changes related to our financial lives. Here are 10: Emptied our TreasuryDirect accounts. Given the current mediocre returns on savings bonds, along with a desire to simplify our finances, we cashed in all our on-line savings bond holdings, zeroing out our TreasuryDirect accounts. Cashed in paper U.S. Savings Bonds. The process of dealing with the Federal Government bureaucracy to redeem savings bonds seems clunky and slow. Many banks are no longer redeeming bonds, even for longtime customers. My bank still provides that service, so I’ve been cashing them in there. I’ve worked through all the highest denomination bonds. This has had tax implications as our interest/dividend income has been much higher than normal. I’ve adjusted my pension and earnings withholdings accordingly. Went on Medicare. Well, at least Lisa did. It was a very smooth process, all successfully completed online. I didn’t even feel the need to purchase ‘Medicare for Dummies’ to help navigate through the decision making. Plenty of good information was available here on HumbleDollar. And no, she is not enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan. Spent 50% more on eating out. My son Dan and I meet almost every Thursday for lunch. Dan is a software engineer who works from home and lives about a half hour away from me. My wife, daughter and daughter-in-law get…
Read more » Frugal but Foolish
Ken Cutler | Apr 18, 2024
JEFF WAS A NEW engineer who began his nuclear power career a couple of decades ago as part of my group. He’d graduated from a middling engineering school with a stellar grade point average. Quiet, though not shy, he had a serious demeanor. Jeff had a goal of purchasing a house as soon as possible. Needless to say, this was a tall order for someone just starting his career. He lived a spartan lifestyle, trying to quickly amass as much money as possible for a down payment. Two examples of his extreme frugality stand out in my memory. First, he favored buying expired food at a deep discount to keep his grocery bills low. One time, I noticed him eating yogurt that was a couple of weeks past its due date. Second, he parked in the outer lot, far away from our office. As an in-house employee, he was permitted to park in the inner lot, close to our building. But he chose not to. I knew a few people who, on occasion, would purposely park in the outer lot to get some exercise with the longer walk to the office. That wasn’t Jeff’s motivation. Rather, he wanted to save money on gas by not driving the extra several hundred yards to the inner lot. A back-of-the-envelope calculation suggested this ritual saved him at most three cents on gas each day. I think Jeff might have been used to being a big fish in a small pond at school. Despite being a star at his college, his work performance in our group was nothing remarkable. I don’t think he was accustomed to getting critical feedback. A brilliant and experienced engineer named Wes was assigned to be his mentor. Wes’s career with the company spanned more than three decades. He had…
Read more » Random Thoughts on the Passing Scene (With Apologies to Thomas Sowell)
Ken Cutler | Aug 3, 2025
-During a dinner a year or so ago with some of my recently-retired but still working friends, talk turned to what toys the fellas were buying with their “bonus” income. Most of the guys had big-ticket items to report: expensive new trucks, recreational vehicles, motorcycles…things like that. I didn’t have a lot to add to that conversation, but when I was pointedly asked what I’d bought for fun, the most extravagant item I could come up with was a new Trek bicycle that cost me a little under a thousand dollars—far more than I’d ever paid for a bike previously. Still, several other purchases in retirement have brought me significant satisfaction. I bought a standing desk, which almost miraculously cured the chronic neck pain I’d been experiencing. I purchased a Weber charcoal grill, which has taken our cookouts to the next level. I replaced three clunky older cordless drills that I had inherited with a brand new DeWalt drill. This exchange allowed me to complete some much-needed repairs on my mailbox without it becoming an all-day ordeal. Finally, I bought several dozen interlocking, brightly-colored anti-fatigue foam pads and created a path around my concrete basement floor’s most trafficked areas. My back has thanked me ever since. The total cost of these four purchases was around $500, hardly requiring me to continue working. Yet they really are the most significant lifestyle-enhancing purchases I’ve made since retiring. -I’m less fascinated by my financial spreadsheets these days. Before I retired, they helped give me a sense of progress toward our retirement readiness. Today, the numbers seem increasingly meaningless. I’m convinced our combination of cash flow and assets is likely “enough” for our relatively modest lifestyle. Constantly sorting data to check our income or net worth now seems like a somewhat empty exercise, although…
Read more » Full Circle
Ken Cutler | Jun 2, 2025
