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Frugal Fitness

AS A PHYSICAL therapist, I’ve spent a large slice of each work day teaching and encouraging patients as they exercise their way to better health. Along with other elements of treatment, each patient pays for a custom exercise program tailored for their specific problem. These are folks looking for a way past the debilitating effects of injury or disease. Even so, many of them find it hard to follow my plea to “do your exercises”. If they struggle to follow the helpful recommendations of a health professional, what about the rest of us? Over the years, I’ve found that most of us have at least an inkling of the health benefits of exercise. Still, like my patients, we often fail to act on that knowledge. Why? Maybe we can find the answer in the list below. Here are five common barriers that I’ve heard keep people idle: 1. No time. I’m sure it’s true. Long commutes, lengthy work days and activity-packed weekends leave little chance to carve-out a few minutes for our physical health. Even in retirement, time can be siphoned-off by the endless list of errands, obligations and leisure pursuits that keep us running. 2. No knowledge. Strange environment. Strange vocabulary. Strange people who seem at ease and know more than us about everything. That’s the challenge facing the novice exerciser stepping into the gym for the first time. It can lead to fear–fear of embarrassment, fear of injury or just fear of feeling lost. 3. No support. Going against the social flow can be painful for the lone exerciser. Choosing to head into the gym, rather than out for pizza and beer with friends can be hard. Or, maybe our spouse thinks exercise time is selfish time. Like exercise, social connections are important for health as well. Ideally, we shouldn’t have to choose one over the other. 4. No money. Let’s face it, gym admission isn’t free, and a home equipment purchase can quickly run into thousands of dollars. That price is no sweat for a fitness aficionado with extra cash who’s hooked on the exercise habit, but what about the newbie? Few people want a gym membership or treadmill gathering dust, reminding them of the resolution they didn’t keep. 5. No energy or motivation. Hectic schedules leave many of us drained and dreaming of a quiet moment to just be still. Other folks find themselves stuck in a sedentary rut, never straying off the path that leads from one seat to the next. For those in either camp, any thought of pumping iron or pounding pavement holds no appeal. That’s my short, anecdotal list of hurdles hindering folks from launching into a new exercise routine. For an in-depth look at more barriers to physical activity for adults over age 70, check out this systematic review of the research literature. Meanwhile, our bodies are missing the movement that keeps them healthy. What to do? Here are five baby steps to help us past the roadblocks listed above: 1. Minutes matter. It’s easy to get hung up on the notion of needing a set routine of exercises performed within a solid block of time. That may be ideal, but it’s not necessary. We can try weaving convenient exercises into the actual fabric of our lives. By the end of our day, a few, short bouts of five to ten minutes each can add up to meaningful progress toward fitness. 2. Study time. The online world abounds with exercise advice. Experts promise results ranging from building a healthy heart to gaining the perfect glutes. The choices can be overwhelming. I recommend starting tiny. The simple routine I’ve included below can help nearly anyone take the first step. 3. New network. I’m not recommending we dump our motionless friends. Still, our moms warned us about spending too much time with the wrong crowd. Think about who in our circle is already doing a little exercise. Maybe they’d like a partner? Or, maybe there’s someone we could recruit with just a little nudge. 4. Frugal fitness. We don’t have to shell out bucks to a gym to get a workout. Any time we move our body against the force of gravity, we’re exercising. With a little thought, we can round up a robust routine of exercises to perform at home with little or no equipment. Read on to find a starter set of exercises for the true beginners among us. This list costs almost no money and just a little time. 5. Finding a cause. Stuck for a stimulus that rouses us to action? Remember, imagination is often stronger than willpower. Letting our thoughts dwell on the end game can often be helpful. Do we want to cut a fine figure? If so, we don’t have to get swimsuit-svelte to claim success. Even a little slimming and toning from exercise can give our normal clothes a nicer fit. How about feeling better? Researchers from Boston University and the University of Massachusetts found that even a low-intensity exercise program can help older adults improve both physical and psychological fitness. And their study doesn’t stand alone. Reams of other research support their findings, and highlight even more benefits from exercise. Still, on some days, the only force that will get us moving is old-fashioned discipline. It’s the same determination that moves most of us reading this to make better financial choices most of the time. No matter what our motivation, nearly all of us can kick off our trek to better health today with the following routine: 1. Wall push-ups. Stand facing a wall at fingertip distance. With arms held straight at shoulder height, place your palms on the wall a little more than shoulder-width apart. Bend your elbows until your nose almost touches the wall. Push back until your elbows are straight. Repeat until you’ve done 10-20 repetitions. When wall push-ups are too easy, progress to push-ups with your hands against a counter. These exercises strengthen the muscles of your chest, shoulders and arms. 2. Shoulder blade squeeze. Sit or stand and place palms together in front of your chest with elbows bent and pointing down toward your feet. Pull your arms apart while keeping your elbows down until you squeeze your shoulder blades together. Do 10-20 repetitions. To progress, add the resistance of an elastic exercise band. This exercise works the muscles of the upper back. 3. Sit to stand. This is a wonderful exercise for buttock and thigh muscles. To begin, sit at the edge of a firm seat. Lean forward from the hips, then stand up without using hands, if possible. Sit down and repeat for 10 or more repetitions. You should stay balanced, with feet in full contact with the floor, during the entire exercise. 4. Calf raises. Stand with your hands on a counter to maintain balance, Rise up on your toes for 20 repetitions to strengthen the muscles on the back of your lower legs. These muscles are important for walking and balance. 5. Easy crunch. Lie on your back on the floor or bed with your knees bent and feet flat on the supporting surface. Slowly curl your trunk forward as you try to touch your knees with your hands, then slowly return to the starting position. Do 10-20 repetitions to strengthen your abdominal muscles, one important part of your muscular “core”. The last five. This exercise requires a decent set of walking or running shoes. Begin by walking out the front door and up the street for five minutes at a brisk pace. Stop and retrace your steps for the return trip back home, for a total of ten minutes of heart-rejuvenating activity. Will this workout ready us to run a marathon or toned-up to star in the senior sports league? No. Could it be better? Probably. Still, nearly every muscle–including the heart–gets a little work. And it may just draw us into a habit that keeps our bodies sturdy enough to enjoy the years ahead. Ed Marsh is a physical therapist who lives and works in a small community near Atlanta. He likes to spend time with his church, with his family and in his garden thinking about retirement. His favorite question to ask a young person is, “Are you saving for retirement?” Check out Ed’s earlier articles.
Read more »

