BiggerPockets Money Podcast - 426: The New Path to Financial Independence is HERE

Episode Date: July 3, 2023

The Financial Independence, Retire Early movement (FIRE movement) is changing. More people are investing, making money, and working from anywhere in the world. Investing education and advice has be...come easier to access, and self-made millionaires have been created through simple frugality and smart spending. Compared to when the FIRE movement was born, now may be one of the best times in recent history to achieve financial independence. But there’s more than one path to choose from. Happy Financial Independence Day! That’s right; we’re swapping hot dogs for home equity, fireworks for frugality, and a cold one for some cold hard cash because TODAY is a day to celebrate an accomplishment we all hope to achieve! In this special episode, Scott and Mindy fly solo, touching on the history of the FIRE movement, its most prominent figures, and lessons learned on the path to FI. But that’s not all; tell your overspending Uncle to tune in as Scott and Mindy debate some of the most common complaints about the FIRE movement and prove that anyone, in almost any situation, can live life on their terms. So sit back, grab those chips you saved for tomorrow’s barbeque (no one will notice), and get your FIRE started! In This Episode We Cover The financial independence retire early movement (FIRE movement) explained  The MULTIPLE paths to early retirement you can take (and which is right for you) FIRE rules you MUST follow that can help ANYONE reach financial freedom What to do once you achieve FIRE and planning for it when you’re on the path Debating the FIRE critics and why you DON’T need to give up everything as you build wealth And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Money Facebook Group BiggerPockets Forums Finance Review Guest Onboarding Join BiggerPockets for FREE Mindy on BiggerPockets Scott's Instagram Grab Scott’s Book, “Set for Life” Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Apply to Be a Guest on The Money Show Podcast Talent Search! Check Out Mindy’s 2022 Live Spending Tracker and Budget Bill Bengen (The Inventor of the 4% Rule) From Homeless at 14 to Debt-Free Homeowner AFTER Prison Time with Jazmyn Gray How to Change Your Financial Life with a Money “Reset” with Jill Schlesinge Mr. Money Mustache on Life After FI: The Truth About Retiring Early in Your 30s Mr. Money Mustache Coast FI: The Calculated Way to Retire Early WITHOUT Giving Up What You Love with The Fioneers Designing a Frugal But Luxurious FI Life by Age 32 Change Your Money Mindset, Change Your Life with Vicki Robin Click here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/money-   Interested in learning more about today's sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email us: moneymoment@biggerpockets.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast where we have a solo show today to celebrate a totally made-up holiday, Financial Independence Day, and talk about the history of the fire movement and how it has evolved over the years. Hello, hello, hello. My name is Mindy Jensen. And with me as always is my ever-evolving co-host, Scott Trench. Thanks, Mindy. Great to be here with my genius co-host, Minnie Jensen. Scott and I are here to make financial independence less scary, less just for somebody else. to introduce you to every money story because we truly believe financial freedom is attainable for everyone, no matter when or where you're starting. That's right. Whether you want to retire early and travel the world, going to make big time investments in assets like real estate, start your own business, or calculate and plan for your ultimate financial independence day. We'll help you
Starting point is 00:00:46 reach your financial goals and get money out of the way so you can launch yourself towards your dreams. Scott, I am super excited to celebrate the first annual financial independence day. Today, on July 3rd, right before regular old Independence Day. What's better than independence? Financial independence. Before we jump in, though, we have a new segment of our show. It's called The Money Moment, where we share a money hack, tip, or trick to help you on your financial journey.
Starting point is 00:01:14 Today's money moment is read your credit cards, terms, and conditions. Many credit cards offer theft protection, rental car coverage, and other money-saving benefits. This means the rental car coverage means you don't have to, get the rental company's insurance, your credit card has its own insurance policy. May have its own. That's why you got to read it. Yeah, it may have its own. Yes, that's why you have to read it. Absolutely. Do you have a money tip for us? Email money moment at biggerpockets.com. Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like
Starting point is 00:01:53 most folks, it can be a little eye-opening. That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly where is going, and more importantly, where your taxed refund can make the biggest impact. Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress. Simplify your finances with Monarch. Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier. It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments, net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop. Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your Monarch subscription with the code pockets. What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving, not just
Starting point is 00:02:26 tracking. You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one place. So every decision actually moves the needle. Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch, the all in one tool that makes money management simple. Use the code pockets at Monarch.com for half off your first year. That's 50% off at Monarch.com code pockets. I love Matt, said no one ever. Nobody starts a business thinking, you know what would make this more fun? Calculating quarterly estimated taxes. But somehow every small business owner ends up doing it. Your dreams of creating, selling, and growing get replaced by late nights chasing receipts, juggling invoices, and wondering if that bad sushi lunch with Scott counts as a write-off.
