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Short-term trading is an act of great arrogance: You assume you know better than the market—and that you’ll quickly be proven right.

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Moving is Expensive!

"Enjoy your new can-do-minimum!"
- Winston Smith
Read more »

The World’s Least Useful Financial Adviser

"Mark, I enjoyed this article because it describes a conversation I suspect many of us have with ourselves. Since retiring, I've noticed that little voice isn't limited to investing. It also shows up when I think about past business decisions, career choices, and even life opportunities. With hindsight, everything seems obvious. What struck me most was your point about judging decisions based on the information available at the time, not on the outcome. A good result doesn't necessarily mean it was a good decision, just as a bad result doesn't automatically make it a poor one. I suspect one reason index investing works so well is that it helps protect us from that voice. It removes the temptation to constantly second-guess ourselves and chase whatever happened to work last time. Congratulations on the 40% gain—but perhaps even more importantly, congratulations on not letting it convince you that you're an investment genius."
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

My sister’s will and what it taught me.

"Thank you Jerry. Your experience highlights a lesson many families learn the hard way. When someone dies intestate, even relatively modest assets can become far more complicated and expensive to transfer than anyone expects. It's frustrating when legal fees and delays end up consuming a significant portion of what was intended to be passed on. Thank you for sharing your story, it reinforces why having a valid will is one of the simplest gifts we can leave our families."
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

Rethinking the “Right” Time for Social Security

"Thank you Marilyn. I love that story. It sounds like Social Security gave you the freedom to spend more time with your granddaughter, and that's a return that can't be measured by any break-even calculation. No regrets indeed."
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

The Boy Who Tried Hard: A Reflection

"Thank you Rick. I think that's one of the lessons I've learned as well. We rarely know the full story behind someone's journey or the challenges they may have faced along the way. If the article encourages a little more understanding and a little less assumption, then it was worth writing."
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

Farrell Behavior

"In retirement I find peace with a 45/45/10 portfolio. I know that if the market turns into a bear if my bonds do nothing (not a guarantee as I learned in 2022- “Why aren’t my bonds rising as my stock position is sinking to protect me?”) my losses will be half of that. What I give up in return is when the market increases my index fund portfolio will not rise a commensurate amount, and I’m fine with that."
- David Lancaster
Read more »

Adam Grossman on The Long View

"I just read the interview. It was very well done. Bravo Adam!"
- Howard Schwartz
Read more »

Billionaires, taxes and you

"I think you are correct. The median net worth of Americans is about $192,000 while the average is just over $1 million. So, at least half have a very different perspective, especially since that includes their homes."
- R Quinn
Read more »