Well That’s A Bummer!

"I’ve done so with ChatGPT, and it was helpful, but you also have to know what you’re doing yourself. For example, it was wrong about how a Roth conversion applies to net investment income tax. Fortunately it explained its work and I could call out its error, which it corrected. My guess its actual math was correct. "
- Michael1
Read more »

Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts (MAPTs)

"Outright gifting exposes the property to claims of the recipient's creditors."
- Paul Ward
Read more »

What happens to Medicare Supplement coverage when moving to a different state?

"https://boomerbenefits.com/what-to-do-when-moving-to-another-state-with-medicare/ See: Moving with Original Medicare and a Medigap plan If you are in relatively good health, and paying an occasional $3,000 or so annual deductible in a particularly bad health year (Part A & B annual charges in excess of ~$15,000) would not cause undue strain on your finances, I recommend looking into a High Deductible Plan G supplement. The monthly premium savings are considerable in comparison to regular Plan G or Plan N."
- Danbo
Read more »

Developing Champions in your Career and Life

"He was a true champion who showed you the right way through his actions. Thank you for sharing."
- Jayaraman Raghuraman
Read more »

The Anatomy of a Threshold Rebalance: April 2025

"Oh my…I really, really want to be under the care of your doctor!"
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Forget the 4% rule.

"I’m with you, Fred. As long as I can keep the portion of my fixed expenses not covered by guaranteed income below 1%, I don’t have a problem spending another 2 or 3% on discretionary purchases. It’s just that so far, even our discretionary stuff is within the 1%. "
- Dan Smith
Read more »

Is there any point when a child needs financial help that you feel comfortable saying “not my problem?” 

"I REALLY like your daughter, and I congratulate her parents for teaching her the wonderful values that she possesses. :-) (I bought a new Honda Fit in 2009 that I absolutely loved, it was hard to keep it under 80 on the freeway because it was so fun to drive!)"
- David Rhoades
Read more »

What, Me Worry?