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Starting point is 00:04:01 Lately, I've been listening to Bigger Liener Stronger for Fitness, the Anxious Generation for Parenting Perspective, and several Arthur Brooks' audiobooks that have been excellent for mental well-being. What makes Audible so powerful as its breadth. Beyond audiobooks, you also get Audible Originals, podcasts, and a massive back catalog across business, health, parenting, and more, all accessible in one app. If you're looking to turn everyday moments into real progress, Audible has been indispensable for me over over 10 years. Kickstart your well-being journey with your first audiobook free when you sign up for a free 30-day trial at audible.com slash BP money. All right, everybody, welcome to our Financial Independence Day episode. This show airs on July 3rd, so we decided to make up a holiday to celebrate with you all.
Starting point is 00:04:45 So first, we want to start off, and I think this is a question for our resident historian Mindy Jensen. what is the history of the fire movement? Well, way back in the, as my kids call it, in the 1900s, 1992, Vicky Robin and Joe Dominguez wrote a book called Your Money or Your Life. And while that book wasn't meant to be an early retirement book, when you take that message and you add it to the October 1994 Journal of Financial Planning article by Bill Bingen, you start to see some pretty amazing ideas forming. You could take money that you have saved up and invested and watch it grow. And Bill's article talks about the safe withdrawal rate.
Starting point is 00:05:32 He looked at the history of the entire stock market and decided in what worst case scenario could I advise my clients to take out what percentage of their portfolio could I advise them to withdraw? and they would still have money. And it turns out 4% is the absolute bottom of the barrel that you can withdraw and still reasonably assume that you will have money for 30 years, a 30 year retirement. That's based on a 60-40 stock portfolio, stock bond portfolio. We've talked about this several times. Bill was on our podcast twice to talk about his original article and to talk.
Starting point is 00:06:19 to talk about a follow-up where he said, you know, it's actually kind of closer to like 5 or 6 percent depending on, you know, your allocation. But that was, that was pretty eye-opening back in the 90s. And people started looking at this and thinking, you know, I don't have to work until I'm 65. I could retire a lot earlier if I just saved it and invested. Scott, when did you first find out about the fire movement. Yeah, I kind of discovered financial independence in the concept of fire via, I want to say, you know, a combination of mad fiantist and Mr. Money Mustache. I can't remember which one, you know, was the initial spark. We've luckily been able to have both of those folks on the show in the past as well. But yeah, that was probably around 2013 when I was just starting
Starting point is 00:07:11 my career and a couple months into my job. I really kind of caught the bug there and went down the rabbit hole. And really, my deep dive down the rabbit hole was with the Mr. Money Mustache blog, and then that quickly evolved to layering real estate investing on top of that in early 2014. And so that's really when I changed and oriented my whole way I live my life and, you know, approach my career in pursuit of this kind of ultimate goal of financial independence. Yeah. Mr. Money Mustash was our introduction to financial independence. And we quickly discovered J.D. Roth, who for some horrible reason, we have never had on the show, but that's changing. He's coming up in a future episode. And my husband was having a very bad day at work, and he just
Starting point is 00:07:59 banged into his Google search, how do I retire early? How do I quit my job early? And Pete's article came up the shockingly simple math behind early retirement. And that started a rabbit hole that Carl dove down very, very far. And I'll point out that just because I discovered it then, and, you know, we had Vicky Robin and Joe Dominguez, this concept of financial independence goes back hundreds of years. Maybe for as long as money has existed, there have been people probably are trying to achieve financial independence.
Starting point is 00:08:33 But I'll give a couple of examples there. The richest man in Babylon really kind of teaches how to achieve financial independence. That book was published in 1926. And since this is July 4th, one of our founding fathers, Benjamin Franklin, I think was a good embodiment of the financial independence lifestyle and movement. This is a guy who was super frugal, notoriously so really kind of pinched his pennies there, was very, you know, one of his core values was industry. So he would work all day in the morning, make a show of being there early in the day and working late at night.