Beefing Up Security

MANY OF US HAVE little more than a weak, reused password standing between our financial assets and a remote attacker—one armed with powerful tools and a database of passwords from security breaches. This is a losing battle. It’s the most likely way for weak computer security to put our finances at risk. Think this can’t happen to you? I’ll bet you have at least one password taken in a big security breach. A quick way to find out is entering your email address at Troy Hunt’s HaveIBeenPwned site. My address turns up in almost a dozen big cyberattacks. We are notoriously bad at creating strong passwords and remembering them. When you decide to create stronger, unique passwords for each site, you quickly discover that managing dozens of randomly generated, site-specific passwords by hand is a headache. Don’t fret. Password managers like LastPass, Dashlane and 1Password make short work of it. A password manager puts all your passwords in an encrypted vault, leaving you with just one password to remember. You want to make this password really strong and unforgettable. The password manager then fills in the right password for mobile apps and websites whenever you use them. What can you expect from a good manager?
  • Up-to-date access to your password vault on all devices, regardless of the device’s operating system.
  • Updates to your vault as you create new accounts or update existing passwords.
  • A random password generator that creates really strong, unique passwords. Those passwords will meet each site’s requirements for length and allowed characters.
  • A security challenge which guides you through the work of replacing existing poor passwords—those which are known to be compromised, weak or easily guessed, or which you’ve used more than once.
  • Emergency access to your vault by someone you choose, as well as password sharing with, say, family members for your Amazon Prime or Netflix account.
  • Two-factor authentication for extra vault security.
Some of these are only available in paid versions of the service. Despite knowing better, I procrastinated in evaluating password managers. That changed the day I tried to picture life for my spouse after I leave this vale of tears. I visualized the chores I handle: Banking, bill paying and investment management all involve online accounts. That brought my password problem into focus. A list of passwords in a binder, next to our wills, isn’t secure and it’s a pain to keep up. After experimenting with a free trial, I bought a family subscription. Moving my password vault from low-ranked to the top 1% took a couple of weekends. Each weekend, I’d spend an hour or two changing passwords, guided by the security challenge and with help from the password generator. Do this on your home PC or Mac, not an office computer. I started with high-value accounts: email, cellular carrier, and then banks and brokerages. Why email? Most web sites let you reset a password by emailing a link to the address on file. If hackers have access to your inbox, they’ll use it to access every online account. The cellular account is also important if you’ve enabled two-factor authentication that triggers text messages with secure codes. What if someone hacks into your password manager’s vault? If you pick a great vault password, the odds of this are low. But when you have all your eggs in one basket, you want to ensure that basket stays safe. That’s what led me to the YubiKey 5 series hardware keys. When you use a YubiKey with a password manager, the manager encrypts your vault twice, once with your vault password and again with a secret it gets from the YubiKey. For convenience, I’m using two models of YubiKey. I use YubiKey 5 Nano with my PC and Mac. Meanwhile, YubiKey 5 NFC stays on my keyring for use with my phone. The latter should work with an iPhone 7 or newer, as well as an Android phone with NFC (near field communication). David Powell has written software or led engineering teams for 35 years. He enjoys work, vegan fine dining, cycling and travel with his spouse. His previous article was Playing Defense. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Don’t Kick The Can Down The Road

"The man had priorities. Misguided, perhaps, but consistent."
- Mark Crothers
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Percentage that “age in place”

"Not necessarily. There has been a nursing care shortage for a long time that is rapidly being exacerbated by the growing number of elderly boomers who need health care. The current administration has also revoked asylum for workers from Haiti and elsewhere and is taking additional steps to limit legal immigration. A hospital staff nurse here in NYC averages about $125k and can make much more with overtime. Those salaries have an upward influence on less skilled healthcare workers. The norm for companies that provide home health care is to charge twice as much for their services as what they pay their employees. Thus, the top companies here charge about $40/hr."
- Slope
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Deeply Rooted

