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Private Credit Stress?

"My parents had almost all of their retirement savings invested in a small second mortgage company. I tried to get them to diversify, but they were addicted to the interest rate returns. Long story short, one disgruntled investor sued the company, they declared bankruptcy, and it took years to sort out. Both my parents died before they were made whole, on the principal only."
- Mike Wyant
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Something to Think About

"For all of us who have most of their retirement income in TIRAs, why all the fear about taking an RMD? Remember when they were drilling into us that the taxcuts were going to expire? What happened? seniors got more deductions. Sean Mullaney has some interest takes on this. We're saturated with Youtube videos by 30yr old "financial experts" telling us to do Roth conversions now and they know nothing about us and what the future holds for senior tax reduction benefits. As for me, I have been doing small conversions just to benefit my heirs. But my TIRA balance continues to grow each year and I am happy with that."
- August West
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$3 Trillion S&P 500 Gatecrashers

HAVE YOU GIVEN any thought to what's about to happen to your S&P 500 tracker? Three enormous IPOs are expected later this year: SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic. Based on their most recent private transactions, SpaceX appears to be valued at around $1.25 trillion, OpenAI at roughly $800 billion, and Anthropic at approximately $380 billion. Combined, we could be looking at close to $3 trillion in private market value that wants to go public. To put that in perspective, the entire S&P 500 is worth roughly $60 trillion. That's not a routine year for markets. That could be a very large event indeed. I suspect the vast majority of people with money sitting in a tracker fund have absolutely no idea it's coming. Those that do might have read some of the more sensational claims I've seen about immediate, disruptive wholesale change to the S&P 500. I think those articles are getting ahead of themselves. These companies might not automatically land in your S&P 500 tracker the day they list. The index has hard rules, and two of them seem particularly relevant. A company generally needs to have been profitable for four consecutive quarters before it qualifies. OpenAI and Anthropic are both, as far as we can tell, burning through enormous amounts of capital. They may well not meet that bar at IPO. There's also a float requirement, where roughly half of a company's outstanding shares typically need to be publicly tradeable. These businesses will almost certainly debut with tiny floats, possibly somewhere between 5% and 10% of shares in public hands. That could disqualify them from day one. SpaceX is possibly the closest to profitability of the three, but the float issue likely applies across the board. One area of uncertainty is the selection committee. This has some discretion around the inclusion of larger IPOs. They could choose to move faster than the rules imply. So the story might not be your tracker being immediately and dramatically restructured. The story could be more drawn out than that, and perhaps more interesting for it. What does this mean in the short term? I can only offer informed speculation. To my mind, volatility seems likely around the listings themselves. Not necessarily because of forced index rebalancing, but because the float issue creates its own kind of pressure. Enormous companies carrying enormous implied valuations, but only a sliver of shares in circulation. Limited supply, near-unlimited institutional demand, and a market full of retail investors who've been reading about these companies for years and finally get their shot. I would guess we should expect wild price swings during those early trading days, though I could be wrong about the scale of it. Rotation risk is worth watching too, I think. Investors might pull money out of existing AI bets, the likes of Nvidia and Microsoft, and move it directly into OpenAI and Anthropic the moment they're publicly available. If that happens, the stocks that have driven your tracker's returns for the last three years could face sustained selling pressure, not because anything's wrong with those businesses, but simply because a shinier, newer version of the same trade has just arrived. A throwaway thought for anyone holding individual shares rather than trackers. The companies most at risk of ejection are those sitting at the bottom of the index. When a business loses its S&P 500 membership, every passive fund becomes an automatic seller. That can hit the share price hard, nothing wrong with the company, just forced selling as a side effect of something big happening at the very top. Worth knowing if any of those smaller names are in your portfolio. Medium term it could get more interesting still. If and when these companies do meet the profitability and float requirements, which could, I think, be years after their IPOs rather than months, every S&P 500 tracker on the planet becomes an automatic buyer. Hundreds of billions flowing into SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic whether fund managers want it or not. The mechanics of passive investing would turn every tracker holder into an investor in these three companies with absolutely no say in the matter. That's the bit people rarely stop to think about. Passive investing isn't neutral. It just means someone else is making your decisions for you. Then I come to the big question: do these businesses actually deserve these valuations? It's worth noting that every major IPO of recent years has tended to trade down from its private valuation once the public gets a proper look at the books. The venture capital guys who set those private prices aren't always right, and public markets have a habit of finding that out fairly quickly. If the same happens here, your tracker should hopefully be buying them at a fair price by the time they filter into the realm of inclusion within that tracker. It has to be said, that's not guaranteed. I'm not trying to be alarmist. These aren't penny stocks being hyped and I think that matters. OpenAI's revenue had already surpassed $20 billion by the end of 2025. SpaceX is targeting what could be the largest public offering in history. Anthropic has BlackRock, Blackstone, Microsoft and Nvidia on its books. These are real businesses generating real money with the biggest and most sophisticated names in global finance and technology behind them. That doesn't make them cheap at these prices, but it does make them a very different proposition from the usual IPO hype cycle. The bottom line for the average investor? We probably don't need to do anything dramatic. But it doesn't hurt to understand that the passive, set-and-forget vehicle you own may look quite different over the next few years, not necessarily in a single sudden lurch, but gradually, as these companies either earn their way into the index or don't. The index you bought into always changes but the next few years will definitely see bigger changes than normal. If nothing else, it'll be interesting to see what happens going forward…Eyes open.
Mark Crothers is a retired small business owner from the UK with a keen interest in personal finance and simple living. Married to his high school sweetheart, with daughters and grandchildren, he knows the importance of building a secure financial future. With an aversion to social media, he prefers to spend his time on his main passions: reading, scratch cooking, racket sports, and hiking.
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Ninety Nine, I mean Eight Retirement Tips

