BiggerPockets Money Podcast - 92: An Introduction to Financial Independence with Chris Mamula, Brad Barrett and Jonathan Mendonsa

Episode Date: September 30, 2019

Personal finance is easy, right? You read a blog or listen to a podcast and just follow everything they did. Easy, Peasy, Lemon Squeezy. Except that’s not how the world works. What brought success t...o one person may bring misery - and ultimately failure - to someone else. Personal Finance is P-E-R-S-O-N-A-L! Of course that said, there are some general principles that apply to everyone:  Spend less than you earn Invest wisely Increase your income Track your spending Be money conscious Chris Mamula, Brad Barrett and Jonathan Mendonsa are the authors of ChooseFI: Your Blueprint to Financial Independence, a new book for ChooseFI Publishing. They join us today to share the basics of Financial Independence, and to remind us that Financial Freedom is available for everyone. Topics: What their book is all about The framework they applied to the concept of financial independence Deconstructing rules and create new mindset Things they questioned that started to fall apart How to frame the conversation to attract and get more people interested on financial independence The concept of spending less money  Principles on how to cut your expenses Learn the rules of money and math How to earn more income How they approach on investing The final step towards financial independence And SO much more! Links: Mr. Money Mustache Mad Fientist YNAB Mint Frugalwoods BiggerPockets Money Podcast 10: Designing a Frugal But Luxurious FI Life by Age 32 with Liz Thames BiggerPockets Money Podcast 86: Choosing the Right Investment Type for Your Goals with David Stein Budgets Are Sexy Twitter - Dad Jokes Scott's Instagram ChooseFI ChooseFI Podcast Eat The Financial Elephant Can I Retire Yet? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast show number 92 with the guys from ChooseFI, Brad, Jonathan, and Chris. You could not have increased your income overnight, but what mindset, what questions, what skill sets did you develop to get where you are today that allowed the earn more of the equation to be the almost inevitable? It's time for a new American dream, one that doesn't involve working in a cubicle for 40 years, barely scraping by. Whether you're looking to get your financial house in order, invest the money you already have,
Starting point is 00:00:29 or discover new paths for wealth creation, you're in the right place. This show is for anyone who has money or wants more. This is the Bigger Pockets Money Podcast. How's it going to everybody? I'm Scott Trench. I'm here with my co-host, Miss Mindy Jensen. How you doing today, Mindy? Scott, I am doing fantastic. How are you today?
Starting point is 00:00:47 I'm doing great. I had a wonderful, fun time just hanging out with three of some of the best students of financial independence around and Brad, Jonathan, and Chris today. I always enjoy having Brad, and Jonathan on the show. This is our first time with Chris, and we don't really dive too much into his money stories. We are definitely going to have to have him back
Starting point is 00:01:06 so that he can share it with us because I think he's got another very interesting approach to money. But, no, today we're talking about the new Chooseify book called Chooseify Your Blueprint to Financial Independence. And I think this is just a really awesome book. Very, very easy to digest book on how to, start down the path to financial independence. It's one thing to hear from people who say, you know, do this, do that. You have to do it this way. You have to do it that way. But this book
Starting point is 00:01:37 doesn't really frame it in that context. This book says, here are the things you need to do. Here are ways other people have done them. And probably something in there can work for you too. Yeah, I really love the case study approach, the variety of perspectives gathered for it and some of the great discussion in that book. And today, we're going to have the privilege of talking with the three co-authors, Brad, Jonathan, and Chris, although I hear that Chris was perhaps the workhorse and putting together some of this to give him a big shout out. And we'll kind of walk through some of the perspective around this.
Starting point is 00:02:11 We'll start with how to get started approaching the concept of financial independence. And then we'll go through three of the kind of key categories that you need to unearth in order to move towards this. And the spend less, earn more, and invest approach. And then what that does for you as you progress along that continuum towards financial What that does for you is progress you towards financial independence where you eventually end up with all of the options in the world and the happiest self you've ever had. Oh, spoiler alert. Yeah.
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Starting point is 00:05:31 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. Should we bring them in? Yes. Chris Mamula, welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. How are you doing today? I'm doing well and I'm excited to be here talking to you. And before I completely ignore our other two guests, we have Brad Barrett and Jonathan Mendonza. Did I say that right, Jonathan? We're friends. I'm super excited.
Starting point is 00:06:01 I feel like every time we practice this, you get just a little bit better at it. Someday I'll be just kicking it right off. And they are also here to talk about the Choose FI book, which is called Your Blueprint to Financial Independence. Chris, let's see, Brad and Jonathan said that Chris basically wrote, what, 112% of the book? Yeah, I think I'd love to Chris, you kind of describe how you parsed it down, but effectively when we started the podcast, we had this vision for how we could take the principles and create something out of them at some point. And I remember verbalizing this to Brad. Then we got this email from Chris, like within two weeks of that, basically saying the same thing, but with more, it was
Starting point is 00:06:45 completely fleshed out. And I was like, oh, this would be amazing. We should work together on this. Yeah, because as you guys know, certainly from being podcast hosts, a podcast is simply not linear, right? I mean, we're having different guests on. It's really all over the place. I mean, I mean that in the best possible way, but there's no way someone could start at episode one and have their path to phi in X number of episodes. They have to jump all around. So what Chris envisioned was, how can we make this blueprint for FI? And we just thought, we really thought it was an amazing idea.
Starting point is 00:07:20 Yeah, and I'll chime in here. You know, I've obviously been a big fan of Braddon and Jonathan. And I've really, and the Chusify podcast and all the work that you guys have done over there. And this book, and I think special thanks to Chris for all your hard work and kind of architecting maybe the work here. You know, I think it's just a great extension of what you guys have been doing and the great work you've been doing there. It's a really well thought out and clearly, you know, it is that. linear approach. You've got several clear sections and a great framework about how to approach FI in that. And I was hoping that we could kind of chat about, you know, maybe that framework
Starting point is 00:07:55 here today with the five of us and kind of get our thoughts on how you're approaching that. So, Chris, would you mind sharing the framework that you brought into? Yeah, sure. So I think that a lot of personal finance is kind of guru-driven. Like somebody says, this is what I did. And they create this five or seven-step program and you're supposed to follow it. And the reality of the situation is we all have a different story. We're all starting from different points. We're all going different places. And so that's not really how it works for any of us. And so either people get frustrated and don't do anything at all, or maybe they will try to follow somebody's program and they get stuck. And what I found that worked for me is just through trial
Starting point is 00:08:33 and air is I just kind of took bits and pieces of lots of different people's philosophies. And I can't say I have a great original idea of my own, but I just kind of stole from a lot of people and put it together to create something that did work for me. So what my thought process was was, I was going to start the podcast that is Choose FI, something very similar. And so when I heard these guys were starting it, I mean, it would be great to say that I had this vision and that I would work with these guys. But I kind of think like a lot of people, I kind of actually was a little bit angry when I heard they started it. And I didn't want them to succeed. But because they kind of stole what was going to be my idea, I thought. But as I started to listen to it, they weren't
Starting point is 00:09:13 bad and they were doing a lot of the stuff I wanted to do, and I couldn't help but become a fan. So I thought, instead of trying to compete with this, why not just reach out to them? And there was definitely an element of luck. I mean, I don't think anybody could have known how much the Chusify platform was going to explode into what it has. And I just reached out early enough. And first off, just early enough that I can get through to them. And also, as Jonathan was just alluding to, like, they just had this conversation about
Starting point is 00:09:37 turning this into a book. And so the timing there was pretty impeccable. So there was definitely an element of luck to it. but that's how it kind of all came about and how it started. Awesome. So could you quickly introduce us to the framework that you guys have applied to the concept of financial independence that you kind of lay out in the book? Yeah, I mean, if I can kind of just describe it in a couple of sentences,
Starting point is 00:09:58 I guess what I tell people is you have to kind of learn the roles to know what to do. But I think a big piece of that is first you have to unlearn a lot of roles that people kind of, and I'm kind of like people are watching this, like air quotes, like people know these roles like you retire. at age 65, that's not a rule. College is the right answer for everyone. That's not a rule. Your house should be X percentage of your income. That's not a rule. You finance your cars. That's not a rule. Yet people just follow these blindly because that's what they see everybody doing. So we really had to start with deconstructing that and creating a new mindset.