"Interesting question: I think I would be able to maintain my lifestyle, however I am sure I would purposely make changes. But, it is unlikely that I will change my lifestyle dramatically based on inflation."
- William Housley
Read more »

Economic Trends

LAST WEEK THE government released its monthly employment figures for February. The results weren’t great. Payrolls declined, and unemployment ticked up. These numbers square with other downbeat data, including a recent uptick in bankruptcy filings. Another worry: Oil prices have been rising, a result of the conflict in the Middle East. That’s a concern because it could lead to a reacceleration of inflation. It could also dampen consumer spending because higher gas prices act like a tax on consumers, leaving them with less to spend elsewhere. For these reasons, commentators have started to talk about the possibility of stagflation—a combination of stagnant growth and higher prices. But is that where things are headed? To answer that question, it's worth taking a closer look at two current economic trends. The first is what's been referred to as the K-shaped economy. To understand this idea, imagine a chart plotting the relative standing over time of those with higher incomes and those with lower incomes. Owing to a rising stock market, the shape of the chart for those with higher incomes extends up and to the right. Folks with lower incomes, on the other hand, haven't benefited as much from rising markets, and they've been more affected by higher inflation. So for this group, unfortunately, the shape of the chart is down and to the right. Put the charts together and they form a K. But how will the two legs ultimately affect the economy and the market? At first glance, this K-shaped divide would appear decidedly negative. That’s because lower-income consumers tend to spend a greater proportion of their incomes, so if they’re not doing as well, that can have more of an economic impact. That’s the most obvious conclusion we might draw about a K-shaped economy. But in that kind of economic situation, that likely wouldn’t be the end of the story. Downbeat consumer spending, especially in combination with higher unemployment, would likely lead the Federal Reserve to continue its current round of rate cuts. That, in turn, would help consumers by making everything from mortgages to auto loans to credit card payments less expensive. All things being equal, it would also help the investment markets, owing to the math behind stock valuations. The bottom line: This K-shaped dynamic doesn’t seem great, and probably isn’t great from a societal perspective, but the ultimate financial impact—and the timing of that impact—isn’t certain. The second big economic trend today is the boom in artificial intelligence. That includes the infrastructure build-out, which has been enormous, as well as its productivity impact for users, which is still to be determined. For now, all of the AI-related spending has been positive for the market and for the economy. But what will the ultimate impact be? On that question, there’s a lot more debate. According to one view, AI will meaningfully boost productivity, by giving everyone what amounts to a highly productive assistant, or team of assistants. But there’s no consensus on this. Others believe that AI will replace large numbers of workers and cause widespread unemployment. Which way will things go? This question is harder than it appears. Not only would we need to determine the net effect of AI. We’d also need to determine how those effects net out against all the other economic factors out there, including the K-shaped situation. To choose just one example, tighter immigration controls could lead to higher wages, which could lead to inflation and maybe pressure on corporate profits. The number of factors is almost innumerable. The bottom line: When markets wobble, the standard advice is to avoid overreacting. The reason for that is straightforward: because we can look back at history and see that we’ve managed to get through all past crises, and that the market has always recovered and gone higher. But there’s another reason to avoid reacting too strongly or worrying too much. Where things ultimately go in the economy will always depend on the complicated interplay among all of the factors out there, from AI to the K-shaped economy to the war in the Middle East, and everything else, including things we aren't even currently thinking about. Investors, in other words, should be careful to not focus too narrowly on any one news item because, at any given time, it’s always going to be just one of many factors, and it’s very difficult to know how those factors will all net out, and when.   Adam M. Grossman is the founder of Mayport, a fixed-fee wealth management firm. Sign up for Adam's Daily Ideas email, follow him on X @AdamMGrossman and check out his earlier articles.
Read more »

Why I Own Gold Bars

"Well written article, but not for me. Remember when everyone was building Nuclear Bomb shelters, what a waste of time. If you think gold bars will get you through, think again, just who is going to be buying them and how do you split them! If we have a level 2 or 3 it will be total chaos. Best you can do is have shelter, with some reasonable level of supplies, and cash. Look we lived through Y2K, and we will get through the next software glitch. My belief is have some cash for when things go South. Costco sells a lot of shiny gold, and now silver too, and they make money doing it."
- William Dorner
Read more »

