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My hope is this resonate with some of you and you will tell your own story. It’s probably more of an article, but my hope is it creates good conversation and your wisdom as well.
The life we built, the family we raised, and the future we prepared for were not handed to us. They were built—day by day, dollar by dollar, choice by choice.
Most people will never have the exact same story. The details change. The names change. The setting changes. But the themes are often familiar: doing the best you can with what you have, learning responsibility early, carrying more than you expected, and trying to build a better life one decision at a time.
That is what this story is really about.
I grew up in a fatherless home, born in the mid-1960s and raised by two strong women—my mother and my grandmother. I was the youngest of four, with three older sisters ahead of me, and while we never had a lot, we always had enough. My mother worked as a nurse, and my grandmother did whatever honest work she could find—ironing, sewing, cleaning houses, and working at a donut shop. There was no easy road laid out in front of us. But there was faith, effort, sacrifice, and a willingness to keep going.
I was also shaped by where I came from—the Texas Panhandle. Amarillo is a place of hard wind, blowing dust, blue northers, ice, heat, and weather that can turn on you in a hurry. It is a place that teaches you early that comfort is never guaranteed. The land is open, the climate is harsh, and life tends to toughen you in ordinary ways. Looking back, that environment matched the values I was being raised with: work hard, endure, adapt, and do not expect life to bend for your convenience.
My grandmother, born in 1919, helped shape how I still see the world. She was one of nine children raised on an Oklahoma farm, and she knew poverty in its rawest form. She came from a generation where survival often mattered more than schooling, where working the farm came before sitting in a classroom. She lived through the Great Depression, and those years left her with lessons that never wore off: work hard, waste nothing, save what you can, and never assume life owes you anything. Those lessons found their way to me.
From my mother, I learned something just as important—compassion. Born in 1941, she was a nurse not just by profession, but by nature. She took care of people all her life, on duty and off. Helping others was simply part of who she was. She taught me that strength is not only found in endurance, but in kindness, service, and showing up for people when they need you most. That example shaped not only how I worked, but how I tried to live.
I learned early that if I wanted something, I needed to work for it. I mowed lawns, had a paper route, and by 15 I was working and driving with a hardship license. Summers were not for sleeping in. I spent them in Oklahoma working on the farm with my great-uncle. At 12 years old, I was up before daylight working hay fields or doing backhoe work for people in the local community. It was hard, dirty, honest work, and I saved nearly every dollar I made. Looking back, those long summer days taught me more than any classroom ever could. They taught me discipline, responsibility, and the value of a dollar.
“The future depends on what you do today.”
— Mahatma Gandhi
Those years also shaped my personality. I have always been rigid about structure, honesty, and planning—sometimes to a fault. I believe in doing things right. I believe details matter. I believe your word matters. I believe preparation matters. Those traits served me well in the military, in civil service, and in life. But I have also learned that discipline can become its own burden when it leaves no room for grace. There have been times when I made things harder than they needed to be, times when I needed to step back, loosen my grip, and be more flexible.
Discipline will carry you far—but flexibility will keep you sane.
Another lesson I have had to learn is that the civilian world does not always move with the same pace or urgency as the military. In uniform, when something needed to get done, it usually got done quickly. There was a built-in expectation of urgency, accountability, and follow-through. In the civilian world, that rhythm is often different. That adjustment has taken time for me, and in some ways it still does. It has taught me patience, perspective, and the need to work well with people who may approach responsibility differently than I do.
After high school, I chased a dream. I wanted to build high-performance engines or be part of a full-time traveling sprint car team. That dream did not unfold the way I imagined. But like many people discover, the road that does not happen often pushes you toward the road that matters most. For me, that road led to the United States Air Force.
The Air Force gave me purpose, structure, and opportunity. A career in telecommunications eventually opened the door to a second career in civil service education after 21 years of active-duty service. Through all of those years—deployments, long days, changing assignments, raising a family, and building a future—one thing never left me: the habit of working hard and saving what I could.
Saving was never flashy, and it was never easy. It was built the old-fashioned way—one decision at a time, one paycheck at a time, one sacrifice at a time. It meant contributing to my TSP, building IRAs, buying bonds, investing where I could, and thinking long-term. It meant understanding that for most people, financial stability does not come from one big break. It comes from consistency. It comes from living below your means, staying disciplined when others are spending, and choosing security later over comfort now. Rental property, retirement accounts, and savings vehicles did not appear overnight. They came from a lifetime of showing up, staying steady, and doing without when necessary.
“Success is the sum of small efforts, repeated day in and day out.”
— Robert Collier
Most importantly, I did not walk this road alone. My spouse of 37 years has been right beside me through all of it. She came from the same kind of background, understands the same lessons, and carries the same work ethic and saving mentality that have guided my life. When two people are united not just in marriage, but in values—hard work, sacrifice, discipline, faith, and financial restraint—it changes everything. We were never trying to impress anyone. We were trying to build something lasting.
A strong marriage built on shared values multiplies what two people can endure and accomplish.
Along the way, my wife and I also built a family. We adopted and raised three children, and that journey became one of the most meaningful parts of our life together. Raising children takes love, patience, sacrifice, and commitment—just like building a life. It adds responsibility, purpose, and perspective to everything you are working toward. The lessons handed down to me through hardship, compassion, work, and faith were not meant to stop with me. They were meant to be lived out and passed on.
One truth that keeps me grounded is this: my story is not unique. There are thousands of stories like it, and many that are harder. Mine is only unique to me and to the people in it. That is what gives it meaning. Not that it was the hardest. Not that it was the most remarkable. But that it was mine to live, mine to carry, and mine to build from.