My first encounter with Jonathan was at an annual client appreciation event in Hershey, PA hosted by my in-laws’ financial advisor, Tim Decker. My wife Lisa and I attended as guests of her parents. The snacks served were nothing special, but the evening was still very worthwhile. Tim gave an “state of the union” update for his many clients in attendance and then turned the microphone over to Jonathan for the keynote presentation. I can’t recall any details from Jonathan’s talk that night a decade ago but I remember finding it quite interesting. I was happy to leave with a signed copy of his book Money Guide 2015, which is sitting on my desk in front of me as I type this. It wasn’t until about eight years later that I was re-introduced to Jonathan, when I stumbled across HumbleDollar. As fee-only advisors, Tim and his associates have done a good job for my in-laws. My father-in-law passed away a few years ago but my 91-year-old mother-in-law remains a satisfied client. Knowing I had an interest in personal finance, over the years Mom would occasionally pass along information or advice that Tim provided. Eventually, I got on Tim’s mailing list and started listening to podcasts of his weekly radio program that airs on a local AM station. I even paid for an hour of Tim’s advice several years ago when I first started contemplating retiring. I’m a bit sporadic listening to Tim’s podcast these days. I typically scan the weekly email topic summary to see if anything catches my interest. Today’s email included the following: “Tim announces that a very special, well-known guest will join him for the show on June 21.” HumbleDollar readers are a sharp bunch and you already know the rest. Jonathan is that special guest. I…
Read more » They Made the Lists
Ken Cutler | Dec 12, 2023
THERE’S AN OLD SAYING: Good things come in threes. That’s certainly been true for one aspect of my life. I’ve lived in just three locations—and all of them have been featured in national “best places” lists. My early years were in Moorestown, New Jersey, a quiet town with a population of some 20,000. It’s an affluent suburb of Philadelphia that defies stereotypes about New Jersey. In 2005, Money magazine identified Moorestown as the best place to live in the country. This was well after I’d moved away. Still, the town was certainly a pleasant place to grow up during the 1960s and '70s. Moorestown has a strong school system, which I experienced first-hand. It also has a relatively low crime rate, a charming downtown and beautiful public spaces. It’s a little over an hour’s drive from the Jersey Shore. One downside: The town is so popular that homes have been richly priced for decades. After I graduated from Moorestown High School, I made my way to Blacksburg, Virginia, to attend Virginia Tech. Blacksburg regularly makes lists of desirable places to live. For instance, Forbes included the town in its 2016 list of the top 25 places to retire. In 2018, Blacksburg was named the 63rd best place to live in the country, according to Livability.com. I was only in Blacksburg for four years, back in the 1980s. It was an idyllic place to attend college. With the town located in the Blue Ridge Mountain range, it was easy to get away, even without a car. Within 10 minutes of leaving campus on a bicycle, you could feel like you were completely away from civilization. The college itself has a mix of academic sophistication and friendly country charm. In a survey a few years back, Virginia Tech’s student quality of life…
Read more » The Road Trip
Ken Cutler | Aug 19, 2024
This past weekend, my wife Lisa and I traveled to Middleburg, Virginia—a little over an hour west of Washington DC. My son’s father-in-law Matt, who also happened to be one of my college apartment-mates, is turning 60 soon and his family threw him a huge surprise party. Most of Matt’s immediate and extended family members were there, as well as key people from his career, church and other parts of life. I was part of the college friend contingent. The bash, replete with food trucks, lawn games for the kids, and a great band, was a smashing success. The location for the event was Welbourne Inn, a huge estate that dates from 1775 and sprawls over 500 acres. The main house, which has 10 large bedrooms, has been inhabited by the Dulany family since 1833. Guests there can be forgiven for thinking they are spending a night at the museum (or in our case, two nights). Our spirited hostess, friend of Matt’s wife, and Dulany family member Rebecca stated that the house contains over 9000 books, the accumulation of eight generations. I picked a volume out at random in one of the libraries. It had been published in 1840. The collection of furniture, paintings, and artifacts housed at Welbourne is astounding. A sizable portion of the estate’s land is dedicated to an equine retirement community. People pay to have their beloved horses live out the rest of their days being cared for in an idyllic setting. About 90 horses make Welbourne their home. My wife and I, along with college friends Bill and Catherine, journeyed into this wonderland our first evening there. As much as I love animals, I’ve never spent much time around horses. When six or eight of these giants came lumbering over to us, I wasn’t quite…
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