Frugal Fitness

AS A PHYSICAL therapist, I’ve spent a large slice of each work day teaching and encouraging patients as they exercise their way to better health. Along with other elements of treatment, each patient pays for a custom exercise program tailored for their specific problem. These are folks looking for a way past the debilitating effects of injury or disease. Even so, many of them find it hard to follow my plea to “do your exercises”. If they struggle to follow the helpful recommendations of a health professional, what about the rest of us? Over the years, I’ve found that most of us have at least an inkling of the health benefits of exercise. Still, like my patients, we often fail to act on that knowledge. Why? Maybe we can find the answer in the list below. Here are five common barriers that I’ve heard keep people idle: 1. No time. I’m sure it’s true. Long commutes, lengthy work days and activity-packed weekends leave little chance to carve-out a few minutes for our physical health. Even in retirement, time can be siphoned-off by the endless list of errands, obligations and leisure pursuits that keep us running. 2. No knowledge. Strange environment. Strange vocabulary. Strange people who seem at ease and know more than us about everything. That’s the challenge facing the novice exerciser stepping into the gym for the first time. It can lead to fear–fear of embarrassment, fear of injury or just fear of feeling lost. 3. No support. Going against the social flow can be painful for the lone exerciser. Choosing to head into the gym, rather than out for pizza and beer with friends can be hard. Or, maybe our spouse thinks exercise time is selfish time. Like exercise, social connections are important for health as well. Ideally, we shouldn’t have to choose one over the other. 4. No money. Let’s face it, gym admission isn’t free, and a home equipment purchase can quickly run into thousands of dollars. That price is no sweat for a fitness aficionado with extra cash who’s hooked on the exercise habit, but what about the newbie? Few people want a gym membership or treadmill gathering dust, reminding them of the resolution they didn’t keep. 5. No energy or motivation. Hectic schedules leave many of us drained and dreaming of a quiet moment to just be still. Other folks find themselves stuck in a sedentary rut, never straying off the path that leads from one seat to the next. For those in either camp, any thought of pumping iron or pounding pavement holds no appeal. That’s my short, anecdotal list of hurdles hindering folks from launching into a new exercise routine. For an in-depth look at more barriers to physical activity for adults over age 70, check out this systematic review of the research literature. Meanwhile, our bodies are missing the movement that keeps them healthy. What to do? Here are five baby steps to help us past the roadblocks listed above: 1. Minutes matter. It’s easy to get hung up on the notion of needing a set routine of exercises performed within a solid block of time. That may be ideal, but it’s not necessary. We can try weaving convenient exercises into the actual fabric of our lives. By the end of our day, a few, short bouts of five to ten minutes each can add up to meaningful progress toward fitness. 2. Study time. The online world abounds with exercise advice. Experts promise results ranging from building a healthy heart to gaining the perfect glutes. The choices can be overwhelming. I recommend starting tiny. The simple routine I’ve included below can help nearly anyone take the first step. 3. New network. I’m not recommending we dump our motionless friends. Still, our moms warned us about spending too much time with the wrong crowd. Think about who in our circle is already doing a little exercise. Maybe they’d like a partner? Or, maybe there’s someone we could recruit with just a little nudge. 4. Frugal fitness. We don’t have to shell out bucks to a gym to get a workout. Any time we move our body against the force of gravity, we’re exercising. With a little thought, we can round up a robust routine of exercises to perform at home with little or no equipment. Read on to find a starter set of exercises for the true beginners among us. This list costs almost no money and just a little time. 5. Finding a cause. Stuck for a stimulus that rouses us to action? Remember, imagination is often stronger than willpower. Letting our thoughts dwell on the end game can often be helpful. Do we want to cut a fine figure? If so, we don’t have to get swimsuit-svelte to claim success. Even a little slimming and toning from exercise can give our normal clothes a nicer fit. How about feeling better? Researchers from Boston University and the University of Massachusetts found that even a low-intensity exercise program can help older adults improve both physical and psychological fitness. And their study doesn’t stand alone. Reams of other research support their findings, and highlight even more benefits from exercise. Still, on some days, the only force that will get us moving is old-fashioned discipline. It’s the same determination that moves most of us reading this to make better financial choices most of the time. No matter what our motivation, nearly all of us can kick off our trek to better health today with the following routine: 1. Wall push-ups. Stand facing a wall at fingertip distance. With arms held straight at shoulder height, place your palms on the wall a little more than shoulder-width apart. Bend your elbows until your nose almost touches the wall. Push back until your elbows are straight. Repeat until you’ve done 10-20 repetitions. When wall push-ups are too easy, progress to push-ups with your hands against a counter. These exercises strengthen the muscles of your chest, shoulders and arms. 2. Shoulder blade squeeze. Sit or stand and place palms together in front of your chest with elbows bent and pointing down toward your feet. Pull your arms apart while keeping your elbows down until you squeeze your shoulder blades together. Do 10-20 repetitions. To progress, add the resistance of an elastic exercise band. This exercise works the muscles of the upper back. 3. Sit to stand. This is a wonderful exercise for buttock and thigh muscles. To begin, sit at the edge of a firm seat. Lean forward from the hips, then stand up without using hands, if possible. Sit down and repeat for 10 or more repetitions. You should stay balanced, with feet in full contact with the floor, during the entire exercise. 4. Calf raises. Stand with your hands on a counter to maintain balance, Rise up on your toes for 20 repetitions to strengthen the muscles on the back of your lower legs. These muscles are important for walking and balance. 5. Easy crunch. Lie on your back on the floor or bed with your knees bent and feet flat on the supporting surface. Slowly curl your trunk forward as you try to touch your knees with your hands, then slowly return to the starting position. Do 10-20 repetitions to strengthen your abdominal muscles, one important part of your muscular “core”. The last five. This exercise requires a decent set of walking or running shoes. Begin by walking out the front door and up the street for five minutes at a brisk pace. Stop and retrace your steps for the return trip back home, for a total of ten minutes of heart-rejuvenating activity. Will this workout ready us to run a marathon or toned-up to star in the senior sports league? No. Could it be better? Probably. Still, nearly every muscle–including the heart–gets a little work. And it may just draw us into a habit that keeps our bodies sturdy enough to enjoy the years ahead. Ed Marsh is a physical therapist who lives and works in a small community near Atlanta. He likes to spend time with his church, with his family and in his garden thinking about retirement. His favorite question to ask a young person is, “Are you saving for retirement?” Check out Ed’s earlier articles.
Read more »

