Happy Hour, or The Panic Button? Why Early Retirement Anxiety Is Real.
Mark Crothers | Nov 30, 2025
Drleftys comment on a recent thread about retirement anxiety got me thinking: Dana isn't alone in this. Why does the early"golden age" so often feel more like free-fall, and what can we do about it? For decades, you've been sold the vision: retirement is the ultimate prize. A perpetual vacation where the most stressful decision is whether the day starts with a third cup of coffee or a walk in the park. But for many who actually arrive there, that reality turns out to be slightly different. It's less "golden age" and more a state of low-grade, constant existential anxiety. This isn't just about putting one's feet up; it's about having the three main scaffolding beams of adult life simultaneously chainsawed out from under you: professional identity, assured income, and daily structure. For forty years, your job title served as the answer to "Who are you?" It's a status symbol, and a huge chunk of one's identity. The moment the working life ends, that credential vanishes. If someone asks a new retiree what they do, the reply is simply, "Oh, I'm retired." And often, you can see the social downgrade happening right there. One goes from being a respected professional to feeling like they're wearing an invisibility cloak, just a person who knows what day the recycling gets picked up. The struggle to fill that void with "meaningful hobbies" can be harder than it sounds. Most people approaching retirement run the numbers a hundred times and have been good savers. Intellectually, they are fine. But knowing that in your head and feeling it in your gut are two totally different experiences. When you're working, the money goes in. Every few weeks, a reassuring electronic deposit. Now? It's only going out. You are watching the account balance shrink, line by line,…
Read more » Extreme Frugality: It Better be Fun
Mark Crothers | Jun 25, 2025
I was watching a TV program this afternoon about a couple living really frugal lives, all so they could escape their former high-pressure jobs. And really? I just don't get why people would choose that. It didn't seem appealing to me. The thing that kept going through my mind was how pressurized their new, "improved" lifestyle seemed – always looking for bargain clothing, short-dated discounted food, hustling for money to pay the bills. Why not just consider a part-time job with less pressure? Then they could live a little less frugally. But I guess everyone has their own values. I'm not here to judge, and I truly hope they're happier within themselves. But it did get me thinking… again! It would make two great new hobbies, and I believe it could save me a fortune. The goal? To invest every penny saved into crypto. I'd be getting an education in this new investment without taking any risk or crying a single tear when it inevitably goes to zero. I'm calling it extreme frugality for crypto education and fun. It all starts with the little things. When my cereal pack is empty, I'm now saving all those tiny crumbs at the bottom that nobody else wants. I'm not exactly sure what I'll do with them, but I'm sure YouTube will have an answer! Toothpaste tubes? Oh, they're getting squeezed with vice-like vigor to extract every last bit. And if there's a stubborn bit of shampoo left, I'm adding water and shaking it like a maraca to get every single drop. Truth be told, I already do the last two things so I'm really only upping my game. From now on, even my takeaway orders are fair game. Those tiny sachets of ketchup and soy sauce? They go straight into a dedicated…
Read more » Something Borrowed, Something Saved.