Starting point is 00:09:05 And he built a very successful business, turned over it for somebody else to run and split the income from at 50-50. I believe someone might fact check me on that, but I read his autobiography. every once in a while. I can't remember who's the author of that one. But it's a good book. Just that was a joke, Mindy. Anyways, but yeah, I think Ben Franklin's a great example of kind of the early outputs of financial independence. This guy achieved it early in life, probably in his 30s or late 20s, and then went on to conduct a number of experiments and have a lot of value to society. So I think that's, you know, that's kind of this bug has been in the, in the, in the, uh, uh, uh, brains of a lot of Americans for hundreds of years to kind of achieve this output, the concept
Starting point is 00:09:50 of financial independence retire early in the acronym, that's a more modern thing. That's really been refined in particular with the internet and lots of great minds kind of adding their twists on the most effective ways to approach it. Yes, that's absolutely right, Scott. It's definitely not, like, Vicky didn't invent it. The richest man in Babylon was written in 1920, and you read it And you're like, wow, this is like modern day thought. But in the early 1900s girls, they call all of the 1900s, the 1900s. And it just feels weird to call a time that I was alive the 1900s. But as the fire movement has evolved and as it has, you know, progressed, it has changed a lot.
Starting point is 00:10:41 one of my favorite things about the fire movement is that it isn't just one thing. It isn't like one path that you have to go down. In the beginning, it was just fire. And then people started putting their own little spin on it. There was lean fie or fat fai depending on how much you wanted to save up before you quit your job. Coast FI is one of my favorites. We had Jess from the Fionnaires on episode 323, where she talks about Coast FI, where you set up yourself to have enough money that in your investment accounts, that it grows so that you will have a comfortable retirement. But you're not gathering up every dollar that you can right now so that you can quit now.
Starting point is 00:11:34 It's more that you're planning for a comfortable retirement. And then as you continue to contribute to your retirement account, your retirement date gets a little closer, but it isn't this all-out, frantic mad dash. Baristify is one where you still plan on having a job, but it's a really low-stress job. The movement has really changed from less about, I have to quit my job, and more about fulfilling your passions and being able to focus on what fills up your cup. So now it's about taking care of your finances first and enjoying the journey to the end of your working life, your work life, not your, that sounds bad, the end of your employment, however
Starting point is 00:12:26 long that takes, rather than this, you know, frantic, frantic mad dash to get there. And there's even the idea that you can reach financial independence and then pivot to a new career where money doesn't matter because you've taken care of that so you can pursue your dreams. We had Jill Schlesinger on episode 398 talking about fine financial independence new endeavor. She has a book out called The Great Money Reset, where you are changing the way that you think about your finances. Scott, do you think there will be a new acronym or change in the movement going forward even more so than what we've already seen?
Starting point is 00:13:07 Absolutely. People always take what exists and add in a spin to improve it, right? You know, like Brandon, you know, in the context of house hacking here on bigger pockets in our little tiny pocket of the FI world here, right? Brandon invented this term house hacking, right? I wrote set for life on this. Craig wrote a book on all the different permutations of house hacking. Now people are doing all these like special evolutions of it where they rent by the room to house hack or whatever with that. And they come up with all these fancy terms for it. Everyone always in perpetuity should be improving what was on, what was, what was, uh, uh, posited or what was, what's been there before, right? These concepts of,
Starting point is 00:13:50 of, of five is not one size fits all. In, when you're asking about how the, the movements changed, I think in 2013, everybody was right about the path to, to financial independence and what to do with your money, right? And what's changed over the last 10 years is now I think more and more people realize there is no right answer to the to these questions with money and there's a lot more nuance with it even though the goal of having freedom and flexibility continues to be the theme across all these different things so absolutely people are going to change create new acronyms the environment's going to change if you you know I I would be betting on an environment with higher interest rates so these formulas that
Starting point is 00:14:31 we've gotten used to of having almost all your wealth and stocks and having very little in bonds, for example, in the accumulation phase, somebody's going to figure out at some point there's an inflection rate with interest rates where that allocation no longer makes sense. And somebody's going to come up with a new spin on the approach to this, right? Somebody's going to come up with a new asset class or make something that wasn't popular two years ago accessible. Right. So I think that absolutely that those things are going to change in dramatic fashion in ways we can't predict. So what we've got to do is be open-minded and receptive to those new ideas and find all these folks so we can share them here on Bigger Pockets
Starting point is 00:15:09 Money because we won't have all those answers, you and I and our team here. Wait, you don't know everything, Scott? Absolutely not. You know, we learn something new every single time we have someone on the show. So, Scott, how has the fire movement and your ideas about it changed since 2013, you personally? I think it's that concept of they're not being a right way to achieve fire. I think the principles of spend less, earn more, create, and invest, those four kind of levers that you can pull. There are only a certain number of levers.