Well That’s A Bummer!

"I’ve done so with ChatGPT, and it was helpful, but you also have to know what you’re doing yourself. For example, it was wrong about how a Roth conversion applies to net investment income tax. Fortunately it explained its work and I could call out its error, which it corrected. My guess its actual math was correct. "
- Michael1
Read more »

Medicaid Asset Protection Trusts (MAPTs)

"Outright gifting exposes the property to claims of the recipient's creditors."
- Paul Ward
Read more »

What happens to Medicare Supplement coverage when moving to a different state?

"https://boomerbenefits.com/what-to-do-when-moving-to-another-state-with-medicare/ See: Moving with Original Medicare and a Medigap plan If you are in relatively good health, and paying an occasional $3,000 or so annual deductible in a particularly bad health year (Part A & B annual charges in excess of ~$15,000) would not cause undue strain on your finances, I recommend looking into a High Deductible Plan G supplement. The monthly premium savings are considerable in comparison to regular Plan G or Plan N."
- Danbo
Read more »

Developing Champions in your Career and Life

"He was a true champion who showed you the right way through his actions. Thank you for sharing."
- Jayaraman Raghuraman
Read more »

The Anatomy of a Threshold Rebalance: April 2025

"Oh my…I really, really want to be under the care of your doctor!"
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Forget the 4% rule.

"I’m with you, Fred. As long as I can keep the portion of my fixed expenses not covered by guaranteed income below 1%, I don’t have a problem spending another 2 or 3% on discretionary purchases. It’s just that so far, even our discretionary stuff is within the 1%. "
- Dan Smith
Read more »

Is there any point when a child needs financial help that you feel comfortable saying “not my problem?” 

"I REALLY like your daughter, and I congratulate her parents for teaching her the wonderful values that she possesses. :-) (I bought a new Honda Fit in 2009 that I absolutely loved, it was hard to keep it under 80 on the freeway because it was so fun to drive!)"
- David Rhoades
Read more »