Starting point is 00:10:30 So the first section is really about that is just kind of realizing that most of the things that people just accept, if you just start to question things, you see that things fall apart pretty quickly and you don't have to follow any of these things and you can kind of choose your own path and do whatever you'd like. So maybe from all three of you guys, what are some of the things that you questioned that began to fall apart? Maybe when you began to discover financial independence or the concepts here, good on the rabbit hole. Yeah, this is pretty cool. So at least for two out of the three of us that are talking with you guys today, we chose the advanced medical degrees. And in my particular case, you know, I just thought the key to reach financial independence, really the key was
Starting point is 00:11:05 just to have a high-income, high-income and a study job at all cost. And I didn't really think about some of the other factors that go into that. So let's just play this out. So I decided to become a pharmacist, and I based that on what I look back, relatively small amounts of information. But I knew pharmacist, you know, did pretty well from a financial perspective. And then it looked like, at least at the time, that the industry was pretty healthy. It's a pretty good industry to be in. And so for me, that looked like four years of undergrad and four years of pharmacy school, getting a doctorate. And then I graduated with 100, $168,000 in student loan debt. And then I wanted to pay down my loans because this is the fiscally
Starting point is 00:11:42 responsible thing to do. And so I took four years to pay it off. It's a 12-year loop, really just getting back to broke, you know, in my very early 30s. And it's fine. You can very easily say, while this person now has an entry level six-figure salary and they have no debt, and that's a great position to be in. It really is. I mean, objectively, it's a good position to be in. But it's, in retrospect, with all the interviews we've done, it's barely optimal. I mean, a lot of people that we've met that have figured out these rules and understand some of the things we're talking about, they are effectively, they can be done by 30 or 30. Scott, you're going to be done by the time that I was getting back to broke. Probably going to keep going. I don't see you, there's no retire here. But in terms of becoming financially independent,
Starting point is 00:12:21 we know that that standard playbook is suboptimal with when you have more information. So I got a question on that. How did that make you feel when you started questioning these rules and realize that you were going to complete that loop to get back to zero? Yeah, you ever feel like just a hamster on a wheel? And at this point, I should also say that my job was no longer lighting me up. It just didn't make me happy anymore. Not because I was paying down my loans, but just because I didn't do enough research before I got into the industry. And the job that I got into just no longer fulfilled me at all, you know, my counterpart that's still deeply six figures in debt and has allowed lifestyle inflation to take over, they really feel stuck. I didn't feel stuck. I just was kind of irritated and I decided to find another ladder to put my wallet. against, you know, and I came up playing this different part of my story. And there's a lot of hope there for people that have made a choice and feel locked in that you could undo that. You can change your story entirely. But you don't have to. The sooner you get information, the sooner you find, you know, this idea and you can start asking different questions and you can create a different path for your future self. It's really possible. And it's amazing to me. I mean, you inspire me, Scott. Your
Starting point is 00:13:24 book set for life inspired me. You know, it's the book that I handed to my younger bro. We're talking about our book. But, I mean, you know, your story personally, you've done a lot of this stuff. It's pretty incredible. I appreciate it. But I think that that's a great point here is just like, when is that questioning of the rule, set of the rules of the game begin for people? And what I've kind of observed is that a lot of people seem to maybe be resistant to questioning some of these things that they've applied themselves to their for their entire lives. And that turning point, I think is a great way to kind of frame the conversation here because if you don't start, once you start questioning these things in a real way, like have I been approaching my entire way
Starting point is 00:14:01 I view money in my career the wrong way, which is a pretty existential question. You can't maybe make as much progress against this goal as you can once you've kind of begin going down that rabbit hole. Brad, do you have any experience that kind of showcases that? Yeah, that's a great question. It reminds me actually of Gretchen Rubin's four tendencies, right, with the questioner. I suspect that questioners are overrepresented in the five community. And just going back for me, it was questioning what does success look like. So maybe it's more of like a higher level. I can't point to one particular instance,
Starting point is 00:14:38 but I remember being like 22 or 23 and people around me and my accounting firm buying BMWs. And I had my old, this was before I had my... Where are you driving before Goldman? Oh, boy. I had a brown Mazda and that barely functioned. But it got me to my job. And I just thought, I don't know, I never got caught up in the material stuff, in the fancy gadgets or fancy clothes or the cars or things like that.
Starting point is 00:15:09 Somehow or another, and I wish that I could place where the message hit home. But the concept of net worth versus looking wealthy was something that was always on my mind. And I think about my brother, he graduated from Tufts University, which is a top, whatever, top 50 or better school. and he really didn't have a job after graduation. He had a psych degree and it's just whatever. It didn't come together for him right away. But he worked at like I forget it was a chain called the Ground Round Round, I think. He was a waiter and a bartender.
Starting point is 00:15:43 Nice. Oh, cool. And he saved 90 plus percent of his income because he lived at home. He didn't have very many expenses. And he had at that point, after a couple of years, he had tens of thousands of dollars in the bank. And I'm sure every single person who looked at him walked in there and said, oh, this is just some kid waiter. But yet, he was probably one of the wealthiest people in there, right? But it just makes you, it makes you question society and societal expectations of what is wealthy? What does it
Starting point is 00:16:15 really mean? Is it just looking wealthy or is it being wealthy? And I think I've always tended clearly towards the latter. And I mean, I can certainly tell you in my kind of big turnaround, but I mean, I think I naturally was somewhat of a person who questioned things from day one. So my wife and I both came from fairly modest backgrounds. And so we were just very anti-debt. We wanted to get out of debt. And so we started living off her salary and using everything I made when I was in grad school to try to get us out of debt. And then within my first couple of paychecks, we were debt-free. And it was working for us. So we just stuck with that. And we lived off her salary. And I don't quite know where we had the wisdom and the insight to do that because none of these, the five
Starting point is 00:16:55 ideas were out there then. But so for 10 years, we just lived off of her salary and banked mine. But the things I didn't question were, number one, I didn't really do a lot of looking into this because normal people like us, we can't retire at 30 or 40. That just doesn't happen. So I never really questioned it. And then you hear all the time investing is complicated and you have to have an advisor. And like there's so much incentive for the financial industry to make things complicated. So I never questioned that. And so I just made a mistake. after mistake, throwing just all this money, handing it to an advisor, never doing any due diligence, never asking a question of why are we doing the things that we're doing?
Starting point is 00:17:35 And it took me 10, 12 years, so I finally woke up. And that wake up moment for me was we didn't think we could have kids. And my wife, we found out she was pregnant. And it was like, wow. And on one hand, like, we kind of deep down, we always wanted kids. So it was we were happy. But then we were just kind of on this path where we were going to kind of, we call it like the dirt bag lifestyle.
Starting point is 00:17:54 We were both climbers and ski bums. And we were actually just getting prepared to just wing it. We had no financial plan. We had no financial knowledge. And we were going to move west. And then we found out she was pregnant. And I think both of us actually had a little bit of almost depression. And I'm a bit embarrassed to say it now with how much, I mean, my daughter is the joy of my life.
Starting point is 00:18:11 But so we just kind of slid for like six months. And then finally I did start questioning and saying, you know, I want to retire now even more than ever. I want to have this freedom even more than ever. And that's when I got into the whole fire movement. And that really made me start questioning. And it really is kind of transcended beyond finance. It made me question, why do I believe, almost everything I believe? And it's really kind of changed my life.
Starting point is 00:18:32 And that's why I'm so passionate about this. And that's why I wanted to write the book. So I didn't question anything. I mean, do you question that the sky is blue? It's blue. It's blue because that's what you're always told. And you don't question that the grass is green because that's grass is green. The end.
Starting point is 00:18:47 You work until you're 65. Retirement age is 65. You don't question that just like you don't question is the sky blue or is the grass green because that's just what it is. You know, water has no taste and milk is white. So when I never questioned it, my husband was having a terrible day at work, he questioned it. And he's like, oh, my God, this is just a math problem. And you read the 4% rule.
Starting point is 00:19:13 And you're like, well, that makes sense. It's not out of the ordinary to assume that you're going to get 8 to 10% return in the stock market. On average, not, I'm not guaranteeing. that. But, you know, it's not out of the ordinary to be able to do all these things. It's not out of the ordinary to grow your investments to a million dollars and then be able to live off of $40,000 if you can live off of $40,000 now. And, you know, once you start looking at it in a different way, it's so easy. But until it's explained to you, until it is introduced to you, if you are not a questioner, or until you go find it, if you are a questioner, the sky is blue, the grass is green, and you work
Starting point is 00:19:54 until you're 65. No, and I certainly agree with what Chris said about this kind of transcending personal finance. I've seen this in my own life with my health and fitness and what I'm putting into my body, what I'm eating. Like you're saying, Mindy, there are just universal truths, quote unquote, and we use that tongue and cheek here. But you see when you experiment on yourself and when you question what actually works in practice.