Starting point is 00:15:43 And I still think that the theme of the application of those levers does change every time. And there are general frameworks. The answer is everyone's journey is individualized, but has to fundamentally increase cash flow, create assets, or achieve strong investment returns on an existing basic capital. Those fundamentals never change. And the circumstances that you are in do not change the ground rules of the game of financial independence. Just because you're married and have kids does not mean that your house, your inability to house hack isn't going to hold you back, for example, from moving towards fire, right? Just because, you know, you feel like you've got a floor of expenses and nowhere to move your income doesn't, oh, then there's no, there's no pass forward for you for five if you can't change those two things. And you don't have time to create an asset and you have no capital to invest.
Starting point is 00:16:33 So you've got to be able to flex on some of those levers. But how you do that and the creativity that people bring to it is limitless within the context of those rules. I really like that. The creativity you bring to it is limitless. And there are very few rules that have to be followed in order to reach financial independence. And I think spend less and spend less than you make and invest what you are. invest the difference is kind of the only hard and fast rule. I mean, you have to have something to be investing. And if you're spending every dime that comes in, you don't have anything
Starting point is 00:17:16 left over to invest. Other than that, what you invest in, how long it takes you to get there is really up to you. Mindy, one other thing you asked about how the fire movement has changed and whether someone will come up with a new thing. Well, I think Gen Z is coming up with this concept of quiet quitting, which is the same thing, right? It's just another, it's another take on the, on the whole situation with this. I also want to point out, when you think about what's going on when the fire movement in a general sense, I think 10 years ago, it was about quitting your job. People wanted to retire. That word was really important, and you already emphasized this, but I think that what's happened as an underlying shift there is power has shifted to the employee
Starting point is 00:17:59 over the last 10 years in a very dramatic way. It may not have felt like it. It may not have have happened overnight. It may not have happened for everyone. But, you know, the options available to us to make money in 2023 are dramatically better than the options that were available to us in 2013, right? The gig economy has exploded from like some 30 odd million people to almost 60 million people over the last decade, right? There are just tons and tons of new opportunities out there. Everyone can work remote. You can literally shop the best job for your skill set across the country in many cases. There may be a slight pullback on that, but the trend line is unquestionably one that is putting power in the pockets of the employee, the worker in this country over the
Starting point is 00:18:45 last 10 years relative to 2013, right? And coming out of the Great Recession, I don't think that was the case. And so I think there was a, how do I escape the job? But when power shifts subtly and over a prolonged period back into the workers' hands, all of a sudden, maybe you're job isn't so bad. Maybe there's things that were that were really making you want to quit. You have the power to begin changing a few of those things or jump shipping get a new opportunity that isn't so bad and you can feel a little bit better about it. So I think that the option to retire is still a strong pull and will be there forever, but the hatred of the job is lessening to a degree, not saying there aren't still tens of millions of people who hate their
Starting point is 00:19:27 jobs and would love to quit forever and not work at all. But I think that that shift has been one that's been underlying a lot of these changes in the way we talk about FI, here on Bigger Pockets Money, for example. Right. And there's, I think this, this movement has brought to the forefront, the idea of the side hustle or like you said, the gig economy where you can kind of cobble together a bunch of different income streams. So you don't have to go and work for the man that you hate.