Economic Trends

LAST WEEK THE government released its monthly employment figures for February. The results weren’t great. Payrolls declined, and unemployment ticked up. These numbers square with other downbeat data, including a recent uptick in bankruptcy filings. Another worry: Oil prices have been rising, a result of the conflict in the Middle East. That’s a concern because it could lead to a reacceleration of inflation. It could also dampen consumer spending because higher gas prices act like a tax on consumers, leaving them with less to spend elsewhere. For these reasons, commentators have started to talk about the possibility of stagflation—a combination of stagnant growth and higher prices. But is that where things are headed? To answer that question, it's worth taking a closer look at two current economic trends. The first is what's been referred to as the K-shaped economy. To understand this idea, imagine a chart plotting the relative standing over time of those with higher incomes and those with lower incomes. Owing to a rising stock market, the shape of the chart for those with higher incomes extends up and to the right. Folks with lower incomes, on the other hand, haven't benefited as much from rising markets, and they've been more affected by higher inflation. So for this group, unfortunately, the shape of the chart is down and to the right. Put the charts together and they form a K. But how will the two legs ultimately affect the economy and the market? At first glance, this K-shaped divide would appear decidedly negative. That’s because lower-income consumers tend to spend a greater proportion of their incomes, so if they’re not doing as well, that can have more of an economic impact. That’s the most obvious conclusion we might draw about a K-shaped economy. But in that kind of economic situation, that likely wouldn’t be the end of the story. Downbeat consumer spending, especially in combination with higher unemployment, would likely lead the Federal Reserve to continue its current round of rate cuts. That, in turn, would help consumers by making everything from mortgages to auto loans to credit card payments less expensive. All things being equal, it would also help the investment markets, owing to the math behind stock valuations. The bottom line: This K-shaped dynamic doesn’t seem great, and probably isn’t great from a societal perspective, but the ultimate financial impact—and the timing of that impact—isn’t certain. The second big economic trend today is the boom in artificial intelligence. That includes the infrastructure build-out, which has been enormous, as well as its productivity impact for users, which is still to be determined. For now, all of the AI-related spending has been positive for the market and for the economy. But what will the ultimate impact be? On that question, there’s a lot more debate. According to one view, AI will meaningfully boost productivity, by giving everyone what amounts to a highly productive assistant, or team of assistants. But there’s no consensus on this. Others believe that AI will replace large numbers of workers and cause widespread unemployment. Which way will things go? This question is harder than it appears. Not only would we need to determine the net effect of AI. We’d also need to determine how those effects net out against all the other economic factors out there, including the K-shaped situation. To choose just one example, tighter immigration controls could lead to higher wages, which could lead to inflation and maybe pressure on corporate profits. The number of factors is almost innumerable. The bottom line: When markets wobble, the standard advice is to avoid overreacting. The reason for that is straightforward: because we can look back at history and see that we’ve managed to get through all past crises, and that the market has always recovered and gone higher. But there’s another reason to avoid reacting too strongly or worrying too much. Where things ultimately go in the economy will always depend on the complicated interplay among all of the factors out there, from AI to the K-shaped economy to the war in the Middle East, and everything else, including things we aren't even currently thinking about. Investors, in other words, should be careful to not focus too narrowly on any one news item because, at any given time, it’s always going to be just one of many factors, and it’s very difficult to know how those factors will all net out, and when.   Adam M. Grossman is the founder of Mayport, a fixed-fee wealth management firm. Sign up for Adam's Daily Ideas email, follow him on X @AdamMGrossman and check out his earlier articles.
Read more »

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Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 3: WE SHOULD focus relentlessly on what we want from our financial life. That’ll motivate us to save, drive our investment strategy—and help ensure we pursue the goals we care about most.

act

AIM TO OWE TAXES. Manage your tax withholding and estimated payments so you owe a modest sum each year, rather than receiving a refund. Why? First, you avoid making an interest-free loan to the government and instead can invest the money to earn gains for yourself. Second, if you’re a victim of tax identity theft, there’s no risk you’ll lose money.

think

HEDONIC TREADMILL. We get excited by the prospect of a pay raise, a promotion, a bigger house or a shiny new car. But once we achieve these goals, our excitement quickly fades and soon we’re hankering after something else. This is the hedonic treadmill: We're constantly striving for greater happiness, only to find that we're running in place.

Truths

NO. 135: MORE THINGS can happen than will happen. We have just one past, but we face all kinds of possible futures—and we don’t know which one we’ll get. If we bet big on one stock market segment or one company's shares, we’re ignoring a host of other possible scenarios and our overconfidence could be our undoing. Our best defense: diversification.

Financial life planner

Manifesto

NO. 3: WE SHOULD focus relentlessly on what we want from our financial life. That’ll motivate us to save, drive our investment strategy—and help ensure we pursue the goals we care about most.