JUNE MARKS THREE years since my mum passed from complications of vascular dementia. It was a tough couple of years, watching her mind slowly fail and her world shrink a little more with each passing month. Anyone who has cared for a loved one in the late stages of dementia will know how difficult and disjointed even the simplest conversation becomes. The loops, the confusion, the frustration of trying to redirect someone you love from a thought they can no longer find their way out of. Mum had been comfortable, if lonely, in retirement. She was a widow for twenty-five years, and she often said with genuine surprise in her voice that she was better off financially than at any other point in her life. Not having to worry about money was a relief she never took for granted. But here's the thing: she never really thought about money either. She wasn't driven by possessions or status. She had what she needed, she was grateful, and she got on with living. Money was background noise to her, not the tune she danced to. What surprised me most came in her final year, when she was deeply confused and often entirely detached from reality. Among all the things her mind could have snagged on, the one conversation loop she returned to with unsettling clarity was money. She was convinced she had none. It made her anxious in a way that was painful to witness, a raw, childlike insecurity that seemed to rise from somewhere far deeper than conscious thought. I would reassure her, calmly and repeatedly, that her savings were healthy and there was absolutely nothing to worry about. I would joke about her bank balance making me jealous and she needed to go on a shopping spree. Sometimes it settled her. Often it didn't last more than a few minutes before the worry surfaced again. The memory care unit understandably discouraged residents from keeping personal cash, but I often broke that rule. Whenever I visited and could see that familiar agitation building, I'd press a few low value bills into her hand. Nothing significant, just the texture of something real. It worked in a way that words alone couldn't compete with. She'd look down at the money, close her fingers around it, and the tension would ease from her shoulders. She felt safe again, at least for a little while. Although, we often moved on to worrying about finding a purse to stash the bills in. For a woman who gave so little thought to money and nothing to status, I found it striking, strange even, that financial anxiety was what surfaced when the rational layers of her mind were stripped away. It made me think about what dementia actually reveals. It doesn't invent fears, it sometimes uncovers them. The fog clears away the learned, the sophisticated, the socially conditioned, and leaves something older and more fundamental underneath. At the time, I read up on this anxiety, there's some neuroscience behind it. Emotional memory, the kind wired to survival and feeling rather than fact, is stored differently in the brain and tends to be far more resilient. Dementia strips back the rational layers first. What it sometimes leaves behind is older, deeper, and harder to reach. In my mum's case, that something was the primal need to feel secure. She had grown up shaped by post-war austerity, widowhood, and years of careful budgeting on a single income. She would have been a young woman when rationing finally ended. In the world she grew up in, money wasn't abstract: it was coal for the fire and food on the table, shoes that lasted another winter without needing replacing. I think that connection between having and feeling safe wasn't a conclusion she'd reasoned her way to. It was lived, year after year, until it settled somewhere beneath thought entirely. Security and money had become inseparable, written into her long before she ever had reason to question it. I've thought about this a lot since we lost her. The concept of financial security isn't just something we think about, it seems to be something we feel, right down in the oldest parts of ourselves. It runs beneath logic, beneath personality, beneath even memory. My mum could and did forget my name on a bad day, but she could not shake the feeling that not having money meant not being safe. That instinct had been laid down so early and reinforced so consistently across a lifetime that dementia, for all its cruelty, couldn't fully reach it. To me, it says something profound about how deeply rooted our relationship with money really is. It seems to be wrapped around the core of our being. Losing my mum the way I did, piece by piece and conversation by conversation, was one of the hardest things I've been through. But in the heartbreak, she gave me this unexpected insight, pressed into my mind just as firmly as I had secretly pressed those bills into hers. Beneath everything we build and believe and become, there are feelings so fundamental they outlast nearly everything else. She reminded me that understanding our relationship with money isn't just a financial exercise, it's a deeply human one. Maybe it goes some way to explaining why we make choices that are sometimes irrational. And she did it, characteristically, without ever meaning to teach me a thing.
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 »

Moving is Expensive!

"Enjoy your new can-do-minimum!"
- Winston Smith
Read more »

The World’s Least Useful Financial Adviser

"Mark, I enjoyed this article because it describes a conversation I suspect many of us have with ourselves. Since retiring, I've noticed that little voice isn't limited to investing. It also shows up when I think about past business decisions, career choices, and even life opportunities. With hindsight, everything seems obvious. What struck me most was your point about judging decisions based on the information available at the time, not on the outcome. A good result doesn't necessarily mean it was a good decision, just as a bad result doesn't automatically make it a poor one. I suspect one reason index investing works so well is that it helps protect us from that voice. It removes the temptation to constantly second-guess ourselves and chase whatever happened to work last time. Congratulations on the 40% gain—but perhaps even more importantly, congratulations on not letting it convince you that you're an investment genius."
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

My sister’s will and what it taught me.

"Thank you Jerry. Your experience highlights a lesson many families learn the hard way. When someone dies intestate, even relatively modest assets can become far more complicated and expensive to transfer than anyone expects. It's frustrating when legal fees and delays end up consuming a significant portion of what was intended to be passed on. Thank you for sharing your story, it reinforces why having a valid will is one of the simplest gifts we can leave our families."
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

Rethinking the “Right” Time for Social Security

"Thank you Marilyn. I love that story. It sounds like Social Security gave you the freedom to spend more time with your granddaughter, and that's a return that can't be measured by any break-even calculation. No regrets indeed."
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