Starting point is 00:19:58 You could have a freelance writing job. and a video channel where you open up boxes and play with toys. I can't believe that's a thing. But there is no limit to the ways that you can make money and the amount of money you can make. There is a limit. It is your creativity. I think that's going on here, Mindy, is in the fire world, is that a lot of the folks, you know, perhaps you and I included, we talked about this with the mad scientist a few weeks ago, you know, once you become
Starting point is 00:20:32 come fie and you sit there for a couple of years. Maybe you keep earning money, maybe the market has done well or whatever. The number, the amount of money you thought you needed, you sore past it. And all of a sudden it becomes, you know, this, you have this very good problem of like, oh, what am I doing now? Like, how do I maximize this opportunity here? And it changes your perspective. So I think there's an evolution of folks realizing like, hey, you've got to go about it with this kind of all out intensity and approach at the beginning stages. Or many folks find that we find that pattern repeated very often among folks that get to fie with any amount of speed, you know, in a couple of years or, you know, under a decade. And then there's a subtle shift that what got
Starting point is 00:21:12 you there isn't what's going to be best for you on the go forward basis. And so I think a lot of these folks who really absorb the identity of being very frugal, perhaps you and me included, have a hard time unwinding that and realize, hey, if I continue to be that frugal going for it. I'm wasting this incredible opportunity to enjoy the life that I have an option to pursue now at this point. And so that's like a really interesting about face and identity problem. I think that a lot of people get here because you almost need that identity at the beginning and you need to shed it when you do it if you are able to achieve to achieve the financial goals that you set for yourself. Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial
Starting point is 00:21:53 picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like most folks, it can be a little eye-opening. That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly where your money is going, and more importantly, where your taxed refund can make the biggest impact. Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress. Simplify your finances with Monarch. Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier. It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop. Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your Monarch subscription with the code
Starting point is 00:22:26 pockets. What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving, not just tracking. You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one place. So every decision actually moves the needle. Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch, the all-in-one tool that makes money management simple. Use the code pockets at Monarch.com for half off your first year. That's 50% off at Monarch.com code pockets. You just realized your business needed to hire someone yesterday. How can you find amazing candidates fast? Easy. Just use indeed. When it comes to hiring, Indeed is all you need. That means you can stop struggling to get your job notice on other job sites.
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Starting point is 00:24:33 And all services are handled in-house because privacy by default is their pledge to all customers. Visit Northwest Registeredagent.com slash money-free and start building something amazing. Get more with Northwest Registered Agent at Northwest Registeredagent.com slash money-free. Wow, Scott, feeling real scene right about now. But you're right. do need to have some level of frugality in the beginning in order to be able to spend less than you earn. It's super easy to spend as much or more than you earn. But it is, it takes a bit of discipline to spend less than you earn and put that away for the future. And the future is
Starting point is 00:25:19 five years, 10 years, 50 years down the road. It's difficult even for my kids right now to be saving for their retirement, they're 16 and 13. It's difficult for a 25-year-old to be saving for retirement at 65. Why would I not spend all of my money now? I can save for retirement later. But if you can save for retirement now, little bits, little bits. Get in the habit right at the very beginning of your working life. If you don't have the, like, if you're not used to having that money in your bank account, you won't miss it when it's not there. Get used to filling out your or contributing to your 401k. You don't have to max it out. But if you could, that'd be awesome. Do that for a little bit. You get used to it. You don't have that in there. All of a sudden, five years down the
Starting point is 00:26:15 road, 10 years down the road, you are coast five. And then now you're at 65, you have a very comfortable retirement. You continue to contribute. Now you can retire at 60. You continue to contribute a little bit. And now you can retire at 55 or even 50. And you're not pinching pennies along the way. You're not depriving yourself of everything. If you push the frugality in the beginning, it can be a little bit difficult to change that up as I am experiencing right now as I start to explore a little bit more of my spendy ways. Carl and I are focusing a lot on experiences and we're looking for ways to not just like experiences on vacation. One of the things that comes up frequently in a lot of these conversations is, oh, when I was on