Spotlight: Saving

2026 Financial Plan

LOOKING TO UPDATE your financial plan for 2026? Below are ten strategies you might consider:
Gaining control
January is a good time to audit your investments. I’d start with this very basic step: If you have accounts at multiple brokerage firms, see if you can consolidate them. This won’t necessarily lead to better investment results, but if you have fewer accounts, it’ll be easier to monitor and to manage them. This might not seem like an important exercise,

Read more »

Raising Savings

When I was working full-time, I always saved the maximum to my 401(k). Before my employers had a 401(k) plan, in the early 1980s, I saved the maximum to an IRA—a princely $2,000. Pretty soon I felt rich. I had $40,000 saved.
For this reason, I always pay attention to changes in plan savings limits. And there are higher savings limits for 401(k) plans in 2025, plus a new “super catch-up” category. For those who are interested,

Read more »

Financial Happiness

ACCORDING TO THE World Happiness Report, Finland ranks as the happiest nation in the world, a title it’s held for eight years in a row.
Each time this report is updated, it makes the news for a day or two but then fades. That’s for good reason, I think. As much as Finland might be a nice place, it isn’t necessarily practical to suggest that anyone pick up and move.
The good news, though,

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Why Don’t Folks Save?

Early in my career, I was critical of those who failed to save, tut-tutting over their short-sightedness and lack of discipline. Today, I’m more willing to cut the world’s spendthrifts a little slack.
Why? Over the past four decades, I’ve often been asked for financial advice not just by readers, but also by those I’ve known well. Some of the advice was followed, some wasn’t. But in every case, there was no change in the person’s basic spending and savings habits.

Read more »

IRS 2026 Updates

SECTION 415(D) OF the IRC requires the Secretary of the Treasury (IRS) to annually adjust limitations for cost-of-living increases. So, let’s dive into some of the changes:
 
401(k), 403(b), and Most 457 Plans:

For 2026, the 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) amount you can contribute is increasing from $23,500 to $24,500. If you are in a 24% marginal tax rate, that’s an additional $240 of federal taxes you can defer. If you are over age 50, the catch-up contributions are also increasing by $500,

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Spotlight: Cutler

Retirement Realignment

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…
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No Interest

THE HOUSE I GREW UP in was built in 1950 by my father, with some assistance from his best friend Joe, who was a master homebuilder by profession. After his work day as an accountant for a local hardware and lumber chain, my dad would head over to the job site and labor into the night. My mom also provided some sweat equity, painting and even swinging a hammer at times. I was born in 1962, so I wasn’t a witness to our home’s construction, but I did reap the benefits of growing up in a well-built house in Moorestown, New Jersey, a comfortable suburban community not far from Philadelphia. At some point as a young man, I became aware that our house had never been encumbered by a mortgage and, having a naturally strong aversion to debt, I internalized that strategy as something to emulate. Alas, I didn’t inherit or acquire my father’s construction skills, so building a home with my own hands wouldn’t be an option. After graduating from Virginia Tech, I rented an apartment in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, for seven years. As a young, single engineer, I didn’t think too much about buying a house. That changed in 1992, when I married my lovely wife, Lisa. After living in a rented townhome for several months, we got the bug to purchase our own place. I disliked the idea of taking on a mortgage, but we couldn’t afford to pay cash even for the modest starter homes that we were looking at. Fortunately, my dad was willing to lend us some money. I was able to bypass the banks by putting $66,000 down on a $98,000 split-level house, with my dad lending us the rest at an 8.5% interest rate. Because I hated being in debt even to my…
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First Quarter 2025

In January, I outlined a host of money moves I’d made in the first 16 months after retiring from full-time work. Financially, things did not slow down in the first three months of 2025. Here are some of my first quarter financial actions and experiences: Distributed gifts to charity. We cluster charitable contributions so that we can itemize on our Federal tax return every other year. During the year that we take the standard deduction, I “write off” the funds earmarked for charity in my financial spreadsheets. When January of the itemizing year arrives, I distribute the previous year’s accrued charity funds. 2025 is an itemizing year, so I wrote some relatively large checks in January. Redeemed more U.S. Savings Bonds. I’ve become increasingly uneasy about the complexities that may arise in the future with respect to cashing in paper savings bonds. Marjorie Kondrack’s excellent post about savings bonds and the associated comments kept that concern in my thoughts. I ended up making three trips to the bank this year and have now completed a three-year process of cashing in all my savings bonds with a face value of $1000 or more. I hesitated to sell the last three I Bonds as they had a generous fixed rate of 3%. But as I imagined the frustration if I—or worse, my heirs—were forced to deal directly with the Treasury Department, I felt it was best to just redeem them now, while my bank still offers the service. I’d held those bonds longer than expected anyway, as the original intent was to use them for my kids’ college tuition. Purchased Certificates of Deposit. It’s so convenient to open a new CD at my credit union. I can make a phone call and within 10 minutes the new account is active. Of course, there…
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Longtime Worry