Starting point is 00:20:20 And it's neat to kind of go through life with that as the guiding light. of maybe trust but verify, right? Or just experiment. Have fun with it. And Scott, I'd love to hear from you, actually, if you don't mind. When did you first start questioning this? Yeah. And by the way, I'm just, I think that this is, this conversation is so great because this is, and like, I love that you started off the book with this concept of like, these are the questions, this is how you get going with this. Because I think that you can't start down the path toward financial freedom without having done what we just discussed in our own different ways here. Now, for me, me, it was I kind of was lucky to discover this right away after graduating college and starting my
Starting point is 00:20:59 first job. So I went to work for the worst company to work for in United States of America. They won an award for this in Business Insider or something like that. I looked it up after I heard this for the first time. Officially the worst company. But anyways, so, you know, I look around and I'm three months into the career and I see all these people working the same job. And they're all finance professionals. We're in the finance department. And I'm wondering, like, what's going on here? like this is like a choice and I know I'm going to be here for the next several years unless I
Starting point is 00:21:27 figure out some way to get around this or accelerate faster. So I actually start researching finance in order to be a better financial analyst. And in the course of those studies, I began discovering the concept of personal finance and Mr. Money Mustache, the mad scientist, a couple of these other podcasts and blogs. And that was really what opened my eyes to it where, hey, oh, if you could accumulate a certain amount of wealth, you can live forever on that. And to me, that was a 15, 20-year journey, which was a lot better than a 40-year journey. And then over time, as I dug farther and farther into it, I discovered real estate investing, discovered entrepreneurship, I discovered extreme frugality, you know, how to earn more income, those types of things, and was able to find
Starting point is 00:22:11 mathematical ways to increase my probability of achieving the goal faster and faster and faster. But it all starts, I think, with just that, you know, for me, it was that concept of the 4% rule that, hey, it's just a math problem. Once you solve it, you're good to go. And then it becomes just a math problem. That is at its heart. It gets me so excited about this, right? Because while, you know, get rich quick is usually a scheme that's baked behind some level of complexity that has you going ever farther into a funnel with an up sale waiting for you and to get the actual secret, it's just a math problem. Then we can focus on the different sides of the equation.
Starting point is 00:22:45 Well, let me ask you this, guys. So how do you frame the conversation to attract and get more people interested in this? How do we convert people who are not currently questioning it to begin going down that path so that they can move toward FI as well? I mean, I can just say what I did in the book and what attracted me to these guys, what I think they do really well, is most people don't care about money. Most people don't care about numbers. So I think you have to use stories. And I think stories will draw. all people in. And I think that's the key. And then having all these different stories, all these different examples, and then from that, being able to pull out principles that apply. So, like, for you, I know you used a house hack. And we think that's an incredibly powerful principle. And we've talked about that frequently in the book. But there's a limited segment of the population that are actually going to go do that. So then what are some other, so what's the key to that is housing is the biggest expense. And if you can totally eliminate it, that's a complete game changer. But if you're
Starting point is 00:23:44 not going to do that. What are the other levers you can pull to lower your housing costs? And there's a lot of them. You don't have to house hack. We kind of went through that with everything with car slash transportation, we'll say, with food, with taxes. And there's all these different things. You don't have to live in extreme lifestyle. And you don't have to do it exactly the same as you or I or Brad or Jonathan or Mindy did. But you do have to do something. You have to take action. And that's really what we kind of emphasize is taking other people's stories, making your own story, and then getting people to see that you have to take some action. otherwise things won't change.
Starting point is 00:24:14 You can have all the knowledge in the world, but if you don't take action, you're going to be stuck. Yeah, I agree with that. And I think we've certainly been talking about this being a math problem, and it clearly is, right? But for me, it starts as a psychology issue, right?
Starting point is 00:24:29 This is about mindset. It's about what do you want your life to look like? What are your goals? Can you get on the same page with your significant other if you have one? How do you want to spend your time? Right. So for me, whenever I'm looking to get someone into FI, it starts more with what are your goals and what do you want out of life?
Starting point is 00:24:52 How do you want to spend time with loved ones? These are the things that light us up. It's not, you know, many of us in this call might be math geeks, right? And we might get some fun out of it. But most people out there, that's not the way to their heart, which is ultimately in my estimation what drives this change. So I like to start with the motivation first. I love that this motivation and stories, and I think that those are a great ways to get through this.
Starting point is 00:25:18 And maybe we can kind of get into those as we kind of move through some of these principles. So one of the principles that we, I think all of us unanimously agree on that is central to the discussion around moving toward financial independence is the concept of spending less money and reducing the amount of your lifestyle cost, right? And that does two things for you. One, it allows you to accumulate capital faster. And two, it reduces the amount of passive income that you need to, to generate in order to sustain financial independence, right?
Starting point is 00:25:43 So what are some of the principles and maybe some of the key tactics that you guys think about when you're thinking about how to cut your expenses? I'll let Chris hop in here, but I wanted to just say, like, I think there's two steps in front of that. So one is, like, it'll be helpful just for our audience to think about this as an equation. I know we've covered it in the past, and I know you've covered on your show, but just as we kind of go through this framework, the equation, right, the simple math problem you're trying to solve what you earn minus what you spend is equal to this difference. Or we sometimes refer to that
Starting point is 00:26:15 as the gap. And you can work on, focus on any one of those. And right now we're talking about spend less. But if you're going to start on spend less, which I agree is typically the place to start. In order to do that, you have to even take a step back and you have to know how much your life cost. And so spend less is always tied to first knowing and starting, stepping on the scale after Christmas or whatever after the holidays, knowing how much your life actually cost. And then you can effect change because you can look for where you are disproportionately weighted. And usually if you're talking about maybe five or 10 years, 15 years of financial drift, or you're just not paying attention, it's paycheck to paycheck.
Starting point is 00:26:47 I can afford the payments. I got this. It's fine. It's all working. It's going to be painful to start real on that end. You have to start mapping it out. And you can use high-tech solutions for this or you can use low-tech solutions. So notepad or you can use different types of budgeting apps like Wineab or Mint or whatever.
Starting point is 00:27:03 You can come up with your own. Brad probably uses some form of Excel. that's, I don't know, all sorts of, there's lots of learning ways to do this, but universally, the principle here is if you have financial drift, as with anything, you've got to do some forensics and find out where your money's going. And kind of the way I think I approach it is, so we talked first about unlearning those rules that so many people, quote unquote, know, but there are actually rules that you have to learn. And I think the first one is just, we talk about the simple math, but math is, those are rules. And whether you like it or don't
Starting point is 00:27:30 like it, two plus two will equal four every time. So you have to learn basic math. And that's, that's all that savings rate equation is, is you spend less than your earn, whether you want to be frugal and approach it from what's your spending side, or if you want to approach it from the earning side, whatever you do to create that gap, you have to create it one way or the other, and it's just basic math at its core. So I don't think if you start there with most people, it's going to excite them, but once you get through those limiting beliefs and you get people started, you do have to understand the rules of math. And then that transcends. Again, that's a principle, like when you get into investing, fees matter, no matter what. And so through all these different things, the rules of
Starting point is 00:28:05 that doesn't excite people, but you do have to learn that. And then there's just basic laws. You have to learn the tax laws. I made so many mistakes because I never took time. I thought that was too complicated. And I just threw away tens of thousands of dollars year after year because I never learned the rules. When people sign up for credit cards,
Starting point is 00:28:23 people in this community will use travel credit rewards and get free trips around the world. But they're giving away that to us, but they still have the biggest buildings because they're making a lot of money on people paying interest on their credit cards because people don't learn the rules. A credit card is not a good or a bad thing. It's just a tool.
Starting point is 00:28:38 A certain investment's not a good or bad thing. But so you have to learn the rules. And I think that transcends throughout everything, every section of the book. So that's kind of how I broke it down. And then we got into individual things and we can dive into any of those that you want to. But that's kind of how I approach it from a high level looking at it. Got it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:53 So thank you guys for that clarification. I guess what I'm kind of more wondering there is, I love this. You have a framework that you're approaching this with, hey, these are the rules of the game and all that. maybe you can kind of elaborate on that and kind of give us an idea of why you chose to focus on the spend less part of the deal first or second in the book right after the kind of question everything and get started. Was that kind of central to your argument there in the work? Yeah, for me, and I'll certainly let Chris, the actual author of the book, talk through this, but for me, it's about accumulating early wins, right? And having those kind of snowball. So I think while earn
Starting point is 00:29:33 an essential part of this equation, that is not something you can set into place tomorrow. Whereas with spend less, you can make changes and see, oh, wow, this isn't deprivation, right? I think that's what so many people get worried about when it comes to, oh, I'm going on this financial diet, right? And the life's going to be miserable. I don't look at it that way at all. I personally have set up a framework of a life that just simply doesn't cost that much. And when I do that, then I can spend in other ways and spend on things that I love spending
Starting point is 00:30:11 money on. You know, Scott, you and I have talked about CrossFit. That's not cheap, but I have no issue spending on that. My wife and I enjoy wine and craft beer. I have no issue spending on that either. So it's not about depriving yourself. It's not about pinching every penny. it's about just finding something that works for you.