Mark Crothers | Feb 23, 2026
My London based daughter came home again on Thursday for a long weekend, this time to go wedding dress shopping with the ladies of the family. The girls had a get-together the evening before the big dress shopping extravaganza, and since wedding talk was firmly on the agenda, I was duly exiled to my sunroom for the night. I'm pleased to report it was a successful mission and the bride said yes to a dress. One of the greatest benefits of the wedding planning has been the regular visits home of my daughter. I've seen more of her these last few months than any time since she moved to London. But there's also been another great benefit, one I'd nearly given up on with the future bride, something I've been unsuccessful with for at least the last ten years. Saving money for the future. Although my wife Suzie and I are basically covering all the big ticket items for the wedding with some help from the groom's parents, there's still a multitude of smaller purchases that come with organising such an important event. The reality of this spending has burst the bubble of my daughter's habit of living and spending in the moment. During a quiet moment over her visit she said to me "dad, I need to start saving and being more careful with my money, I should have listened to you when you were bugging me to save every payday." Sweet music to my ears. She's heading back to London this afternoon as the proud owner of an interest bearing savings account with an auto payment set up for the day after her pay lands in her checking account. Absolutely marvellous. While we sorted the savings account out I reassured her that me and her mum would always…
Read more » Pension Funds are Sus: A Strange Little Post From A Grandparent
Mark Crothers | Jun 25, 2025
I have a new job, a chauffeur no less. This involves conveying my grandson to school. I don't know how much education he receives, but on the journey, I'm certainly getting an education on the colourful language of Generation Alpha, for those not in the know that's kids up to age fifteen. While I freely admit this post has very little traditional financial content, I would contend it holds a vital message. So, without further ado, I would like to present my newfound knowledge in the form of a short sentence you could pass on to your Generation Alpha grandchildren. If Gen Alpha follows this advice, it will certainly help their future selves. High-fee pension funds are sus, no cap. They're often mid, not bussin', hindering your financial glow up. If IYKYK, you'd bet against them. Shakespearean in nature, don't you think? For your convenience, I've provided an English translation below. English Translation: High-fee pension funds are suspicious, no kidding. They are often mediocre, not excellent, hindering your financial improvement. If you are aware of the truth, you would agree to avoid them. So, after much 'labour' in the linguistic trenches, I've not only cracked the code of a younger generation but also (hopefully) armed them with some truly useful financial intel. And truly, passing on this kind of knowledge makes me feel a lot less guilty about hoarding my own hard-earned cash. I think my grandson would award me 200 aura but still criticise my drip…. you can work that one out yourself, consider it homework.
Read more » The Wedding Extravaganza: A Pre-Mortum for Future Parents of the Bride
Mark Crothers | Jun 24, 2025
Today, I have the not-so-joyful task of collecting my suit from the dry cleaners. This instrument of torture is, of course, for a wedding I'm attending in a few weeks. Suzie and I are close friends with the bride's family, and for the past 18 months, we've been "in the loop" on all the drama and discussions surrounding the planning. It seems every visit to a bridal show adds a new "must-have" addition to what's become quite the circus, leading to ever-escalating costs. I have a particularly vested interest in all of this because my eldest daughter got engaged a couple of months ago. It's likely she'll be heading down this same rabbit hole in the next few years. However, observing my friend's daughter's wedding from afar has firmly cemented in my mind that some of the latest "must-have" items, both during the wedding and at the reception, are plainly ridiculous in both concept and cost. A few cases in point: silent discos, roving tarot card readers, free cocktail stations, and holographic art displays. Why? And who even thought of a silent disco in the first place? As parents to a future bride-to-be, we're contemplating our own Rubicon. It's our little darling's big day, and we want it to be special. But at what point do we draw a line in the sand and say "no more" if the wedding additions become simply silly? I do “get it” to a degree. The bride and possibly the groom get caught up in a bubble of excitement about their shared grand adventure. I suspect aided and abetted by social media influencers etc….. but I think sometimes we need to bust their bubble and ground them to the financial reality of the big day. What do you think, readers? Am I being mean…
Read more » Ageing and the Open Road
Mark Crothers | May 2, 2026
RECENTLY I TOOK a free ride on a driverless bus trialling its proposed route, part of my local administration's ten-year rollout plan for self-driving public transport and taxis. I see real potential in this technology, and I'm hoping the infrastructure and implementation stay on schedule. That hope is mostly selfish, I'll admit. In fifteen years I'll be in my mid-seventies, and I'd love to ditch my car and rely on cheap, dependable robo-taxis instead. It would give me freedom precisely in that decade of life when driving starts to become genuinely problematic. I'm planning to change my car in 2027 for a modern hybrid, but in the back of my mind is the thought that it could be my last. If the self-driving rollout hits its targets, I can see the case for never buying another. The advantages for someone in my demographic at that stage of life would be hard to argue with. Think about what car ownership actually costs. There's the purchase price, insurance, road tax, fuel, servicing, tyres, and the occasional bill that arrives like a punch to the stomach. For most people, a car is the second most expensive thing they own after their home. In retirement, when income typically drops and budgets tighten, that ongoing drain becomes harder to justify. This is especially true when the car spends the vast majority of its time sitting on a driveway looking pretty. A robo-taxi model, where you pay only for the journeys you actually take, could represent a dramatic shift in how much personal transport really costs. The numbers, I suspect, will be compelling — with current estimates from real world operations suggesting an 80% reduction in the cost of fares being achievable. Then there's the question of independence. This is the one that matters most to…
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