If this story means anything, it is not because it is rare. It is because versions of it are being lived every day by people who work, sacrifice, endure, and keep going without much recognition. Struggle is common. Sacrifice is common. Quiet perseverance is more common than the world gives credit for.
I also came from a caring community of family and friends who offered advice, encouragement, correction, and perspective along the way. Some of that advice I took. Most of it I ignored. But one truth became clearer over time: at the end of the day, your choices determine your destination. People can influence you, warn you, help you, and walk beside you—but they cannot choose for you. Your direction in life is shaped less by what you hear and more by what you do.
Advice can guide you, but your choices chart the course.
One of the harder lessons in life is realizing that the world is not arranged around your comfort. It does not owe you ease, applause, understanding, or rescue. That may sound blunt, but there is freedom in accepting it. Once you stop waiting to be carried, you start taking full responsibility for your own direction. You take your work seriously. You take your money seriously. You take your word seriously. You stop waiting on perfect conditions, perfect timing, or perfect people. You do the work anyway. You save anyway. You plan anyway. You keep going anyway.
“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.”
— commonly attributed to Theodore Roosevelt
The world does not owe you certainty or comfort. Build anyway.
That mindset is not bitterness. It is maturity. It is responsibility. It is learning that life becomes stronger when excuses become fewer.
I have also learned that who you surround yourself with matters more than most people realize. You need positive people around you—people with character, perspective, faith, and a mindset that pushes you forward instead of dragging you backward. The wrong voices can drain your energy, cloud your judgment, and keep you focused on everything that is broken.
And in the world we live in today, you also have to learn to ignore the noise. There is always outrage, distraction, negativity, and foolishness fighting for your attention. If you let all of that in, it will steal your peace and your focus. At some point, you have to tune out what does not matter, stay grounded in what is true, and keep your eyes on the people, values, and priorities that actually build a life.
Who you walk with will shape how you think, what you value, and how far you go. Choose your circle carefully, and do not let the noise of the world drown out what matters most.
Now, as I approach 60 and look toward retirement in the next couple of years, I can say this with gratitude and humility: I think I have done pretty well for a kid who did not start with much. Not because life was easy. Not because the path was smooth. But because I was raised by people who taught me that hard work matters, faith matters, character matters, compassion matters, and saving matters. I carried those lessons with me through every stage of life. Along the way, I earned my BA and MA degrees, served my country, built a career, built a family, and built a future.
This is not really a story about hardship. Plenty of people have had it harder. It is a story about what certain kinds of lives can teach us—work matters, saving matters, character matters, and the people around us matter. Most of all, it is a reminder that while nobody gets a perfect road, we still get choices. And over time, those choices shape the life we live.
In the end, a good life is rarely found. More often, it is built—day by day, dollar by dollar, choice by choice.
Jeff:
Thanks for sharing some of the details of your life journey: the situation you were born into, the lessons you were taught and learned through experience and hard work, and the wisdom you have gained through living.
It is a great blessing to reflect back on the life we have had and to be able to see meaning and fulfillment. I would agree that often that comes through how we choose to approach life and the cards we are dealt, and the kinds of decisions we make.
Great examples of the slow path to financial security, Jeff! Thanks for sharing your story!
Jeff, thanks for sharing your story. A lot of wisdom in its lessons.
Beautifully written–I love the quotes. Thanks for sharing it!
Your story, while not uncommon as you yourself noted, is genuinely inspiring — a testament to tenacity and a real commitment to building a good life for yourself and your family. Your discipline and principled, dare I say strict, mindset has clearly paid dividends, and stands as a brilliant illustration of what can be achieved when you put your mind to it.
I’ll confess with some guilt that, beyond the core tenet of spending less than you earn and saving for your future self, my own approach was far more relaxed — perhaps even casually indifferent, a little laissez-faire if I’m honest. I built my life largely by happenstance and a modicum of common sense, yet somehow arrived at the same destination. I suppose there’s more than one way to skin a cat if we lay the financial foundation first.
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Mark, I was thinking the same thing about my life. Looking back I took the correct path when I met numerous forks in the road and was “lucky” to choose the correct path most times. Getting across the finish line is the important thing. How you get there can be an infinite number of paths as I’ve read over the years here on Humble Dollar.
Very nice article, I am sure many at HD can relate.
Now approaching 63 years old (young!), I think back to being raised, one of three children, by my father in England. He had little more than an elementary school education and left Ireland as a 19 year old to find a better life. He had with him a small tool chest, containing some carpentry tools from where he had served as an apprentice for a couple of years making coffins.
He passed 12 years ago and when sorting through his affairs I found old photos. A couple in an envelope here, a couple more there. I ended up with a small box full. One photo in particular stood out. A photo with his mother and 5 siblings. My father was 8 or 9 years old at the time. He had no shoes, similarly a couple of the others, and they appeared to be dressed in their Sunday best. Within a year or two of the photo his mother had passed along with one of his sisters due go the ‘consumption’ (TB).
Growing up I had no idea of the degree of poverty he experienced during his childhood, and while I grew to understand more as an adult this photo was still a revelation to me.
I often think back to how far he came, through hard work, perseverance, making sacrifices and making the best choices he could, while passing a better life onto his children as a single parent.
We never had much growing up, but we never wanted for much either. My sister and I were the first in family history to go to university and have lived our lives with similarities and differences as you described in your article. All made possible by our father and hard work on our part.