Starting point is 00:30:30 But rest assured, you need to make changes, right? If you have no savings or no savings rate or a negative savings rate, clearly you're never going to get to financial independence. So you have to make changes. And there are things that you can do in the short term, like just simply go out to dinner fewer times that week. And you can say, oh, wow, maybe I can make a game of this. Maybe we can get a cheap bottle of wine and cook at home.
Starting point is 00:30:56 and have a great conversation, which is what we're actually looking to get from that $100 dinner out. We're not looking for the fancy food. We're looking for a conversation. So let's make a happy hour outside and then eat dinner out on the back porch or something like that and make it something fun.
Starting point is 00:31:12 So for me, it's about how quickly can I implement this and how quickly can I see that there's no negative to this? It's only positive. I can get all that I want out of these experiences and save money in the meantime. Yeah, Liz from Frugal Woods has a really great episode. She was on our episode 10. She has taken her spending and made it into a game.
Starting point is 00:31:38 She decided, of course, as everybody does, oh, I discovered this, I'm going to cut out everything. And she's like, wow, that kind of sucks to not have. Like, I really want seltzer water. And she went from taking a 99 cent, seltzer water, two-liter bottle. And now it's like 0.01 cents a serving because she makes it at home with her little soda stream.
Starting point is 00:31:58 But instead of getting the gas from the soda stream, she goes to the welding supply store and buys the big thing of gas. And she wanted that in her life, but she didn't need to keep spending that much for it. How can I game this? How can I bring this cost down? She cut out her yoga and discovered that she really missed it.
Starting point is 00:32:16 So she looked for ways to continue to have it in her life and just not pay as much for it. She ended up working the front desk for like a half an hour before or after the class and then got it for free. So just because you like something doesn't mean you have to give it up. Just because you like something expensive doesn't mean you have to give it up. You can find ways to make it cost much less and still keep it in your life.
Starting point is 00:32:39 But you'll find other things that you cut out. You don't miss it all. Yeah. In the recent playing with fire documentary, J.D. had this amazing quote. And he was basically saying, and we use this term internally a lot, you know, what is it in this life that you value? And in this quote then about to reference, J.D.
Starting point is 00:32:53 basically says, you know, find the things. things that you value and spend lavishly on those, right? But the things that you don't value, cut them ruthlessly. And it allows you to put your attention, spend more of your time and your attention on the things that really do mean something to you. And the problem is when you can afford the payments on everything, you value nothing. You just don't. It's just that we can have it all. So you're not sacrificing to get anything in particular. So it just doesn't have the same weight. If you can kind of go through this process of knowing how much your life costs, cutting things almost to the point of deprivation, you can always add it back.
Starting point is 00:33:25 But it's really hard to know whether or not you really care about something until you like test the waters a little bit and push the boundaries. And so it's really cool when you let something go and you realize that, wow, I miss that. Then bring it back. Just bring it back. It's no problem. It's not forever. You're finding out what really adds value to your life. And in the process, you may save a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:33:45 And just to jump back to Scott's original question, why did we kind of put spend less first than earn more than invest better? when I started writing, so my story was that we had a big portfolio already. We had a huge savings rate. We had our house paid off when I discovered the whole FI thing. And so I was like, I'm going to change the world. I'm going to put this out there and everybody's going to just change everything. And I really quickly realized that I was kind of a unicorn. Like there aren't very many 35-year-olds who have a six-figure portfolio where this stuff even matters what a 1% investing fee does. Most people aren't saving anything. And most people don't have that gap between their, whatever they make, no matter how much they make. Like I worked in the medical profession. I have a lot
Starting point is 00:34:26 of doctor friends and people think doctors are rich, but most doctors just spend up to their income. And so you have to start where people are. And so like Brad said, the first thing you can do for almost everybody is you can find something to cut out and you can start getting wins. And you need that. You need to develop momentum. So I think that's the place to start. Earning more is a great concept. I'm not a naturally frugal person and I encourage people to look to earn more. But it's hard to do that overnight. It takes time. And the principles we talk about in the book, you can't just enact them. It's not a get rich quick scheme. It's principles that over a year, over five years, over 10 years, you're going to earn more because you're adding value to people and we teach how to do
Starting point is 00:35:04 that. But it's not going to happen overnight. And then until you have investable assets, the investing section is really pretty worthless. And I think most people think you get rich by investing. And so we kind of made a point of putting it at the end. And until you have something to invest, it really, not to say you shouldn't start learning about it early, so you can not make the mistakes like I made, but people just get the horse before the card, I think a lot of times. Yeah, if I could actually send this back to you, I'd love your thoughts on this just because your story is the perfect case for this. Like, you could not have increased your income overnight, but what mindset, what questions, what skill sets did you develop to get where you are today that
Starting point is 00:35:41 allowed the earn more of the equation to be the almost inevitable? Yeah, so I love it. And by the way, like I just totally agree with the premise. of that for many people, maybe most who go and want to achieve fire, that cutting your expenses is the best way to start. Because typically, to your point, Chris, that you don't have money to invest, getting a high return on nothing is not a valuable exercise, right? And then you can enact it immediately, right? You can decide what you actually value and focus on that. And then, Jonathan, to your point, your question you just asked here, I see a huge correlation between income generation potential and savings rate. And this is something that I don't think is
Starting point is 00:36:18 talked about a lot. But when I left my job earning $48,000 a year to join a startup with fewer benefits and no guarantees, that was me pursuing an opportunity to somebody who's spending all of their income and has no savings, that's an unacceptable risk. And that difference, I think, is highly correlated, in my mind, at least. And this is where I have a controversial opinion about at the time I didn't contribute to retirement accounts because I needed that liquidity. I needed that concept, and you did that access, that financial runway in order to pursue the greater income opportunity and the greater career potential. So I think that's why I like to go with the Erdmore as a kind of secondary focus. Did that answer your question, Jonathan? No, it absolutely did.
Starting point is 00:37:03 And that's the heart of it. When you have bandwidth in your life, whether it be financial or time, not everything, you de-risk your life. You de-risk your life. You're able to take what other people would view is incredible risk, intolerable risk and turn it into, as you pointed out, opportunity. And If you can open yourself up to enough opportunity, the quote unquote luck factor will strike. It's just, it's inevitable. And I've seen that and people that have worked with us who've kind of picked up opportunities over time, they were positioned very well because, frankly, they didn't need us. And this is just very selfishly inside.
Starting point is 00:37:38 But I see that in particular. I'm talking about one individual. His name's William, he modeled some of his choices after what he heard you did when you shared your story on our show. He's like, if that works for Scott, I can do something similar. And he modeled a lot of the decisions he made with opportunities that he positions himself for because of that. If you can open yourself up to that framework, that mindset,
Starting point is 00:37:57 control what you can control in the short term, which is your spending, right? And then as a result of that, your savings rate. And then you reclaim bandwidth in your life. And then you start asking better questions, increasing your zone of awareness, being ready for quote unquote opportunity or maybe some people call it luck to strike. It's like the external world. but you know that you've created a structure for your life that acts as a forcing function for these opportunities. Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their
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Starting point is 00:41:46 We'd love to talk. Business. Chris, I love how we just kind of have transitioned here so seamlessly to the income generation part here. What are some of the things that you think about when you're putting together your values, principles, tactics, tricks, whatever, when you're approaching that question of how do I generate more income downstream? Yeah. So, I mean, I think the overriding principle that I started that whole section of the book with is you just have to add value to other people. I think a lot of times we start thinking about how can I make more, how can I get more for myself?
Starting point is 00:42:22 And when, again, it's kind of like a lot of this stuff with five, just changing the whole mindset and flipping everything on its head. But when you think about how can I add value to other people, that value is going to come back to you because they're going to appreciate it. And it may not be overnight. And again, this is kind of going back to getting quick wins with the spending less. You may not see this as quickly, but if you apply these principles, they almost invariably, over time, eventually they're going to pay off because you're looking at other people's needs first and serving them. And then the other thing is you're able to do that because you have de-risked your life. If you need every last penny to cover your mortgage and make your car payment and pay your life insurance and all these things that most people have in need, it's hard to necessarily do that. And it can kind of sound like almost like pie in the sky thinking.
Starting point is 00:43:06 But when you've cut your core costs, and if you don't need that next paycheck and you can play the long game instead of having to play the short game and push everything and force things, I think that's a really big key. So I think all of this ties together. You can't necessarily just take one thing in isolation. But when you view this whole FI mindset as a overall framework, it just works. And Scott, something you said before reminded me, which is increasing the odds of success. And I'm not sure if you got this specifically from Annie Duke and her. book Thinking and Betts, but I know you and I have both read and thoroughly enjoyed that book. And that's kind of how I think about this is on the Earnmore side, at least for me,
Starting point is 00:43:45 it's building skills and relationships. And I think if I do those things, that it's going to increase my long-term chances of success. I can't point to each individual skill or each individual relationship as, wow, that led directly to this. But I can tell you over the last, I guess, probably 10 years since I first started my first failed, ultimately failed online business, it has led me to the point where now I'm the co-host of Choose FI, and it's making a difference in people's lives. And I could not have envisioned that when I started a website called Soccer Tools.com. Okay.