The Boy Who Tried Hard: A Reflection

"Thank you Rick. I think that's one of the lessons I've learned as well. We rarely know the full story behind someone's journey or the challenges they may have faced along the way. If the article encourages a little more understanding and a little less assumption, then it was worth writing."
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

Farrell Behavior

"In retirement I find peace with a 45/45/10 portfolio. I know that if the market turns into a bear if my bonds do nothing (not a guarantee as I learned in 2022- “Why aren’t my bonds rising as my stock position is sinking to protect me?”) my losses will be half of that. What I give up in return is when the market increases my index fund portfolio will not rise a commensurate amount, and I’m fine with that."
- David Lancaster
Read more »

Adam Grossman on The Long View

"I just read the interview. It was very well done. Bravo Adam!"
- Howard Schwartz
Read more »

Billionaires, taxes and you

"I think you are correct. The median net worth of Americans is about $192,000 while the average is just over $1 million. So, at least half have a very different perspective, especially since that includes their homes."
- R Quinn
Read more »

Beefing Up Security

MANY OF US HAVE little more than a weak, reused password standing between our financial assets and a remote attacker—one armed with powerful tools and a database of passwords from security breaches. This is a losing battle. It’s the most likely way for weak computer security to put our finances at risk. Think this can’t happen to you? I’ll bet you have at least one password taken in a big security breach. A quick way to find out is entering your email address at Troy Hunt’s HaveIBeenPwned site. My address turns up in almost a dozen big cyberattacks. We are notoriously bad at creating strong passwords and remembering them. When you decide to create stronger, unique passwords for each site, you quickly discover that managing dozens of randomly generated, site-specific passwords by hand is a headache. Don’t fret. Password managers like LastPass, Dashlane and 1Password make short work of it. A password manager puts all your passwords in an encrypted vault, leaving you with just one password to remember. You want to make this password really strong and unforgettable. The password manager then fills in the right password for mobile apps and websites whenever you use them. What can you expect from a good manager?
  • Up-to-date access to your password vault on all devices, regardless of the device’s operating system.
  • Updates to your vault as you create new accounts or update existing passwords.
  • A random password generator that creates really strong, unique passwords. Those passwords will meet each site’s requirements for length and allowed characters.
  • A security challenge which guides you through the work of replacing existing poor passwords—those which are known to be compromised, weak or easily guessed, or which you’ve used more than once.
  • Emergency access to your vault by someone you choose, as well as password sharing with, say, family members for your Amazon Prime or Netflix account.
  • Two-factor authentication for extra vault security.
Some of these are only available in paid versions of the service. Despite knowing better, I procrastinated in evaluating password managers. That changed the day I tried to picture life for my spouse after I leave this vale of tears. I visualized the chores I handle: Banking, bill paying and investment management all involve online accounts. That brought my password problem into focus. A list of passwords in a binder, next to our wills, isn’t secure and it’s a pain to keep up. After experimenting with a free trial, I bought a family subscription. Moving my password vault from low-ranked to the top 1% took a couple of weekends. Each weekend, I’d spend an hour or two changing passwords, guided by the security challenge and with help from the password generator. Do this on your home PC or Mac, not an office computer. I started with high-value accounts: email, cellular carrier, and then banks and brokerages. Why email? Most web sites let you reset a password by emailing a link to the address on file. If hackers have access to your inbox, they’ll use it to access every online account. The cellular account is also important if you’ve enabled two-factor authentication that triggers text messages with secure codes. What if someone hacks into your password manager’s vault? If you pick a great vault password, the odds of this are low. But when you have all your eggs in one basket, you want to ensure that basket stays safe. That’s what led me to the YubiKey 5 series hardware keys. When you use a YubiKey with a password manager, the manager encrypts your vault twice, once with your vault password and again with a secret it gets from the YubiKey. For convenience, I’m using two models of YubiKey. I use YubiKey 5 Nano with my PC and Mac. Meanwhile, YubiKey 5 NFC stays on my keyring for use with my phone. The latter should work with an iPhone 7 or newer, as well as an Android phone with NFC (near field communication). David Powell has written software or led engineering teams for 35 years. He enjoys work, vegan fine dining, cycling and travel with his spouse. His previous article was Playing Defense. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Free Newsletter

Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 74: WHATEVER the nightmare scenario—recession, inflation, deflation—the answer’s the same: We need stocks to notch long-run gains, with enough bonds and cash to survive the rough spell.