Starting point is 00:27:11 vacation, I took a cooking class. Well, why do I have to wait till vacation to take a cooking class? So I'm looking for a cooking class that I can take with my girls locally. And I don't want to bring more things into my house. I have a tendency to be a little bit hoarderish. But if I can buy more experiences with my kids, I think that'll be a really awesome way to, an awesome use of my money. Yeah. I think that's like a great example of this, like, hey, make a list of all the things you like doing the most and just like put them in order and forget what cost, what cost is. And like more often than not, the things at the top of that list are like a hike here in Colorado, a cooking class. I love doing a cooking class with my wife. You know what we found out
Starting point is 00:27:55 is that the cooking classes are a pain in the rear because there's like four other people on the call. They're like kind of expensive. You have to have the thing on the whole time. And you know what's way better? It's just a YouTube. You just literally get the YouTube cooking class on there. It's completely free. And you have a great evening. You can pause the thing whenever you want to go handle the and so like like we're like like we're like what are the favorite our favorite things to do over the next month yes there's some travel that's that's that costs money um but a lot of the things that we like to do are completely free my wife and i um you know and or involve very low cost right rocky mountain national park is 75 dollars for the annual parks pass um on an annual basis that gets you
Starting point is 00:28:32 all the parks in the country so like you know what how like like in some ways yes you can spend money in some ways you get you realize hey if you go too far um you're just going to have this huge surplus so you might as well um you might as well spend it on the on the um on the things you may not be able to spend it because your passions aren't going to cost that much money yes uh another way to look at it is you made a list of the things that you like to do make a list of the things that you hate i hate cleaning my house but it feels like a waste i think rameet's going to call me up and yell at me for saying a waste of money. It feels like a waste of money to pay somebody to do something I could do myself. But I really hate cleaning my house to the point that it's really not all that
Starting point is 00:29:17 clean. So I am going to hire somebody to clean my house. That's financial independence. Yes. I have a big Fourth of July party every year. And this show is airing on July 3rd. So I have somebody here at my house right now cleaning my house. And I am now excited about it. But a couple of months ago, that would have been like, ooh, is that the right choice for me? Totally the right choice for me. My friends, the Waffles on Wednesday couple, I was just having dinner with them. And they said, you know, we looked at each other and said, how can we take things off our plate that we hate? And this was like three years ago. I should have had this conversation with them three years ago. How can we take things off our plate that we don't like. And she said, I don't like to clean my house. And he said, great, let's hire a cleaner.
Starting point is 00:30:09 And she said, it's the best decision I've ever made. So I am embracing this, even though it feels wasteful to me, I'm getting over that because I'm providing a job for somebody else. And they're going to do a better job than I could ever do. I hate cleaning and I can afford it. Mindy, I want to cover one last thing before we get out of here and let people celebrate their financial Independence Day. What are the biggest complaints that people have about the path to financial independence and the people, you know, the people who we bring on, for example, and talk about or the, what are the complaints and the naysayers saying about fire? I could never do that because I don't want to be frugal. I don't want to give up things. I don't want to not enjoy my life.
Starting point is 00:31:01 There seems to be this idea from people who are on the outside looking in that this is a life of deprivation and you can't have anything enjoyable if you are going to be on the paths of financial independence. I think that's the biggest one, the total deprivation. And it isn't total deprivation. Was it? Frugal Woods, I think, has the best example of this. I think she was on episode 10, maybe episode 11. I wish I could just remember that like that. Mrs. Frugal Woods was on a very early episode.
Starting point is 00:31:42 And she said when we first discovered financial independence, we're like, oh, okay, we're getting rid of everything. And they did. And for a month, she's like, you know what? This is not fun. I want to add some things back. Like I got rid of absolutely everything and most of it I don't miss. but I miss my seltzer water.
Starting point is 00:32:02 I miss my yoga class. I miss, you know, a couple of things. So they figured out ways to keep those in their life at less expensive prices. And they actually ended up being almost free in the yoga was free and the, the seltzer water was practically free. And that's what you, that's how you have success in this is to keep the things in your life that are meaningful to you, that bring you joy. You don't have to get rid of everything and get rid of the things that don't add any value. I am selling a car today. It doesn't bring me
Starting point is 00:32:41 any value. It doesn't bring me joy. So I don't have it anymore. It was taking up mental space. Scott, what are some of the biggest complaints you think about? Well, I see folks saying, oh, this person earns too high of a salary, you know, get somebody a normal, you know, tell me about a normal person who achieve this, you know, in this period of time. I think that's a big one because there are a lot of, this is more accessible in a lot of ways to focus with those higher salaries. I also see some things saying, oh, this person didn't actually start from scratch with a completely clean slate with no advantages.