"I experienced the persistence of a Fisher's Vice President's follow-up after an initial conversation. Because of my background in insurance & investments, as well as college teaching in those areas, I dismissed Fisher's program. Any advisor who advises you not to consider a powerful financial tool (an annuity) is automatically suspect to me. Their Fee Schedule also turned me off, in a major way, since it is borderline greedy. As far as their brochure and its recommendations are concerned, it's actually not a bad brochure. Many of the recommendations make great sense! As far as laundry is concerned...one of the greatest gifts my mom gave me was a young man was how to do my own laundry, how to do minor sewing tasks, and how to iron clothes nicely! Add to that how to do basic cooking, and I was ready to take care of myself. She also taught me how to appreciate a wife...and I have never told my wife how to do our laundry. Ha! She didn't tell me how to give clients financial advice or teach college classes, and I don't tell her how to keep our home!"
- Mike Lynch
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My Window is Open – Come In

"Thanks for writing a positive and timeless message."
- Jack Hannam
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The Bear Market Survival Kit (Pharmaceuticals Not Included)

"There will be a sizeable correction one day. You can bet on it. We each should answer the question "Are you in thought, or in action?" and you are in action."
- normr60189
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Focus on the real healthcare financial risk in post age 65 retirement

"There should be one formulary covering every FDA approved drug used for its approved purpose."
- R Quinn
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America Doesn’t Just Do Layoffs. It’s Fallen in Love With Them

"A business isn't a democracy: it's a for-profit organisation owned by the people who put their capital at risk. Ownership carries the right of control, full stop, and that holds whether you have two employees or twenty thousand. Employees are absolutely entitled to the wages they've earned and to respect — but that entitlement stops well short of representation on strategic and operational decisions. That authority belongs to the owners, or to the management they choose to delegate it to. Handing control to people who bear none of the financial risk is simply unfair to those who put up the money. I ran a small business with around fifty employees. The idea that I should have been legally or morally required to consult them on running my own company is frankly absurd. Want a say in how the business is run? Put financial skin in the game. That changes the equation entirely ."
- Mark Crothers
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Took Courage

I ALWAYS THOUGHT my father was a brave man. It wasn’t just because he served in World War II. It had to do with a few incidents that I witnessed.