Truths

NO. 42: IT’S HARD to distinguish skill from luck. Suppose that, after all investment costs, there’s a 45% chance of beating the stock market each year. Over a dozen years, probability suggests that, out of a million investors, 69 “investment geniuses” would beat the market in all 12 years. But were these stock pickers truly skillful—or just very lucky?

humans

NO. 14: WITH EVERY dollar we spend, we’re seeking to tell others how we want to be perceived. The big house says we’re financially successful. The Prius says we’re environmentally aware. The theater subscription lets others know we’re cultured. The irony: Even as we use money to signal our success to others, we can end up damaging our financial future.

think

FIXED COSTS. Our fixed monthly expenses include items like mortgage or rent, car payments, insurance premiums, utilities and groceries. The higher these costs, the less we'll have for savings and for discretionary spending. The latter includes things like vacations, concerts, eating out and hobbies—typically the spending that brings the greatest happiness.

How to think about money

Manifesto

NO. 74: WHATEVER the nightmare scenario—recession, inflation, deflation—the answer’s the same: We need stocks to notch long-run gains, with enough bonds and cash to survive the rough spell.

Spotlight: Investing

Sector Fund by Stealth

I’VE RECENTLY MADE the most significant change to my own portfolio in thirty five years. For the first time I’ve moved away from pure market-cap investing, tilting meaningfully toward Europe and Southeast Asia and bringing my US technology concentration down to around fifteen percent.
I’m retired. I don’t need to chase the outperformance that concentration might deliver, and I don’t need the potential volatility that comes with it. This is a personal position rather than any kind of recommendation;

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The Benefits of 401(k)

I WAS HAPPY to read in The Wall Street Journal that 401(k) plans are “minting a generation of moderate millionaires.” I spent the last two decades of my professional life promoting 401(k) plans to workers, so the news felt like validation.
Moderate millionaires were loosely defined as coupon-clippers with seven figures. Sound familiar? It should to many HD readers. At Fidelity, a record 654,000 investors had a million or more in the 401(k) in the third quarter of 2025.

Read more »

Backdoor Roth Explained

ROTH IRA IS A powerful account. It grows tax-free and withdrawals are tax-free during retirement. Roth IRA also has income limits.
For 2025, if you are filing your taxes as single and make less than $150,000 ($236,000 if married filing jointly) of modified adjusted gross income, you can contribute a maximum amount of $7,000.
But if you make $165,000 (single) or $246,000 (married jointly), you are ineligible to contribute to a Roth IRA directly.

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Dividends Part II – At least

The Dividend Irrelevance Theory

Today, I’m going to channel my inner “RDQ” and raise some peoples ire:
About one month ago, there was a post about dividends.  It contained quite a bit of what I will politely call, “magical thinking”. Despite my linking two excellent articles which debunk the dividend myth, clearly subsequent posters did not bother to read either of them and persisted in posting the dividend dogma that commonly persists.  I even resorted to asking Jonathan to chime in (which he kindly did) as too many folks seemed to still not be “getting it”,

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Harder Than It Looks

ONE OF THE MARKET’S worst-performing stocks over the past year was, not long ago, one of its best. Novo Nordisk is the Danish company that pioneered the hugely popular weight-loss drug Wegovy, also known as Ozempic. After it hit the market in 2021, the company’s stock rallied, tripling over the following three years. Since then, however, things have been far more challenging. Over the past 12 months, the stock has dropped 60%.
This highlights a key challenge for investors: On the one hand,

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Trading 24/7?