IS A STORM COMING? Long before I discovered HumbleDollar, I regularly read articles by Scott Burns. Now in his 80s, Burns was a popular financial columnist who wrote for the Boston Herald and later The Dallas Morning News. He’s a graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, so he’s comfortable presenting quantitative arguments. Burns is an advocate of low-cost index funds, and he helped popularize couch potato investing, using a low-maintenance 50-50 mix of stock and bond index funds. One of the books in my financial library is his work The Coming Generational Storm, coauthored with Laurence Kotlikoff. It came out in 2004, so its 20th anniversary is approaching. It was on Forbes’s 2004 list of the top 10 business books. Here’s a sample from the back cover: “In 2030, as 77 million baby boomers hobble into old age, walkers will outnumber strollers; there will be twice as many retirees as there are today but only 18 percent more workers. How will Social Security and Medicare function with fewer working taxpayers to support these programs? According to Laurence Kotlikoff and Scott Burns, if our government continues on the course it has set, we’ll see skyrocketing tax rates, drastically lower retirement and health benefits, high inflation, a rapidly depreciating dollar, unemployment, and political instability.” As you might imagine, the book was an uncomfortable read. The twin threats of unfavorable demographic shifts and unsustainable government debt are laid out in stark terms. The generational storm thesis can be summed up by these two sentences from the epilogue: “The American dream is becoming prohibitively expensive. And unless we act soon, the Greatest Generation will be the last to leave its children and grandchildren a better country.” The biggest reason we’re facing this generational storm, according to the authors, is an implicit asset problem. “The…
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Everything She Needed

THE MOST FRUGAL person I’ve ever known was my Great Aunt Beatrice. To all the family, she was just Aunt Bea. Never married, she was the sister of my paternal grandfather, a man who passed away 14 years before I was born. She was a dignified lady, proper and pleasant, and not given to bursts of laughter. Still, I felt closer to her than to any of my living grandparents or other relatives from that generation. When I was growing up, Aunt Bea lived in the same town as us. She would usually be present for our family’s Thanksgiving and Christmas celebrations, and would occasionally be present for other gatherings. Every Christmas, she’d give each of my three sisters and me money envelopes that contained exactly two crisp $1 bills. Although I liked getting the money, back then I couldn’t appreciate what a sacrifice those gifts must have been. Aunt Bea was born in 1891. I remember that because I inherited the silver dollar bearing her birth year that she kept throughout her life. Although it’s not an especially valuable coin or in particularly good condition, it was probably her most valuable possession at the time she passed away. [caption id="attachment_1540969" align="alignright" width="300"] The author's Great Aunt Beatrice[/caption] While I have some old family photographs from when Aunt Bea was young, I don’t know much about her early life. I do know she lost her brother Willits in the great influenza pandemic of 1918. I wish now I’d paid more attention as a youngster when we all got together and she held forth about family history. Being a typical kid, I was bored by stories about people I’d never met. Aunt Bea’s last job was as a milliner. She sold ladies’ hats during a time when women increasingly went hatless.…
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That Dumb Stock Market

The proposition of an article I recently read was “this is the dumbest stock market in history.” Why is it dumb? In part because of an increasingly popular approach to investing—one that most in the HumbleDollar community, including myself, subscribe to.  According to the article, passive index investing is “the very definition of dumb money, because indexers buy stocks without any regard to valuation.” Here are some other points that caught my attention in the article, which I will link to in the comments: -Fewer and fewer people are actually making a market in stocks using their brains. Most index fund investors are just blindly buying, assuming that someone else is minding the store. -The dumb stock market, built entirely on blind faith, wouldn’t matter so much if the numbers passed a sanity test. The problem is, they don’t. -Due to bets on AI, a single company, Nvidia, is worth substantially more than all of the 2000 companies in the Russell 2000 index combined. -Metrics such as price per earnings and the ratio of total stock market to GDP indicate that stocks are priced at historically high levels, close to valuations during the 1999/2000 bubble. The conclusion of the article is that investors need to stress test our so-called risk-tolerance sooner rather than later. We may be taking on far more risk than we realize. After a conversation with my son in which he pointed out I am quite conservatively invested if my pension is included as part of my retirement portfolio, I wondered if he had a point and if I should increase my stock allocation (currently around 63% for my retirement funds). I decided to stick to my “kiss rebalancing goodbye” approach. Still, I have moved a good bit of money from U.S. to international stocks as valuations…
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