I’ll never forget when my dad and I went to McDonald's for a late evening meal. I was probably in the eighth grade. I believe my mother was working late that night. It must have been a Friday because a lot of teenagers were hanging out in the parking lot.

It was the 1960s, when folks would often eat their food in their car. While we were consuming our burgers and fries, a fight broke out in the parking lot. I said to myself, “We should get out of here before things really get out of control.” But my father thought otherwise. We were going to finish our meal.

There were three teenagers in the car next to us. They started to get out of their vehicle to join the fight. My dad wasn’t a big man, and these three guys looked like they were big enough to be on the high school football team.

Still, my dad stuck his head out of the window and yelled, “Get back in your car.” Those guys looked at my dad, and slowly sat back down and shut the car doors. I don’t know what my dad would have done if they’d ignored him.

We stayed until order was restored. I always thought my dad was courageous that night. Today, some might say he was foolish.

But what might have been even more courageous was when my father accepted a job in California. In summer 1961, when we lived in Canton, Ohio, my dad answered a help wanted ad in the local newspaper. It was for a job as a machinist in Los Angeles. At the time, Southern California companies were looking for skilled labor.

He was offered the job after a telephone interview. Although the company paid all our travel expenses, I often thought it took courage for my father to uproot his family, head to a faraway place he’d never seen, and leave his job to work for a company he knew little about.

We drove our 1956 Ford Fairlane on a long, hot and humid journey across the country in hopes of a better life. I remember it was so hot in Arizona we had to hang a bag full of ice over the radiator to keep the car from overheating.

The company paid for our stay at a motel in Culver City. My dad would go to work during the day at a machine shop that did work for aerospace companies. My mother, sister and I hung around the motel, waiting for him to return. After a few days, it was clear California would be our new home, so my mother, sister and I took a train back to Canton to sell the house and most of our belongings. My parents’ Ohio starter home sold for $10,000.

As a 10-year-old, I didn’t realize that this cross-country trip was the start of my own journey to financial freedom. We weren’t just driving that Ford Fairlane to Los Angeles so my parents could find steady employment. We were also going to a place where my sister and I would find more economic opportunities.

When I graduated college, there were still plenty of job opportunities with major aerospace companies in the area. I went on to enjoy a fulfilling career in the aerospace industry, and I owe much of my success to my parents and that old Ford that took us to a land of opportunity.

Now that I’m retired, I sometimes think that my wife and I should take that cross-country trip in the other direction, in hopes of finding a better retirement. The cost of living is much cheaper in other parts of the country. In California, gasoline is more expensive and food prices are higher, plus our insurance premiums went up sharply this year.

We could sell our house and buy a nice home in the Midwest or the South, and still have money left over. But I think deciding where to live in retirement should involve more than money. I believe we have a better chance to live a longer and healthier life if we stay in Southern California.

We can have a more active lifestyle because the weather is milder here. We can walk, run, hike, bike, golf and work in our garden all year round. The summers can be hot, but not humid. There’s also less risk of falling down and breaking a hip during the winter season.

When I was in college, I had a professor—an older gentleman. On the first day of class, he was telling the students about himself. He said he recently moved to California from Indiana. For the sake of his health, his doctor recommended that he move to a place where the climate was milder.

While he was telling us his story, he began rubbing the top of his bald head. He said, “Not only do I think my health is better, I think my hair is starting to grow back.”

I don't think my hair will grow back. But like that professor, I think my wife and I have a better chance of living a longer and healthier life if we stay put.

Dennis Friedman retired from Boeing Satellite Systems after a 30-year career in manufacturing. Born in Ohio, Dennis is a California transplant with a bachelor's degree in history and an MBA. A self-described "humble investor," he likes reading historical novels and about personal finance. Check out his earlier articles and follow him on X @DMFrie. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts (MAPTs)

"I do not see how these trust arrangements are any different than the various legal tactics that the wealthy and others employ to avoid paying taxes. If paying as little taxes as possible is ok so then certainly taking advantage of this should be viewed similarly. Many extremely large estates successfully avoid estate taxes by using sophisticated techniques. Dynastic wealth is becoming more extreme in the United States."
- R Mancuso
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Private Credit Stress?