I was reminded recently of how far stock trading has come when I inherited a small stack of old stock certificates from my great-uncle Billy. They were dated between 1927 and 1931, right through the turbulent years of the Great Depression. One was for a railroad, issued by Citibank itself. And yes—I checked—they’re now completely worthless. But holding those fragile pieces of paper in my hands brought history to life. Back then, making a trade was slow,

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Spotlight: Cutler

July’s Hits-Forum Edition

I always like seeing Jonathan’s monthly top hits list for articles, which is based on page views. I thought I’d compile something similar for the Forum to recognize posts that had the highest engagement last month. My engagement metric uses a proprietary formula based on a combination of likes and comments. Quinn Relents/Dick Quinn Feeling Lucky/Jonathan Clements Humble Bragging/Jonathan Clements Nobody Wants to Pay Healthcare Bills/Dick Quinn Vanguard vs Fidelity/Steve Abramowitz New Car Envy/Rick Connor CCRC is not an Assisted Living Facility/Kathy Wilhelm They’re Sunk/Jonathan Clements Would You Leave a Note?/Rick Connor Monday Rant/Dick Quinn How about the three most liked posts? Feeling Lucky, Humble Bragging and Nobody Wants to Pay Healthcare Bills.
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Food for Thought

I was a bit of a surprise to my parents. My father was 44 and my mother was 40 when I was born. My youngest sister was over seven years older than me. Because of the age differences between my three sisters and me, after about age 10 I rarely had any siblings at home. I was essentially an only child from that point on. Besides having my parents to myself, my experience growing up in southern New Jersey was a bit different than my sisters’ in another way. Money wasn’t so tight and my parents would eat out with me at least a couple times a month. They also liked to take mini-vacations regularly, bringing me along. Some of my warmest memories of my parents are from when we shared a restaurant meal together. Aside from Italian, ethnic food wasn’t much of a thing when I was growing up in the 60s and 70s. There just weren’t many ethnic restaurants around. We didn’t even have a Taco Bell in my town. Still, there was a small Chinese restaurant in a nearby shopping center. My mother was not a fan of Chinese food. Dad was more adventuresome and he would occasionally take me to lunch there during my pre-teen and early teen years. It was not unusual for us to be the only customers present. I was a huge fan of their pork fried rice and would always get the $2.50 lunch special, which also included wonton soup and a small dip of ice cream. I enjoyed being in what was to me an exotic atmosphere. My dad and I would engage in pleasant chit-chat and observe that the newspaper the owner liked to read during slow periods was written in Chinese. After I graduated from college, Dad and I…
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Billionaire Next Door

JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER was the richest man in the U.S. in 1918, which happens to be the year my father was born. His $1.2 billion net worth at that time would have the buying power today of more than $24 billion. Rockefeller, with his massive wealth, could purchase things most of us can only dream about, such as sprawling estates and gigantic yachts. Still, in many ways, today’s millionaire next door has more purchasing power than this billionaire of yesteryear. Consider the things that Rockefeller—despite all his riches—couldn’t buy at any price in 1918: Internet access. Personal computers didn’t exist in 1918, let alone the internet. Today, we regular folks have access to an almost infinite array of knowledge, news and entertainment. Trillions of dollars of technological development since Rockefeller’s time have made this marvel possible. Modern vehicles. Rockefeller had a collection of automobiles, but nothing he owned could come close to the performance, comfort and reliability of today’s vehicles. His cars weren’t equipped with power steering, anti-lock brakes or even air-conditioning—which debuted in 1940. Vehicles in 1918 were subject to frequent breakdowns, causing inconvenience even for rich people. Cutting-edge health care. Medical science has advanced exponentially since 1918. Despite having what’s been termed a nervous breakdown in his early 50s, Rockefeller generally seemed to enjoy good health. Still, had he suffered from any serious health issues, the medical help available to him would have been far less advanced than what most Americans have access to today. If his appendix had ruptured, like mine did early in life, he likely would have died. Entertainment options. The motion picture industry was in its infancy in 1918. Rockefeller died in 1937. Blockbusters like The Wizard of Oz and Gone with the Wind were released a couple of years after his death. Today,…
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Day of Reckoning