Starting point is 00:44:33 That was it. I was literally copying, in essence, or creating my own version of English Premier League soccer tables, right? The ultimate final results. That was what I was literally doing. I was learning how to do it in HTML. That was 10 years ago, probably almost to the day. And here I am.
Starting point is 00:44:53 So I can't chart that path for you, but I can tell you that every step and everything I learned in every relationship I built helped me get here. Love it. You know, one of the themes I'm picking up here is, again, there's step-by-step guides and clear math that goes into cutting your expenses. When it comes to trying to earn more money, there's only probability. It's a probability game, and you don't know what that's going to look like downstream, right?
Starting point is 00:45:17 How do you guys think about philosophically the idea of certainty versus potential when it comes to this. Like, for example, is do you perceive higher income opportunities to be less certain than maybe that kind of lower base salary? Or is that a tradeoff that people are going to have to consider for themselves? Or is that just in my head? I think, like, one of the things we talked about in the book, so now we're jumping back to the very first chapter, but we talk about, instead of looking at FI as like this dichotomy you are or you aren't, you're working or you're retired, as you progress along, I think that mindset changes. So I am not a risk taker.
Starting point is 00:45:56 Like I quote unquote retired at 41 and I rock climb and I ski and I do all this stuff. And I think people hear that and then maybe think that, well, this guy's a little bit crazy and he takes risks. But I actually, I think I'm extremely conservative and I'm extremely driven by fear sometimes to a fault. And so whatever I and progressing along this has allowed me to do is, yeah, I kind of played it safe. and I had a career as a physical therapist where I can make a decent income. We had a high savings. And I got to this point where, M-I-F-I, can I retire?
Starting point is 00:46:26 If I had to follow the drawdown and live that lifestyle, I would have been probably scared. But I knew I had enough that I can start living into the life I wanted to and taking more chances. So like with this book, for example, I've gone two years and I basically had no income and I'm perfectly fine. And it allowed me to kind of develop this book, work with these guys to find a bigger platform,
Starting point is 00:46:46 and take all these things that de-risk things, because there's really no downside. If we don't sell a book, it really doesn't affect me at all, but we have tremendous upside. And so that's kind of the way I look at risk. And I think FI allows me to pursue things that have a lot of upside with really no risk to myself. So that's, I think, a key distinction.
Starting point is 00:47:06 Would you call that playing to win? Yeah, yeah. I think that's a good way to state it. I love this. So, you know, I think obviously the two parts of this are earn more, spend less, increase that month, after tax or pre-tax or however you, just the general rate of wealth accumulation that you're building. Once you get past a certain point, though, the investment, the returns that you generate on that
Starting point is 00:47:27 wealth accumulation begin to matter more and more and are increasingly important in this journey to financial independence. So how do you guys approach the topic of investing in terms of, from a philosophical standpoint? Yeah, this is one of those areas where our communities kind of collide, and there's a lot of overlap, obviously, but there might be some natural. biases on those sides. I think the heart of it on both sides is to keep it simple. You should be able to understand it. That's the clear place that were exactly in the same place. And for some people, simple looks like real estate. You know, in your case, you're like, I don't want to do 401 case. I don't want to invest. And you had this plan to take this capital, invest it and crush it.
Starting point is 00:48:05 You had a clear plan. It was simple. You could explain it and made sense. You know, on my end, simple looks like, I don't want anything to do with real estate right now. I want to keep it very simple, focus on a high savings rate, pay off my debt, and focus on broad-based, low-cost index funds, and go that for a while. I think both of those are fine if you're clear on your vision. You don't necessarily have to choose, but I think the heart there is you keep it simple. People try to sell complexity. They really do. They try to use complexity as well to hide how much they're carving away from you, right? Look over here, you know? And I think if you can have a playbook, it should absolutely make sense you should be able to explain it. You should be able to understand it.
Starting point is 00:48:42 And that's really at the core. And so for me, when I heard J.L. Collins, the stock series, the simple path to wealth, for the first time investing was distilled down into something, I was like, that makes sense. When I decide to invest in a low-cost, broad-based index fund, I'm not picking the winners and the losers. I'm just trying to keep up with the market. When the market goes down, I'm going to go down with it. And I'm going to invest the whole time. And when the market goes back up, I'm a dollar-cost that average into the sunset.
Starting point is 00:49:08 It's going to be great. And so what that allows me to do is it removes some. of fear that I think is also used against you. And you see that all the time with clickbait articles that tell you, they're selling fear and pessimism. They're monetizing your assurance of your own plan. And so I think at its heart, and I think Chris does a wonderful job taking, didn't say, you don't just have to do broad-based, low-cost index funds that Jonathan and Brad and a lot
Starting point is 00:49:34 of the five community are fans of. But here is like a simple version that will work for you. And again, find those principles. If you look at house hacking, what you did. I mean, Scott, let's talk about your story, man. You look and you found a way to cut your housing cost to zero. In fact, live for profit. Simultaneous, you paired that house near your work so you didn't need to drive.
Starting point is 00:49:53 And somehow that also affected your grocery budget. I forget the parallel there. But basically, you crushed your groceries, your transportation, your housing. That's like 50% plus of most people's budgets. So in your early 20s, when you weren't making a whole lot, when most people were just paycheck to paycheck, you automatically, by default, it carved out a 50% savings rate. are we going to say, oh, no, you didn't do it the right way.
Starting point is 00:50:14 That should have been in your 401K. No, you had a plan and you crushed it and you followed it through it, but you also took action. You took action because it's simple, and you could explain it to yourself and explain it to your friends and family. They may not have understood right away, but I think they get it now. And kind of tying it back to that, you know, you have to understand basic math.
Starting point is 00:50:29 So kind of the way I framed it in the book is we took it back to that and Mr. Money Mustache chart with the incredibly simple math. And for most people, they're going to, again, they're going to kind of go to the advisor or go to their 401k, plan because that's quote unquote what you do. And you only have one lever to pull. You either up your risk by taking on more stocks or if you, they say, well, if you don't can't tolerate risk, maybe you should put more bonds in your portfolio. And that's literally the only lever. And first off, you might change your returns by 1% or so a year. And over time, yeah,
Starting point is 00:50:59 that's great. But if you're not going to tolerate risk, like so if your portfolio goes down 30% instead of 50%, you're still going to panic. And if some people were just not meant to invest in the stock market. And that's fine. And some people, they just don't make enough money, particularly if you live in a high cost living area, and you just can't create enough gap to get to your goals. So you need to have different investment paths. So again, it does come back to math and choosing an investment strategy that, A, matches your personal goals. And then, too, your personality, are you willing to put in the work to do real estate? Do you have the temperament to sit through big drawdowns if you're a stock market investor? You have to know yourself and you have to know the math and then match the investment
Starting point is 00:51:38 strategy for you with what's going to get you where you want to go. And that doesn't mean you have to choose only one, but probably better to start with one. And then you can always branch out too. Possibly the best explanation that I have heard of this is David Stein was on our show, episode 86, a couple of weeks ago. And he said, look, if you cannot explain in detail what you are investing in, you have absolutely no business investing in that. And I take that to heart with cryptocurrency. I can't explain it. I don't have any interest in it. I should absolutely not be investing in it. And I'm currently invested zero percent. See, I disagree with you, Mindy. I understand the cryptocurrency perfectly. And that's why
Starting point is 00:52:16 nothing in crypto currency. Brad pretends like he doesn't understand. I just don't understand it. Just explain it to me again. No, I think there's a lot too that many about understanding, right? So I can vividly remember an insurance agent coming to my house and trying to hawk, I think it was variable, universal life, V-U-L policy. And this guy had no idea what he was talking about. And I was just like gleefully asking questions. Because, I mean, I wasn't necessarily being-
Starting point is 00:52:52 My favorite thing in this world is to watch Brad interact with it with glee. It lights me. I wasn't necessarily being a jerk, though. I mean, there was certainly part of that. But like, part of it was also, all right, there has to be some essence of, I don't know, simplicity or truth in anything. And if we can get to that and I can understand it and understand why this makes sense for me, then great. I'm going to look into it. But we couldn't get to that point.