"My parents had almost all of their retirement savings invested in a small second mortgage company. I tried to get them to diversify, but they were addicted to the interest rate returns. Long story short, one disgruntled investor sued the company, they declared bankruptcy, and it took years to sort out. Both my parents died before they were made whole, on the principal only."
- Mike Wyant
Read more »

Something to Think About

"For all of us who have most of their retirement income in TIRAs, why all the fear about taking an RMD? Remember when they were drilling into us that the taxcuts were going to expire? What happened? seniors got more deductions. Sean Mullaney has some interest takes on this. We're saturated with Youtube videos by 30yr old "financial experts" telling us to do Roth conversions now and they know nothing about us and what the future holds for senior tax reduction benefits. As for me, I have been doing small conversions just to benefit my heirs. But my TIRA balance continues to grow each year and I am happy with that."
- August West
Read more »

$3 Trillion S&P 500 Gatecrashers

HAVE YOU GIVEN any thought to what's about to happen to your S&P 500 tracker? Three enormous IPOs are expected later this year: SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic. Based on their most recent private transactions, SpaceX appears to be valued at around $1.25 trillion, OpenAI at roughly $800 billion, and Anthropic at approximately $380 billion. Combined, we could be looking at close to $3 trillion in private market value that wants to go public. To put that in perspective, the entire S&P 500 is worth roughly $60 trillion. That's not a routine year for markets. That could be a very large event indeed. I suspect the vast majority of people with money sitting in a tracker fund have absolutely no idea it's coming. Those that do might have read some of the more sensational claims I've seen about immediate, disruptive wholesale change to the S&P 500. I think those articles are getting ahead of themselves. These companies might not automatically land in your S&P 500 tracker the day they list. The index has hard rules, and two of them seem particularly relevant. A company generally needs to have been profitable for four consecutive quarters before it qualifies. OpenAI and Anthropic are both, as far as we can tell, burning through enormous amounts of capital. They may well not meet that bar at IPO. There's also a float requirement, where roughly half of a company's outstanding shares typically need to be publicly tradeable. These businesses will almost certainly debut with tiny floats, possibly somewhere between 5% and 10% of shares in public hands. That could disqualify them from day one. SpaceX is possibly the closest to profitability of the three, but the float issue likely applies across the board. One area of uncertainty is the selection committee. This has some discretion around the inclusion of larger IPOs. They could choose to move faster than the rules imply. So the story might not be your tracker being immediately and dramatically restructured. The story could be more drawn out than that, and perhaps more interesting for it. What does this mean in the short term? I can only offer informed speculation. To my mind, volatility seems likely around the listings themselves. Not necessarily because of forced index rebalancing, but because the float issue creates its own kind of pressure. Enormous companies carrying enormous implied valuations, but only a sliver of shares in circulation. Limited supply, near-unlimited institutional demand, and a market full of retail investors who've been reading about these companies for years and finally get their shot. I would guess we should expect wild price swings during those early trading days, though I could be wrong about the scale of it. Rotation risk is worth watching too, I think. Investors might pull money out of existing AI bets, the likes of Nvidia and Microsoft, and move it directly into OpenAI and Anthropic the moment they're publicly available. If that happens, the stocks that have driven your tracker's returns for the last three years could face sustained selling pressure, not because anything's wrong with those businesses, but simply because a shinier, newer version of the same trade has just arrived. A throwaway thought for anyone holding individual shares rather than trackers. The companies most at risk of ejection are those sitting at the bottom of the index. When a business loses its S&P 500 membership, every passive fund becomes an automatic seller. That can hit the share price hard, nothing wrong with the company, just forced selling as a side effect of something big happening at the very top. Worth knowing if any of those smaller names are in your portfolio. Medium term it could get more interesting still. If and when these companies do meet the profitability and float requirements, which could, I think, be years after their IPOs rather than months, every S&P 500 tracker on the planet becomes an automatic buyer. Hundreds of billions flowing into SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic whether fund managers want it or not. The mechanics of passive investing would turn every tracker holder into an investor in these three companies with absolutely no say in the matter. That's the bit people rarely stop to think about. Passive investing isn't neutral. It just means someone else is making your decisions for you. Then I come to the big question: do these businesses actually deserve these valuations? It's worth noting that every major IPO of recent years has tended to trade down from its private valuation once the public gets a proper look at the books. The venture capital guys who set those private prices aren't always right, and public markets have a habit of finding that out fairly quickly. If the same happens here, your tracker should hopefully be buying them at a fair price by the time they filter into the realm of inclusion within that tracker. It has to be said, that's not guaranteed. I'm not trying to be alarmist. These aren't penny stocks being hyped and I think that matters. OpenAI's revenue had already surpassed $20 billion by the end of 2025. SpaceX is targeting what could be the largest public offering in history. Anthropic has BlackRock, Blackstone, Microsoft and Nvidia on its books. These are real businesses generating real money with the biggest and most sophisticated names in global finance and technology behind them. That doesn't make them cheap at these prices, but it does make them a very different proposition from the usual IPO hype cycle. The bottom line for the average investor? We probably don't need to do anything dramatic. But it doesn't hurt to understand that the passive, set-and-forget vehicle you own may look quite different over the next few years, not necessarily in a single sudden lurch, but gradually, as these companies either earn their way into the index or don't. The index you bought into always changes but the next few years will definitely see bigger changes than normal. If nothing else, it'll be interesting to see what happens going forward…Eyes open.
Mark Crothers is a retired small business owner from the UK with a keen interest in personal finance and simple living. Married to his high school sweetheart, with daughters and grandchildren, he knows the importance of building a secure financial future. With an aversion to social media, he prefers to spend his time on his main passions: reading, scratch cooking, racket sports, and hiking.
Read more »