I was out of college for seven years before I got married. During all those years, I lived in the same apartment located on the edge of Lancaster, PA. I occasionally had friends who were in transition bunk with me for a month or two, but for the most part I lived alone. I liked living a relatively simple life and having control of my environment. The apartment started out with a sofa ($300), chair ($50), and two paintings-all selected by my parents. They were retirees and were happy to take on the task of furnishing my apartment while I finished up my degree a few states away. I paid them for the items they selected and added my bookcase, stereo, and bed from my childhood home. My dad made me a kitchen table, provided as a college graduation gift along with four matching chairs. I didn’t add a lot to this stock of material goods in those seven years. I never owned a television. I eventually splurged on a nice shortwave radio (Radio Shack model DX-440), an electronic keyboard, and a selection of Far Side comic books to keep visitors entertained in my TV-less pad. My single years were fairly unencumbered with “stuff”, allowing me to have an active social life. Fast forward to life today. Our suburban house is filled with the accumulations of three decades of family life. One wall of our basement is lined with boxes of toys that used to be my children’s treasures. Dozens of storage bins sit on racks, holding items as disparate as my father’s World War II service records, my high school memorabilia, and a variety of seldom-used household items. There’s a couple dozen carousels containing family slides from the 1960s, along with a projector that still worked the last time…
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The Dance of Time

When I was a freshman in high school, my earth science teacher once started out a class by playing Pink Floyd’s song Time, from their album The Dark Side of the Moon. He played the uncut version, which runs almost seven minutes. His reasoning for having us listen to the song was that musicians probably know more about time than the typical person. Two years after that science class, a song called Time Passages by Al Stewart became popular. I’m sure readers can think of many other popular songs that include time as a theme. Time is a fascinating and fundamental concept, but as a whole we don’t comprehend it well. One of my high school math teachers presented a mathematical argument as to why time seems to speed up as we age. The year between birthdays four and five represents a full fifth of your life experience. The year between your 49th and 50th birthdays constitutes just two percent of the years you’ve lived. Our perception of time is not static. Over 20 years ago, I went through a difficult period. For the previous several years, I had been in charge of a stressful project at work. My father was dying. We were building a house. And I probably had a form of PTSD lingering from the recent experience of my young daughter’s cancer ordeal. At some point, something snapped and I experienced a long season of serious insomnia. No treatment seemed to help; in fact, the various medications that were prescribed for me made the problem worse. Unable to sleep more than an hour or so at night for months on end, I slipped into an abyss. A single day seemed agonizingly long in the face of unrelenting misery. I’ve wrestled with the concept of time throughout my…
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A Crisis of Competence?

Do you think we are moving toward a competency crisis in this country? I told this story in a comment on an article a few months back: “Seven years ago, I bought a 2005 Outback. Despite the pink slip being clearly written by the dealer, the title came back with ‘Culter’ as my last name. I went to AAA for advice and they filled out a correction form for me. The title was revised to read ‘Renneth Culter’. I couldn’t believe it. Sent another correction form with very explicit instructions to correct both names included. It came back ‘Kenneth Culter’ again. I ended up having to drive to DMV headquarters an hour away to resolve the issue in person.” That experience with a faceless bureaucracy concerned me—was it the canary in the coal mine? If I can’t trust Department of Motor Vehicles employees to fix a simple typo, what else could go wrong in future encounters with government entities? Currently, there’s something like a two-month delay to redeem U.S. savings bonds by mail. What will the wait be in a few years when my bonds mature? And will the bonds even make it to their destination? Recently, in my neighborhood, a lot of mail is being mis-delivered…something that rarely happened even a few years ago. The post office is having a hard time finding anyone to cover certain routes. I’m told drug testing is out the window. I read news stories about “quiet quitting” and how slacking off is the new workplace norm. While I am a proponent of work-life balance, I’m concerned about the aggregate effect of work being increasingly less valued in our culture. This isn’t meant to be a shot at younger generations. I’ve worked with many engineers in their 20s who are diligent and competent. My…
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