Starting point is 00:53:18 Right. So I'm fairly confident that I made the right move walking away from that. In fact, I'm 100% confident, obviously. I was going to say, I have no idea what it is and I'm 100% confident to make the right move. But, you know, for me, my bias is long term. So, you know, like everybody's been saying here, you have to know yourself, you have to know your plans, you have to know your strategy. For me, it's long term. So when I was introduced to index funds and the power thereof by Jim Collins, as Jonathan mentioned, that just seemed like a fundamental truth to me. And if I'm going to invest in the stock market over a 50 plus year period, I think my highest probability of success is through index funds. So I sleep very well at night, invested in index funds.
Starting point is 00:54:05 And I understand that over a short period of time, there's a theoretical chance that I could do better, investing in individual stocks or trying to pick a mutual fund that might outperform. But I'm fairly confident over a 50-plus year period that my plan works for me and is going to give me a very high probability of success. So, again, is how I approach it mentally. And I think at the end of the day, if you can sleep soundly with your plan, then it's the right plan for you.
Starting point is 00:54:33 How do I go about doing the research or putting together that philosophical foundation to lay a plan, whether it's index funds, real estate? What's your kind of advice in thinking through that? Wow. I mean, I think part of it is making sure that you can explain it to somebody else, you know, and it's absorbing the information until you feel very comfortable with it. I think most of us look for people that have done this to some degree, and that provides some feedback loops, some confidence that comes with that.
Starting point is 00:55:02 I would say in terms of like the investment strategy does this work, I think that J.L. Collins wrote that stock series for his daughter and had zero interest in investing whatsoever. And so he created as one an unassailable yet simple philosophical discussion on why he believed this was the best path for someone that isn't interested and wants to keep it simple. I've talked to his daughter once or twice, and it feels like it didn't work right away. She wouldn't interact with them. Had no interest. And over time, especially as she's seen many, many other people look at this as a source, it's grown on her.
Starting point is 00:55:39 And now they're able to talk about this. And it's really like a wonderful relationship they have. And it's something she still isn't super interested in it. But she trusts that it works, right? I think it takes a couple touch points. I think have you ever noticed, Scott, as far as you've come with bigger pockets, It's like to some varying degree, you can go back and you can tell your friends and your family about this concept of personal finance and financial independence and financial freedom.
Starting point is 00:56:02 And you just can't get them to listen. Like they just don't care. And you're like, don't you realize what's going on is how amazing this is and how awesome this is. And they don't buy in right away. But then maybe they hear other touch points and other people and maybe they listen to a podcast or a radio show and just it starts coming at them from other directions. And over time, if you can go from, you only live once, right?
Starting point is 00:56:21 which is kind of this bumper sticker to you're born to do more than pay bills and die, which is financial independence, then it starts to click and it starts to shine through. And what I love that Brad does such a great job highlighting is understanding people's motivations and incentives. What is it that they get excited about? And that takes a relationship and it takes some time. But I think if the message is simple and at its core, you know it's fundamentally right, then it spreads.
Starting point is 00:56:50 I mean, and that's what we've seen with this community. I think you've been able to kind of, over time, through different messengers and the diversity of experience, you've been able to say, what is the pattern? And you kind of shed the stuff that's just extra. It's just dead weight that's holding on and holding the message back and really get to something that has the ability to change lives. And that's why I get excited that people are talking about this
Starting point is 00:57:11 with the intensity that they are. It's an important conversation. And I think it is halfway, a philosophical one. Yeah, and for me, it comes back to, understanding information sources. So you can take in every piece of information, but you have to be able to discern what is true or closer to truth and what is just junk, right? And a lot of people are trying to make money off of you, right? There's a financial incentive, there's some motivation that they have. So for me, I'm looking for information sources that are as unbiased as
Starting point is 00:57:48 possible, right? Everybody has some level of bias, but I'm looking for people that I think are aligned with me and are not trying to enrich themselves off of me. So that's kind of my general framework for approaching information and why we've mentioned Jim Collins multiple times. He's provided this wealth of information and he's looking to get nothing off of me. He was trying to educate his daughter. So that makes sense to me, right? And, I think a lot of things and a lot of gurus and there's some secret behind this that you have to pay the $6,000 upsell for. That doesn't inform my life and my life philosophy, right? It just, it can't.
Starting point is 00:58:34 So that's kind of, I think hopefully Scott, this is getting to the heart of your question is like how I approach information. Again, it goes back to what I said probably a half hour ago, which is just in my own life, I look for patterns. I look for information that seems true based on multiple sources of information that I've taken in. I try to experiment low level where it's not going to necessarily be a huge detriment to me. And that's both financially and health-wise. So I think that's kind of the general framework, at least with which I approach it. And obviously, I can't tell you or Mindy or every listener out there like, these are the sources. Those are the sources for me.
Starting point is 00:59:15 but I think if you look at incentives and motivation, I think it's hard to go wrong with that as an initial for a. Yeah, I think the only thing I could add to that is just starting with the end in mind. So does this even make sense? Is this a path worth going down for me? And then I totally agree with what Brad just said, just to kind of reiterate a couple key things. But like I also, J.L. Collins was my intro to understanding how to invest.
Starting point is 00:59:41 But I think some people think you can read it. And because J.L. Collins said it's the truth. And for me, my initial thing was, well, first off, who's J.L. Collins? Like, anybody can write anything on the internet. So he talked a lot about Vanguard. So I wanted to go right to the horse's mouth. I started reading John Bogle's books. And then I got into the Bogle heads.
Starting point is 00:59:58 And there's a lot of different theory within that. And I don't think any of us know what is going to be the optimal portfolio or the optimal path until you are 40 years down looking back. But you can go in knowing why you're doing it. And that's going to make you stay the course, which is very important. and not jump from thing to thing chasing the next hot trend or the next hot idea. If you have the principles and the foundation, I think that's the key as far as investing goes. Yeah, I think it is a surefire way to guarantee massive losses by chasing the next surefire thing,
Starting point is 01:00:29 the next hot stock tip. Because the people who are telling you that are either trying to dump their own stock and running up the price so they can drop it, or they just don't know what they're talking about. And I think it's a lot more of the latter than the former. there's just no shortage of bad information out there. I got a hot stock tip just a couple of weeks ago, and it turns out to not be so hot. Spoiler-related.
Starting point is 01:00:52 Facebook ads were running for cannabis and crypto in December of this past year. I mean, that's the sort of pattern that you see. And when you see it everywhere to the point where it's noise where you can't, you know, you know something's coming, it's terrifying. And so what if you can just ignore the noise and focus on a simple path? It's very encouraging and allows you to stay the course of confidence. Yeah, here's a pro tip. Don't get your stock tips from Facebook.
Starting point is 01:01:16 Pro tip. Yeah, when the cryptocurrency was like running up and Bitcoin was at 20,000 or whatever it was, I watched in my, I'm in a lot of these different financial Facebook groups and I'm just scrolling through Facebook. It's like, let me teach you all about Bitcoin. I know you don't know anything about Bitcoin because I've been following you for years. Like this person would say, I've got a course on it. And here's my post. And it's like, no.
Starting point is 01:01:42 And then as soon as that goes away, then you see all these other things. Oh, look at what I've done. I bought Amazon. Wow. How did you make money on Amazon? What a surprising stock tip. You know, there's just some things that you're like, I know you don't know what you're talking about. Facebook is not a place to get stock tips.
Starting point is 01:01:58 You know, I was talking to someone recently and they were telling me, in this case, they were referring to their parents. But I think this is one real thing. The great thing is if you find this young, you have time. The great thing is if you find this when you're a little bit older, you also have time. And I think one thing is you're finding this in your later 40s, you're like, oh, it's something great if I found out my 20s, but now I need to do better than average. Now I got to get better than market returns. Now I need that hot tip. I've got to do,
Starting point is 01:02:22 I've got to make up for the last whatever. And that's when you start thinking like that, that's really when you can take advantage of because somebody can play off that. And they can tell you, here's how to get a 720% return. Here's how you can double your money overnight. Here's how you can use a highly leveraged deal to crush this thing. As soon as those start, you start hearing that, I'm going to crush this game because I've got a secret tip. And they're probably selling you that secret tip. You're going to get played.
Starting point is 01:02:47 The great thing is, well, get rich quick. You usually ends up with you bitter and bitter in your money in someone else's pocket. Again, it's just a math problem. If you can keep it simple, if you can understand it, if you can explain it, this is going to end out really well. And your 10-year future selfist can be giving you a standing applause. That's what you want. and we make small, simple choices that lead us to a better place.
Starting point is 01:03:07 Don't get sucked up on this FOMO where you have to do this last-minute thing because of this incredible return opportunity. I think the key that I'm picking up here is this long-term focus that you fundamentally understand. And I can say that this is what I try to apply in my own approach to investing and basically all the other components of wealth generation we got here. Like long-term, how do I keep my expenses really low? How do I make choices that keep low? long term, how do I increase my probability of greater and greater income generation?