Ninety Nine, I mean Eight Retirement Tips

"I experienced the persistence of a Fisher's Vice President's follow-up after an initial conversation. Because of my background in insurance & investments, as well as college teaching in those areas, I dismissed Fisher's program. Any advisor who advises you not to consider a powerful financial tool (an annuity) is automatically suspect to me. Their Fee Schedule also turned me off, in a major way, since it is borderline greedy. As far as their brochure and its recommendations are concerned, it's actually not a bad brochure. Many of the recommendations make great sense! As far as laundry is concerned...one of the greatest gifts my mom gave me was a young man was how to do my own laundry, how to do minor sewing tasks, and how to iron clothes nicely! Add to that how to do basic cooking, and I was ready to take care of myself. She also taught me how to appreciate a wife...and I have never told my wife how to do our laundry. Ha! She didn't tell me how to give clients financial advice or teach college classes, and I don't tell her how to keep our home!"
- Mike Lynch
Read more »

My Window is Open – Come In

"Thanks for writing a positive and timeless message."
- Jack Hannam
Read more »

The Bear Market Survival Kit (Pharmaceuticals Not Included)

"There will be a sizeable correction one day. You can bet on it. We each should answer the question "Are you in thought, or in action?" and you are in action."
- normr60189
Read more »

Focus on the real healthcare financial risk in post age 65 retirement

"There should be one formulary covering every FDA approved drug used for its approved purpose."
- R Quinn
Read more »

America Doesn’t Just Do Layoffs. It’s Fallen in Love With Them

"A business isn't a democracy: it's a for-profit organisation owned by the people who put their capital at risk. Ownership carries the right of control, full stop, and that holds whether you have two employees or twenty thousand. Employees are absolutely entitled to the wages they've earned and to respect — but that entitlement stops well short of representation on strategic and operational decisions. That authority belongs to the owners, or to the management they choose to delegate it to. Handing control to people who bear none of the financial risk is simply unfair to those who put up the money. I ran a small business with around fifty employees. The idea that I should have been legally or morally required to consult them on running my own company is frankly absurd. Want a say in how the business is run? Put financial skin in the game. That changes the equation entirely ."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Free Newsletter

Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 10: OUR GOAL shouldn’t be more time to relax, but rather more time to pursue our passions. Working hard at things we care deeply about is among life’s greatest pleasures.

act

SUPPOSE YOU LOST your job. How long could you go before your financial life unraveled? This isn’t an issue for retirees—which is why they need little or no emergency money. But if you’re working, your plan for unemployment might include a cash reserve, slashing discretionary spending, a home equity line of credit and withdrawing Roth contributions.