Starting point is 00:33:18 And I have kind of two comments about that. first up is understanding that this is a journey and that folks that we talk to on that are achieving financial independence or have a positive trajectory to showcase you know if you if you go from zero to a million dollars in net worth over 10 years you're probably not earning 40,000 dollars the whole time you may start there and a lot of our folks do start in those types of situations right but if you if you're able to amass a million dollar portfolio and manage it, your skill set's probably going to advance over that period of time, right? Like at bigger pockets, if someone was managing a million dollar budget here at bigger pockets
Starting point is 00:33:59 on an annual basis, they'd earn more than 50 grand to manage that budget, right? Or I would, I would, you know, to get somebody competent to do that, we'd have to pay them more than 50 grand in order to do that, right? So this is a function of the journey itself. I think that as you're going on there, if you're the kind of person who can amass from very little or from a close to scratch position or pay off debt and move to, towards that, you're naturally going to get the skills along the way that will showcase a growth and income across that journey. So that's, I think, one part of that story. And the second thing is,
Starting point is 00:34:35 you know, it's very hard to find examples of people who truly start out with absolutely nothing and no advantages whatsoever and a truly standing start from scratch and then go on to build wealth, right? We've talked to a few of those folks on the show. You know, we've had a, we had a story about a gentleman, Tony Gaden, who was, you know, weighed himself on the Walmart scale and saw a $400,000 was $26,000 in credit card debt, and then went on to build a $500,000 portfolio after shedding 200 pounds. Well, simultaneously shedding 200 pounds. We've had Jasmine Gray here in Denver come in, who struggled with addiction and went to prison for a while, and now as a homeowner, house hacker and on her way to building wealth. But those stories are going to be rare and they're
Starting point is 00:35:23 going to take a lot more time. What's much more common is people do have some advantage on the journey to FI. They've got something, a friend or a family member that can help them out with things, someone to give them a loan or a helping hand in that first little bit, an inheritance from a grandparent or great-grandparent of $10,000 to $50,000. Honestly, those situations are just way more common than the person who truly starts from a standing position from scratch with no friends or families to support them and no helping hand and builds it completely from the ground up. Again, it does happen. It's just not the norm. And really think about it if that's you and you're one of those naysayers. Are you really in the position where you have absolutely no advantages?
Starting point is 00:36:07 You're truly on your own. You just have you and your salary and you have no ability to ask for helping hands from friends, family, community, or anybody else. If that's you, look, it's going to be hard, right? And it's going to be much more different experience than, than most other folks. I think that that's what I'd say to those two common points, right? This person are at a high income, well, don't reflect on where they are now, reflect on where they started from with that high income, right? And then where is, because over 10 years, your income should grow if you give it your all at a career that it has a scalable potential and as your wealth builds. And then two, you know, reflect. Are you really in a position where you have absolutely no advantages and no
Starting point is 00:36:48 ability and you're truly completely on your own and have no support and advantages? Your parents can't watch your baby, for example, because you live near them, even those types of small things on your journey, because I think you might be surprised if you really go looking for those advantages. You'll have a couple of secret ones that you can unleash on your journey. That's a really good point, Scott. I think that everybody has an advantage somewhere. It's just not all of the advantages. It's all the advantages that somebody else has. It's not even some of the similar advantages that other people have. But you have advantages. You have a high income. You have flexibility. You have family to help out. You have the ability to house hack. Everybody has some advantage that they can
Starting point is 00:37:31 take advantage of. All right, Scott, this was a lot of fun. Happy Financial Independence Day. Happy Financial Independence Day. I hope you have a wonderful Independence Day for the USA tomorrow. Enjoy everything with friends and family. And thank you to everyone who's listening. I hope you are able to take this as some motivation and keep rolling towards your financial independence day. Yes. And if you have a story that you would like to share with us, if you would like to apply to be a guest on the BiggerPockets Money podcast, go to BiggerPockets.com. slash guest and fill out the form. Let us know what your story is. We would love to hear from you. All right. That wraps up this episode, this Financial Independence Day episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. He is Scott Trench. And I am Mindy Jensen saying Tudaloo Kangaroo. If you enjoyed today's episode, please give us a five-star review on Spotify or Apple. And if you're
Starting point is 00:38:32 looking for even more money content, feel free to visit our YouTube channel at YouTube.com Bigger Pockets Money. Bigger Pockets Money was created by Mindy Jensen and Scott Trench, produced by Kaelin Bennett, editing by Exodus Media, copywriting by Nate Weintraub. Lastly, a big thank you to the Bigger Pockets team for making this show possible.

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