Starting point is 01:03:36 Long term, how do I make sure that I'm going to earn a solid long-term average return, right? And stocks are a great way to do that. Index funds you know, or not you know, but I presume that I'm going to get that close to the 10% compound annual growth rate that the S&P 500 is produced over the last 100 years. You know, if you will disagree with, we can get into arguments about that number all day long, but just that presumption of like, what is the correct long-term decision here? And then what's amazing has been, as I've applied that thinking, the short-term wins seem to be piling up as I'm applying that long-term philosophy there. That's great. Just because you make actions now, you don't just see the results when you're 65.
Starting point is 01:04:15 You have the 65-year-old mindset, right? But you get those wins all along the way. But they don't change your investing decisions. You set your course. You know, it's great to point that out. All right. So I'm spending a lot less money. I'm earning a lot more money. And I'm investing according to a proven long-term philosophy that I understand completely. What happens then? What's the final step here with all this? I think this is something that Chris struggle with a lot and he's still struggling with to some degree of this book in some way it was a way to kind of highlight that. I think at its core, the thing that we've all kind of latched on to and our community seems increasingly to embrace that this is not what are you running from? This is about what are you running to? What does it look like to design your future? And I think for many of us, that doesn't look like retirement necessarily,
Starting point is 01:04:57 although that may be, you know, the initial question that's certain of us in this room, you know, have looked up at one point or another, but it does look like crafting a future that you can get excited about. And so, Chris, I think of the ones at this little powwow here, you're the only one that is technically, quote unquote, retired, right? Yeah, and I think I was all in on that idea that retirement was the goal when I was all about doing that. And even now, one of the blogs that really influence me, and this is my now home on the internet, but it's called Can I Retire Yet? And I literally started with the question being that simple. Like, I cannot wait to escape this kind of life that I'm living. I wanted something different. And we talked about we were just going to kind of live
Starting point is 01:05:37 this kind of outdoor dirtbag ski bomb lifestyle. And then once we found out, we had my daughter, we became much more serious about understanding the technical aspects, but it was still about escape. And it was about retirement at that point in a traditional sense. And like now on the, on the blog on our header, because of my blogging partner, he started this site and he had retired by 50. So we just added me up there and put retired by 41. And people just really get bent out of shape if you say you're retired and you're doing anything or like I'm a stay-at-home dad or I'm a writer or I'm anything but retired. And people get really bent out of shape.
Starting point is 01:06:08 And I mean, as I look at it as I step back, when my original goals for doing this, I wanted to be involved with my daughter. That was probably my primary goal when we got serious. I mean, we spend so much time together. We go to every school event. We ski with her. We ride bikes. We do all this stuff.
Starting point is 01:06:23 I wanted to have time for myself. I see so many parents that they choose between being a good parent and giving up yourself or being selfish and kind of not being the greatest parent. I'm able to get out and do these things, seek adventure, do the stuff I want to do. And at the same time, I can write a book and I can contribute on my blog and I can do these other things that have impact. And so if that's not really retired, yeah, then guilty. But yeah, I mean, people just really struggle with that.
Starting point is 01:06:48 And they'll give you a lot of pushback because people have this vision of retirement. And again, that's one of those things that there is no role of what retirement. retirement is, but certainly people have pretty strong opinions and feelings about it. I always envisioned it as a set of incredibly risky hobbies like you. Yeah, I guess I'm a little bit abnormal there. You won't seem on the golf course very often. Same. So I like that you said this, Jonathan.
Starting point is 01:07:17 It isn't about the retire early part. I have had jobs that I absolutely hated, and I don't have that anymore. I can't imagine quitting right now because I do have children, but they're in school. And I said this a lot. They're in school 35 hours a week for 40 weeks a year. I work almost those exact same numbers. So it's not like I'm giving up time to be with them and I get to do this. I mean, this is not a hard job. This is a fun job. And I actually feel guilty. I say this frequently and it's not just a sound bite. I feel guilty sometimes when the girls are downstairs at the kitchen table fighting with each other and I'm getting ready to go to work and I'm excited to get to work
Starting point is 01:08:01 because I love what I do. I feel guilty as I'm walking out the door. Bye, sweetheart. Have fun. Wrangling the fighting girls. I'm going to go, you know, talk about real estate, which is my favorite thing. So I can't imagine quitting. And anybody who thinks that I am any less financially independent because I have a job, I don't care what they think. I love you, sorry, Mindy. And can you ever imagine working in a job that you didn't like at this point? Like with your ability to do anything or not do anything, can you imagine being an job? Is there any possibility that you would ever be in a job that you didn't enjoy at this point?
Starting point is 01:08:33 No, because if it stops being fun, I'm going to stop being there. So there is, like, the amazing thing is with financial independence, there is no downside to having more options in your life. That's the entire premise for this. None, you can like your job and still pursue financial independence. My sister is a teacher and she loved her job. And then some things changed and she's like, wow, now I understand what you're talking about. She doesn't have the option of leaving her job because she isn't financially independent. I mean, she's a teacher. Come on.
Starting point is 01:09:05 Teachers can be financially independent, right? You're right. No, teachers can be financially independent, but we pay them so little and I think they deserve a million dollars salaries. Anyway, but yet she never planned for retirement because she loved her job so much. that's the best time to plan for early retirement. Because when you love your job, you can envision doing it. And financial independence isn't this desperate slog that you're trying to get to at any cost.
Starting point is 01:09:30 But when you hate your job, you're like, oh, my God, how can I get out? How can I get out? And it's kind of all consuming. Yeah. I think Scott touched before on playing to win. And my wife has a situation very similar to kind of the decision you made when you went to bigger pockets. But so her company that she works for now, they reached out to her. So, like, first off, when I tell people her working conditions, I think a lot of times, people don't even believe me.
Starting point is 01:09:51 But they reached out to her. She didn't reach out to them. So they said, where do you find this job? Well, you don't. They found her. And then it was kind of risky. She was the seventh employee going there. So if we needed the income and we knew that we needed her to have a job that was going to succeed,
Starting point is 01:10:04 she probably wouldn't have taken it. So we would have stopped right there. But then it allows her to work remotely. So our company is out of Northern Virginia. We live in Utah. So that was the next step. It gave us location independence. So it was like, well, maybe this is worth taking the risk.
Starting point is 01:10:16 And then it was like, well, they wanted her to work full time. But we said, you know, that's the non-starter. She was already working part-time. This was after we had our daughter. So we said, well, what if we work 30 hours a week? And they said, well, we want full-time. She said, well, I don't think I'll do it. And they said, well, okay, we'll give you 30 hours a week.
Starting point is 01:10:31 And then we still couldn't solve the health care problem. So we said, if we work 30 hours a week, can we get health care? And they said, yeah, I think we could swing that. So, I mean, when you have this ability to play to win, you can kind of create working conditions so good that why would you retire? And that's kind of where we're at now. So, yeah, I mean, there's just so much. And again, this stuff, it all builds on each other.
Starting point is 01:10:51 other and you're not going to see this immediately and you really have to kind of play that long game. But if you do things for the right reason for long enough, these things do happen. And her exact situation is that replicable? Absolutely not. It's a tiny company and 10 people, 20 people in the world work there now. But can you find something similar if you're willing to play that long game? I think it is very replicable for a lot of people. Well, this goes to the fact that you get a lot of the benefits of financial independence long
Starting point is 01:11:16 before you reach it. That control is continually coming to your side of the equation, to your side of the and just a couple examples just with people that we've met in the last couple days that have been listening to our show, one of them said. Well, actually, here's a very recent example. I'd ask Brad, what's something that you think you can't do? Just anything. Something you can do. I can't travel with my kids because they're in school.
Starting point is 01:11:37 What would it look like to be able to flip the script on that and just be able to do it? What were the questions that you would need to answer? And he kind of went through a list of things that he would have to research in order to be able to pull that off. Someone in our audience listened to that. And for them, it was like, how do I spend more time with my kids? So I'm working full-time. You know, it's her and her husband both work. The kids are in after-school daycare.
Starting point is 01:11:56 And, like, I don't, you know, I have to pay for the after-school daycare. Maybe if I could just work remote or reduce my hour or something like that. And they realize the worst the boss could say is just no, right? The boss could just say no, in which case they can come up with a plan. They have other options. They could look to do something else. But like, they want this. This is now a priority.
Starting point is 01:12:15 So she went to the boss with that mindset in mind. I have the control. I don't need this job. I could replace it with something else. We're fine. we're in great shape. We live well below our means and we have a great savings rate and a great savings. And she took them her list of demands. And the boss immediately said yes. And now what does it look like? So now she's able to get the same pay she's getting now. She's able to cut her actual
Starting point is 01:12:36 in-office hours by a 25 percent. And the rest is just remote. That means that her kids now actually get to come home with her. She no longer has to use after school care. And so she's effectively getting a raise, a raise and more flexibility in your life just because she had that power. And she wasn't afraid to know and she wasn't afraid to know because she had bandwidth in her life. That's opportunity. It didn't rely on her hitting a number, but it did rely on her saying, my employer needs me more than I need them. Yeah, and clearly for us, FI is about options.