Truths

NO. 110: ITEMIZED deductions only save you taxes to the degree they exceed your standard deduction. The total of your mortgage interest and other itemized deductions might seem impressive. But if that total is barely above the standard deduction, they’ll trim your taxable income by just a modest amount, giving you tiny tax savings in return for huge dollars spent.

humans

NO. 12: WE AREN'T good at figuring out what we truly want—dubbed miswanting by psychologists. We imagine a bigger house or early retirement will make us happier. But if we achieve such things, we may discover they aren’t that important to us. That’s why, instead of simply assuming we know what we want, we should think hard about our goals.

Investment math

Manifesto

NO. 10: OUR GOAL shouldn’t be more time to relax, but rather more time to pursue our passions. Working hard at things we care deeply about is among life’s greatest pleasures.

Spotlight: Careers

Coast FIRE! Who would have thought that FIRE could have so many flavors?

Coast Fire by Jason Kitces
Coast Fire sounds like a logical evolution of the FIRE (financial independence-retire early) idea. Not everyone thinks ending work is the greatest idea, but a lot of people might prefer less demanding jobs, such that they can both work and enjoy a lower stress life.
When I look at the technology and tools available to help people organize their personal finance and take over their lives I’m truly envious.

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Summer School

RETURNING TO NEW YORK for the summer was out of the question. It was spring of my freshman year, and I wasn’t about to acquiesce to my parents’ wishes, not after the whirlwind of college life that included an introduction to pot and dating non-Jewish girls from small Midwestern towns. I didn’t give much thought to what I’d actually do. Maybe meeting girls taking summer school in The Grill or driving all the way to Miami and party,

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Going Against the Grain

From an early age, we are influenced by our parents, friends, relatives and society in general to get us on the treadmill of achieving success. By the time we are in college, career choice and what we want to do with our life have been heavily influenced by everyone around us.  After several decades of pursuing someone else’s dream, it is hard to switch and focus on what we really want to do. It is too late and most just carry on.

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A Target On My Back

Early in my career, I took a quiz meant to determine how suitable a person was to be an entrepreneur. A high score indicated that one’s personality and interests were aligned with a life of entrepreneurship. A score close to zero was neutral, indicating neither a proclivity nor an aversion to being an entrepreneur. I scored deep in negative territory. I determined at that point to always be a salaryman, a path that worked out well for me.

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Asking the Editor

NINE MONTHS AGO, Jonathan Clements shared with readers that he’d been diagnosed with an incurable form of cancer. It was devastating news, especially for longtime readers, many of whom regard Jonathan not only as a journalist but also a friend. I count myself among them, so I was grateful that Jonathan agreed to sit for an interview to share more about his background, his early years and his current thinking. 
You’ve joked that,

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When You Love What You Do. Definitely NOT a rant.

Regular HumbleDollar readers are likely familiar with my passion for dogs. I adore dogs and find I generally prefer their company to that of many humans. 
Three years ago I retired. I had spent thirty years working in laboratories. I generally enjoyed the work but I was never particularly passionate about it. I spent my weekdays working in order to support my dog hobby on the weekends. 
Right after I retired, my husband and I toyed with the idea of starting a dog training business.

