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Welcome to this session of grand rounds, a collection of posts I have discovered in the blogosphere and have found of interest and hope you do too.
This offering of Grand Rounds looks at articles from around the web that deal with FIRE (Financial Independence/Retire Early)
As a guitar player one thing I am used to is getting callouses on my fingertips.
These callouses are the body’s response to protect against what it deems a potential harm, namely the guitar strings pressing into flesh.
Well Accidental FIRE thinks of another potential use for a callus, helping achieve FIRE, in “To Achieve Financial Independence, Callus The Mind.”
Being furloughed is no fun, especially if you need the money.
But what if you don’t?
Could you get a taste of early retirement because of a furlough and see if you are indeed prepared or not?
Smart Money MD seems to think so in, “Trialing FIRE during a pandemic?”
Unless you are incredibly lucky, you just don’t stumble your way into financial independence.
Nope.
For the most of us it takes planning, sacrifice, and keeping an eye on our finances.
ESI helps keep things in order with, “7 Financial Numbers You Should Keep Track Of.”
One of the great ironies of life is when we are young and able to enjoy life we do not have the means to do so and when we finally have to means to our older bodies often do not cooperate.
So it really is important to make the best of that transition period between the two and not have blinders on just the destination.
Retire By 40 reminds us of this important concept in, “Don’t Forget to Enjoy The Journey to Financial Independence.”
I think being a physician makes it harder to walk away and retire early.
Walking away from a high income stream is very tough to do as your income is your biggest safety net for economic uncertainty.
There also is a finality to your decision: Once you stop practicing medicine it is incredibly hard to go back into it if you change your mind years down the road.
Often medical licenses lapse and are difficult to reinstate after a certain amount of time has passed.
You also likely have not kept pace with current medical practices and your medical knowledge base may have declined in the interim.
So you better be sure you have enough set aside and treat your decision as a permanent one when you do decide to hang up the stethoscope.
White Coat Investor shares some tidbits on this amount in, “How Big Does My Nest Egg Need to Be to Retire?”
Hope you enjoyed the reading material.
Have a great rest of the week.
Note:
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Thanks for the highlight Doc!
No problem. Was a great article 🙂
Hey Xray, Love your blogs, but this last bit about being a physician makes it harder to walk away… just not buying it. High income usually means high debt. Hence POF and your blog and White Coat Investor. Just because you’re a high earner doesn’t mean you’re good with money. Anyone’s income stream is their source of financial stability, whether physician, or in my case, IT Professional. Same issues… once you stop, your credibility with the new technology is a problem. Licensing not so much. The reason I stick with you high earners is because our problems are generally the… Read more »
I agree 100% that high income does not mean high net worth. The point I was trying to make is that a lot of high earners suffer the one more year syndrome. It’s hard to walk away from a salary in the 350k+/yr range (and for medicine I think it is harder because the licensing stuff does matter a lot to keep current and in order to do so you need to have met certain criteria (I believe for mammograms, for example, you have to have read at least 400 mammograms/year in order to continue reading mammos). Once you are… Read more »
Hey Xray,
Thanks for the quick follow-up. On the licensing part, I have no argument. That’s not something that applies in my field and I’m sure it’s a barrier to re-entry.
But that whole… when do I have enough to walk away… whether you’re making 350k or 100k, that seems universal.
My next goal is the mid-50’s financial checkup, which is approaching sooner than I’d like! That’s going to be the one that says how many more years. And no, I won’t mind walking away once I’ve hit “that number”.
Thanks for sharing your financial journey with us!