Starting point is 01:13:05 It is about accruing that power. It's not about this binary. I'm not at FI or I'm at FI. That's a silly way to look at this. You accrue power and options all throughout this journey. Every step closer, you have. have more of that. And I think that is just, Scott, it actually goes back to my answer to your question about cutting expenses, right? Like, it's those wins. When you can rack up those wins and stack
Starting point is 01:13:32 them together, you feel this sense of empowerment and then it becomes real, right? Like, think about how much more powerful you are with 20 grand in the bank, 50, 100, right? Then you start getting into huge numbers, right? Like, think about how many more options you have. So for me, the RE in this fire acronym that's kind of cute. That's the only reason at this point where we keep it around at all is it has a neat little ring to it. The fire is spreading. Right.
Starting point is 01:14:00 I mean, that is the only time we mentioned the RE because it is a distraction otherwise, because people get bogged down in this nonsense of what's retirement and what isn't. I think that's just absurd, right? What we're talking about here is financial independence. And that's why we've called our podcast and this book, Choose FI. You're making a choice to pursue financial independence, and that is extraordinarily powerful. Yeah, love it. And my favorite thing about this, I've said this a million times, is the point of this, the point of why I do what I do, and why you guys do what you do, and why we're all such zealance about this financial independence thing here is you're using the word power. I'll use the word potential. Your ability to realize your potential continues to multiply the farther along the spectrum. that you go, and maybe it's controversially the earlier you go about producing the situation.
Starting point is 01:14:55 So the farther you can get along the Pathify and the earlier you can do it, I just believe that that gives you that much more chance to realize that potential and leave that mark in the world, whatever that is downstream. This is a multiplicative effect that I think can change the world over time in increasing odds each passing year, the more people that become financially independent. And that's kind of the mission. That's the whole point of bigger pockets, bigger pockets, money, all the stuff I do is to enable that reality to come about. And I think it's good. That's just the way it should be. We love working with you guys on this. I think it's a big project. All right. Well, I think this has been a great discussion and we should probably transition to our
Starting point is 01:15:36 closing segment here, which I think we were not going to do the famous four that we always do. Because there's just, you know, famous four multiplied by three. Too many. I knew I was coming on the show, Scott, I knew you're going to ask me a joke and I don't have any jokes. I was like Googling them so I can have something. So I'm just going to ask you to tell us jokes. I was going to say it's the famous two. Jonathan will do my joke as well. I'm just going to do one. You get one joke. That's all you get. I got this off. I'm reading this is on Budgets are sexy.com. He has it on he has funny money jokes. So he's a bunch there. You ready for it?
Starting point is 01:16:10 All right. All right. A frightened investor goes to his financial planner and ask if he's at all worried about the volatility of the market these days. The planner replies that he sure does. In fact, he says that he sleeps like a baby. The freight investor was amazed. Really? Even with all the fluctuations? Yep. I sleep for a couple hours and I wake up and I cry for a couple hours. He needs to read the simple path to wealth. He should read the simple path to it. All right, Brad, we're expecting big things here. Putting you on the spot. I got nothing. Isn't this where Mindy's extra list comes in handy? Come on, Wendy.
Starting point is 01:16:45 Yes. Okay. So I went into a pet shop and asked for 12 beads. The shopkeeper counted out 13 and handed them over. You've given me one B too many. He said that one is a freebie. That's from Dad Jokes on Twitter, which is at Dad Says Jokes, which I
Starting point is 01:17:03 actually kind of like, even though I hate these dad jokes. So this was our breakfast conversation. I told my daughter I was doing show. I said, you got to give me your best joke. She's six. And this is high risk over the internet, but I'll give it a go. So knock, knock. Who's there? Interrupting cow. Who? Move. Nice. I was going to get that with the timing. I was a little nervous.
Starting point is 01:17:32 I was a little nervous. What do you call a cow who jumps over a barbed wire fence? I don't know. I don't know. Utter destruction. Oh, oh, oh. Oh, come on. And on that note, it's been fun. Mindy, does he have a list in front of them? Does he have these memorized? Or does he, like, look him up in the background? I recently discovered Instagram,
Starting point is 01:17:56 and I've been posting finance jokes to Instagram. Oh, no. Great effect. Okay, I have one more. Scott underscore Trench, everybody, if you're... I was just going to say, my original blog was called Eat the Financial Elephant, and it actually came from reading highlights.
Starting point is 01:18:13 I had a patient with her granddaughter, and I was reading a highlights, and that was like the riddle, like, how do you eat an elephant? And it's one bite at a time. That's actually where my original blog came from. So I have a history of reading highlights for the jokes. Well, you and Scott will be very good friends, then. Those jokes are terrible. Okay, now here's the last question, because I did say it's famous too.
Starting point is 01:18:36 Well, I guess it's more of a command. I liked calling it a question, but Scott didn't like that. So tell me. four questions and then have five questions. So you have to do four questions to command. That's what makes it funny. You can change it to five questions. No, it's the famous four, the same five questions we ask everyone. That's what makes it funny. All right. I'm sure you'll get it worked out. Chris, next time. Tell me where people can fight out more about you. That's my command. So my home on the internet is at can I retire yet.com. That's the best place to find me and I'm pretty
Starting point is 01:19:05 responsive there. And obviously I'd love everybody to check out the book. Choosefi.com slash book. And then Jonathan and Brad, I've heard that you guys are online somewhere. Yeah, we have a podcast called Chooseify and as Jonathan is holding up the book here for the YouTube audience, this book releases October 1st. And yeah, you can find it anywhere books are sold. But yeah, like Chris said, if you had to choose avite.com slash book, it'll forward you to the appropriate place. So yeah, we'd love for you to check it out. Yeah, I just want to chime in that love the book, love your guys podcast. And for those of you listening, I know that a lot of folks who listen to Bigger Pockets money
Starting point is 01:19:45 and also listen to Choose FI and I think vice versa as well. And so I think that there's a lot of complimentary information that we kind of share from time to time. So definitely encourage everybody to check out both shows if you're continuing interested in getting even more financial independence content because we're big fans, you guys. Wow. We obviously do more than reciprocate, Scott. We love what you and Mindy have created both in the Bigger Pockets Parent,
Starting point is 01:20:08 but also with Bigger Pockets Money. I think the flavor of your show is phenomenal. And we hope everybody in our audience comes and checks it out. Okay. Chris and Jonathan and Brad, thank you so much for your time today. This was really helpful and very exciting. I'm so excited for you,
Starting point is 01:20:21 a new book. I know you're going to sell a petroleum copies. A betrillion. A betrillion. That's a new word that I just. People are going to go check it off from the library, right? Yeah, well, we are going to, I was just talking to Brad this morning. I was asking you have you or Laura put in the request there.
Starting point is 01:20:35 It does need to be in the library. We need to make sure it's there. But you can copy for a friend. Christmas present. By the book and Requestor from the library. Yes, please. There you go.
Starting point is 01:20:45 Yeah, Petroian's a big number, so we've got to hit it from all angles. I hope you guys printed it enough. Everybody's going to buy 12. On demand. Provided courtesy of bigger pockets. Okay, and with that, we are out of here. All right.
Starting point is 01:21:01 That was just all of the people from Choose FI. Mindy, what did you think? I loved it. I loved it. I loved it. I love talking to Brandon, Jonathan. and they're such genuinely nice people, and all they want to do is help you become financially independent, too.
Starting point is 01:21:16 The book is fabulous. I think the content that they are going to bring to the world is exactly what the world needs to hear. Yeah, they're very thoughtful and careful about how they kind of articulate their thoughts as well. And I really appreciated that. There was a lot of, you know, you could tell there's a lot of experience and thought and knowledge that they were drawing on every time they answered a question from us. and really appreciated that and learned quite a bit here.
Starting point is 01:21:41 So big privilege. And like I mentioned, their philosophy, I think, really manifests itself really well in their new book. Yes. Did you have it right there in front of you? I do. I did get an advanced copy out of hardcover. The Choose FI Your Blueprint to Financial Independence. Available wherever books are sold.
Starting point is 01:22:00 That's right. So, Scott, our show ran really long because when you get five finance nerds talking, they talk for a really long time. we should get out of here. Let's do it. We should say thank you to all of our lovely listeners who have spent time with us over this last hour-ish.
Starting point is 01:22:16 And from episode 92 of the Bigger Puckets Money podcast, I am Mindy Jensen, he is Scott Trench, and we are out of here. Goodbye. Goodbye.

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