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Spotlight: Marsh

Clumsy With People

SOME PEOPLE ARE BORN clumsy. Tools never seem to fit their hands. Their hammer finds a thumb more often than a nail. For them, running looks and feels like an ungainly, uphill battle—even on level ground. I don’t claim to be physically gifted. But my clumsiness shows up in a different way. I have a notable social deficiency: I’m naturally clumsy with people. Why is this important? It defined the first quarter-century of my life, including my finances. Stumbling start. Had I been born in these days of heightened awareness, I might be fingered for testing and diagnosed with mild autism. Yes, I had friends, played grade-school sports and swarmed into class with the other students. But my in-born emotional wall prevented true intimacy with my mates and resulted in a paralyzing anxiety that accompanied all public performances. I focused on the eyeballs in the stands, rather than the approaching pitch. A simple book report in front of familiar faces led to sleepless nights and a stuttering presentation. My personality traits hampered me from thriving during my childhood years. Despite this, my childhood wasn’t all misery. My quietly loving parents gave me room to be different, maybe seeing a bit of themselves in their awkward son. The many hours devoted to hunting with my father were joyful, mostly because of the time we shared and the beauty of the woods and fields. Meanwhile, seven summers with my maternal grandparents allowed an escape to a world away from people. The authentic rural landscape beckoned me on solitary walks of mental freedom, an indulgence missing from my life back home. Though stunted by my social shortcomings, my studies were a bright spot. Good grades led to an offer to skip my senior year of high school. Instead, I enrolled in the local…
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It’s Up to Them

I recently asked HumbleDollar Forum readers if they talk about money with friends and family members. Though the sample is small, the answer is clear. It seems nearly everyone except me keeps their nose where it belongs–out of other people’s business Perhaps my work as a physical therapist has dulled my sense of relationship boundaries. I’ve asked thousands of patients personal questions such as “Do you need help bathing?” Apparently, it’s just a small step from there to quizzing a close friend about her retirement plans. With my mind in that mode, at the end of last year I scheduled a short presentation on personal finance with my rehab clinic co-workers. In a previous lecture, I stressed the importance of posture in the prevention and treatment of a host of problems from back pain to breathing and swallowing difficulties. I reminded my colleagues that practicing proper posture is a simple, yet vital health habit. This time, I hoped to show my workplace friends the simple steps to a financially healthy retirement. My objective was twofold. First, stretch my colleagues’ minds forward in time to picture their future selves when their working days are past.. Then, point them toward our workplace retirement savings plan as a means of laying up money for that future. The rehab department is young. At 62, I’m well above average age. Most of the staff are caught up in the struggle of balancing the time demands of work and family life as they figure out how to meet the monthly bills and pay off debt. For many, saving for retirement can get shifted down the priority ladder of financial concerns. Of the fifteen or so people I expected to attend, I knew the group’s financial acumen ran the gamut. Some were savvy, like the young woman…
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Take a Seat

MILESTONES MARK the growth of a child as she moves from infancy through school age. In similar fashion, we adults tend to measure our life’s progress with “firsts” or other significant events. Perhaps we remember the feeling of maturity that came with our first kiss or our first job. Milestones help us attach meaning to the course of a life that sometimes seems beyond our control. Financial milestones often command special significance, like my first “real” job at age 15. My older brother got me hired by a company building a bank. My parents surprised me with unusual lenience by letting me drive myself in a borrowed vehicle, though I was still a few months from having an unrestricted license. On my first day, my initial task was enlarging the vent hole for the concrete vault with a hammer and chisel. Next came breaking up a sidewalk with a sledge hammer. I thought I was lucky to be called away from that work, but instead found myself hauling heavy landscaping timbers in the rain at the boss’s friend’s beach house. I got back to the jobsite wet and covered with sand. When I pointed out to the foreman that I’d had no lunch, he begrudgingly let me leave with the admonition to “hurry back.” Instead, I hurried to my truck, hurried home and never looked back. I don’t say that with pride, but I have no regrets. Despite my rough start, followed by a few tough years, my financial journey eventually smoothed out. The milestones began passing by with some regularity for my wife and me. Whether frugal by nature or nurture, our aggressive saving—and lack of troubles—left ample money from each paycheck to ladle into growing retirement accounts. I kept close tabs on the burgeoning balances, excited to see…
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Retirement Rehearsal

