The day you make the minimum payment on a credit card, you’re setting yourself up for maximum financial pain.
NO. 24: OUR ONLY earthly immortality will be the memories of others. We should make sure those memories are good—by spending our wealth on special times with friends and family.
SET UP A HOME equity line of credit. These have lost some of their allure under 2017's tax law, because you can only deduct the interest if it's used to buy, build or substantially improve your home. Still, a HELOC is one of the cheaper ways to borrow, and it could come in handy if you have a financial emergency or as an alternative to education and car loans.
ULTIMATUM GAME. A player is given a pot of money and must offer a share to a second player. If the second player rejects the offer, neither gets anything. If the sole litmus test is financial gain, the second player should always accept, because at least he or she gets something. But players often reject small offers—a sign of how much we value fairness.
NO. 16: WE’RE TOO self-confident. We imagine we’re smarter than other investors and can beat the market averages. This leads us to trade too much, make big investment bets and buy actively managed mutual funds. What if we’re at least partially successful? We may attribute our gains to our own brilliance—leading us to take yet more risk.
NO. 24: OUR ONLY earthly immortality will be the memories of others. We should make sure those memories are good—by spending our wealth on special times with friends and family.
WE MAKE COUNTLESS decisions—financial and otherwise—with little or no thought to the dollars at stake:
We purchase items that we know are overpriced and almost guaranteed to lose value, but we do so happily, because they have a meaning for us that’s far greater than their price tag. Think of artwork and vacation souvenirs that are purchased because they remind us of moments we treasure.
We prize family possessions for their sentimental value, even though they typically have scant financial worth.
COMPARISONS ARE the death knell of happiness—and they aren’t good for our wallets, either.
If we’re to get the most out of our time and money, we need to devote those two precious resources to things we consider meaningful. But how do we figure out whether something is indeed meaningful to us, and not a reflection of the influence of others?
For “meaningful,” dictionaries offer synonyms such as “important” and “significant.” What we’re talking about are things that have some special emotional resonance,
HOW WOULD YOU DEFINE financial freedom? That’s the intriguing question I’ve been asked twice in recent weeks by journalists curious about the new HumbleDollar book, My Money Journey: How 30 People Found Financial Freedom—And You Can Too.
Financial freedom is something that pretty much everybody wants, and yet there’s no agreed-upon definition. Still, I think most folks would focus on two key elements: time and money. But I don’t think it’s a simple matter of having lots of dollars and lots of free time.
A FRIEND ASKED ME recently if I got paid for the writing I do. She assumed that I’d be compensated, especially for research articles published in scholarly journals.
“Yes,” I replied. “I’m paid generously—in psychic income.”
“What’s psychic income?” she asked.
I explained. “Instead of earning a paycheck for my paper, I earn the satisfaction of this well-respected periodical running my article.” That’s also the way it is for my short stories and poetry that appear in specialty publications.
Mirror, Mirror On The Wall
Seeking Certainty
Jonathan Clements | Mar 28, 2025
- Bailing early. Where’s the certainty if life intervenes, as it often does, and we’re compelled to sell our individual bonds before maturity? How easy will it be to sell the bonds in the secondary market, and could we receive far less than the bond’s par value?
- Worrying about pennies. If we’re willing to own stocks and run the risk of steep short-term losses, should we really get hot and bothered because we don’t know precisely what a bond fund will be worth when we’ll need our money back in, say, 10 years?
- No safety in numbers. Are we really reducing our financial peril if we trade the diversification of bond funds for the single-issuer risk of an individual bond? Is the added risk involved worth it, given that the return of an intermediate bond fund will likely be similar to that of an intermediate individual bond of comparable credit quality?
- Losing to inflation. Where’s the certainty in knowing that each of our individual bonds will be worth $1,000 upon maturity, but we have no idea what the purchasing power of that $1,000 will be?
To be sure, the risk of individual securities is reduced if we stick with Treasury bonds, which most experts believe carry scant risk of default. Worried about inflation? That can be addressed with inflation-indexed Treasurys and Series I savings bonds. Still, I’ve never owned an individual bond, except a $75 EE savings bond I won for finishing second in a 5k road race. Why not? I’m not that concerned that my bond funds might be worth a few percent more or less than I’d hoped when it’s time to cash out. Why would I? Heck, I’ve lived through two 50%-plus stock market declines during my investing career, so modest fluctuations in bond prices hardly seem worth the worry. Meanwhile, I simply don’t want the hassle and complexity of dealing with individual bonds, including Treasurys and savings bonds, and I sure don’t want to bequeath that sort of portfolio to my family. Given all the complaints I’ve read about dealing with TreasuryDirect, and especially cashing in Series I and EE savings bonds, I’m glad I made that choice. But many readers, I know, strongly disagree.I’m concerned about the stock market. How concerned are you? Jonathan, any comforting words?
Lessons Learned from Taking Care of a 102 Year Old in Her Final Year
Three bucket strategy for financing retirement
Help Wanted
An Insignificant Sum?
Twenty-five years ago today… by Sanjib Saha
Recommendations for Free Portfolio Analyzer?
Going Back to Work (Briefly)
Quinn’s grand new way to plan for a secure retirement. It’s called the McDonalds strategy
401(k) Savings Limits