As I finish this article, I'm sitting in an Airbnb in an older community undergoing a renaissance, nestled between a small mountain and my family's favorite little city. Atop the mountain, my daughter is attending a three-day "get acquainted" gathering at the college perched there, while my wife and I hang out and practice being a couple again. Across the room, my wife is catching up on her reading. Freedom from home or family duties feels like a vacation to her, even if we're not running to and fro to catch the sights. Meanwhile, indulging in semi-dedicated writing time foreshadows my vision of retirement. Paired with gardening, my other hobby, I hope writing provides a balance to the busy retirement I expect to experience. Currently, my writing is relegated to early-morning, late -evening or odd stretches of time snatched from my busy schedule. I say "semi-dedicated" because my wife and I have an itinerary that intermingles short hikes and good food with down time in the Airbnb. That's an easy mix to throw together, since it's just a brief walk to strike a trail leading up the mountain, while a cluster of restaurants close by promise a tasty menu. There's no set schedule, so I'm following my plan to fire up the keyboard when my wife is otherwise occupied Until recently, retirement planning for my wife and me meant fretting over our investment mix and running the numbers to be certain there's money to pay the bills after our work days are over for good. But we've learned money is not the only scarce resource to work out a plan for. Once we're satisfied our pile of treasure is high enough to quit working--should we choose to do so--how should we spend our new-found free time? Our list of possible…
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Lunch Money

WE ALL HAVE GOOD habits and bad habits. One of my best habits: bringing my lunch to work. I save both money and calories by brown-bagging it rather than buying lunch at a restaurant. My lunch of leftovers, along with a few pieces of fruit and a bottle of water, cost less than even a fast-food meal deal, and it’s healthier. What about the long-term savings from avoiding those additional calories? Researchers have found that excess body weight adds thousands of dollars to our annual health care expenses. My meals at home are also reasonably healthy, mostly lean meats and fresh vegetables. The leftovers find their way into my lunchbox the next morning. A typical midday meal for me is two to three ounces of meat, one cup of steamed vegetables and two or three pieces of in-season fruit. The cost is less than $3. By contrast, a McDonald’s Big Mac combo meal runs to more than $8. A Chipotle grilled chicken burrito with rice, black beans and a drink is $11 to $12. Lunch at LongHorn Steakhouse starts at $8. The calorie count for my lunch is also lower. The total usually runs about 400. By contrast, the Big Mac combo boasts 1,080 calories, the Chipotle meal can total around 820, and a LongHorn crispy chicken combo has 1,200 calories if you choose a salad and diet drink. Those extra calories don’t automatically mean extra weight. But experience tells me that fast food lunches and a few restaurant dinners add pounds to my frame. Toss in a latte, instead of my preferred home-brewed black coffee at breakfast, and I could be headed toward a body mass index, or BMI, that’s dangerous to my health and my wallet. BMI is a measure of total body fat calculated from the height…
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Just Enough

PHYSICAL THERAPY IS a teaching profession. I am the teacher and my patients are the students. They come to me with a problem in need of a solution. I help them find the answer. Most of my patients have never faced the daunting challenge of overcoming a physical disability caused by injury or disease. They don’t know where to begin. Many have also never put in the sustained effort needed to achieve a tough goal. I’m tasked with teaching them both—giving them the knowledge that they need to get where they want to go and encouraging them to put forth the effort required to get there. I know how they feel. I had never really settled on a serious career goal until my early 30s, when I decided to return to college to train to become a physical therapist. At about the same time, I decided to become an “expert in investing.” I didn’t know at the time what that meant, but I figured I needed to be one so I could retire one day. I did know that I knew nothing about investing, and would need to begin from scratch. But first, physical therapy. I learned the basics, about muscles and joints, nerves and organs, and about the chemistry of the body. I went on to learn how all the parts work together to produce movement and allow us to interact with the world around us. Finally, I learned treatment strategies to help restore the bodies of those who need physical therapy to regain what they’ve lost because of a joint injury or a stroke. I landed my first physical therapy job at age 36. I didn’t know it then, but I was following the centuries-old, three-stage classical model of learning. In the grammar stage, the basics are learned through…
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