TicTocLife - A Story of Financial Independence
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FIRE Insider
The inside scoop on financial independence, retiring early, and the FIRE community from Chris & Jenni at TicTocLife.
Hey Subscriber,

Good afternoon from extremely sunny Arizona! Chris here and I’m writing this September edition of the FIRE Insider from the back patio of my grandparents’ house outside of Phoenix. Jenni and I have been crisscrossing Wisconsin, Florida, and now Arizona. We’re off to California tomorrow assuming we don’t wind up with yet another canceled flight!

Travel always lets me step outside my comfort zone, push the edges a bit, and think about life (and money) from a higher level. Sorry about the delay between newsletters, our schedule has been packed! Still, we’ve got some fun, insightful, and hopefully productive posts on financial independence and our early retirement experience below.

We’ve written six articles since our last newsletter:
  1. A Clever Way to Financial Independence (My Money Mindset)
    Ramit Sethi might be well known for one particular quote: “Spend extravagantly on the things you love, and cut costs mercilessly on the things you don’t”. But is that too simplistic? Does spending “"extravagantly” really make much sense…ever? There’s nuance to that advice and this post digs into the details of how to spend money on what actually matters to you without cutting (to the bone) and losing the things you enjoy.
  2. Your Start to Financial Freedom (From Scarcity to Abundance)
    A more personal story from me that explains FIstarting with financial independence—and the struggle to find work/stability in the early years. It's an example of the mindset switch between scarcity (paycheck-to-paycheck) and abundance.
  3. A Summer of Travel (and Our July 2021 Monthly Money Update)
    July started off our summer of travel! Late in the month, we left for Wisconsin. We finally had a full year of net worth data and donations to poke through. We also reviewed community health nonprofits, and detailed our monthly budget.
  4. A Lesson in Lifestyle Inflation (and Adventure) From the Beach
    What's the cost of losing your sense of adventure and following the crowd? If crowds are the ultimate purveyors of lethargy, then it’s your sense of adventure that protects you from their allure; cherish it as part of your financial mindset. Bending the world to your will and sheltering yourself from the unknown is an endless chasm to fill your wealth with.
  5. Wealth vs Income (and How I Can’t Afford Our Mortgage)
    I tackle the dynamic between wealth and income—while working to answer what’s more important for your success. Once you have ”enough” in your pursuit of FIRE, what are the trade offs of losing your high income? This post also serves as a bookend to my first post on refinancing with quite the interesting outcome.
  6. We Blew a Hole in Our August Budget (and We Head West)
    Our latest post! Surprise! We overspent our budget big time—and share the details! We also review refugee nonprofits as our summer of travel goes west.

What we've been reading —

Neither Jenni or I have had as much time as we’d like to be able to read and participate with the larger FIRE community. Still, we’ve found some incredibly great writing on money and psychology out there we think you’d enjoy as well. Check out some of the articles and podcasts below from friends and peers!

Money

Noel at Happily Disengaged questions how taxes and happiness are interlinked in different regions. In the US, we think taxes are high but imagine paying more than 50% income tax AND being happy about it. But if you knew these taxes paid for healthcare, higher education, childcare, etc.—would that make you less unhappy to pay more?

Mr. Tako continues his great analysis of stock investing (if that’s your thing over index funds!) with a list of long-term (20+ years) holds. You might be surprised by what’s left out of the list (hint, it’s how you’re reading this). But, it’s a pretty solid list for the serious investor looking ahead to retirement.

It may not seem like having $2 coffee every would make a difference in your savings, but over time that $2 adds up. Building small habits add up over time. It's never too late to make changes to your financial habits or too early to start savings. You’ll thank yourself later when you watch how small things can add up as Along the Camel Ride says.

Lifestyle

I really enjoyed this synopsis on financial freedom and relationships from My Quiet FI. He says, “The truth was that the greatest bulk of our shared lives was lying next to each other, eyes closed side by side in a bed asleep, rather than owning and sharing our time, wakeful and energetic in the daylight.” Give his case for freedom for another a read!

Reaching FIRE is a shortcut to retired life and realizing larger pursuits in life—but that doesn't mean it's a shortcut out of having to grind your way through some tough work! As Freddy Smidlap says, there’s privilege in working your nuts off!

There's that call of the void out there for all of us, a precipice we look over and wonder—what if? But how do you know if that edge holds you from destruction and despair—or beauty and elation? Accidental FIRE reveals his near spiral into the deadbeat club.

What we've been listening to —

From jumping out of the attorney game to sabbaticals and Big Hikes—Carla and Robert share their story about lifestyle design, mini-retirements, and flexi-F*-ability during Mile High and FI podcast’s first four-person interview.

Jenni and I listened to a special episode of the Stacking Benjamins podcast on a recent flight which used one my recent articles as the centerpiece for their round table discussion! We really enjoyed the conversation! Among others, Fiery Millennial was on the show to add a FIRE perspective. The episode focuses on how what ‘value’ means to each person might be quite different.


We both hope you find an entertaining, productive, or interesting article or podcast that supports your financial health! We’ve been working on our physical and mental health with hikes through the Grand Canyon, camping in Sedona, and quality time with friends and family.

Our newsletter is a little shorter today as I’m actually now finishing up at a small cafe where there so happens to be WiFi while we’re on the move. A nomadic life is entertaining if not quite as supportive for writing, you’ll have to forgive us for now! :-)

Until next time,
Chris & Jenni

Overlooking the Grand Canyon from Cedar Ridge near the South Rim. This is how we closed out August!

Our latest posts —


In case you missed one, here are our latest posts since our last newsletter:

We Blew a Hole in Our August Budget (and We Head West)

Surprise! We overspent our budget big time—and share the details! We also review refugee nonprofits as our summer travel goes west!

By Chris
Overlooking the Grand Canyon from Cedar Ridge near the South Rim. This is how we closed out August!

Wealth vs Income (and How I Can’t Afford Our Mortgage)

Wealth vs Income (and How I Can’t Afford Our Mortgage)
Wealth vs income—what’s more important for your success? Once you have ”enough” in your pursuit of FIRE, what are the trade offs of losing your high income?

By Chris

A Lesson in Lifestyle Inflation (and Adventure) From the Beach

If crowds are the ultimate purveyors of lethargy, then it's your sense of adventure that protects you from their allure; cherish it as part of your financial mindset.

By Chris
Just through that cluttered horizon lies adventure.

A Summer of Travel (and Our July 2021 Monthly Money Update)

Paddle boarding and tubing the James River before we left for Wisconsin!
We’ve got a year of net worth data and donations, review community health nonprofits, and detail our monthly budget—as our summer of travel continues!

By Chris

Your Start to Financial Freedom (From Scarcity to Abundance)

Battling financial illiteracy is your first step—then, build a money mindset from paycheck-to-paycheck scarcity to one that plans for the future with abundance.

By Chris
My journey to financial independence started right out of college as I sought one business opportunity after another and flailed for safety in a pool of money sharks—debt, financial illiteracy, and capitalism at its best.

A Clever Way to Financial Independence (My Money Mindset)

What's your money mindset? What spending matters to you? Are you in it for adventure or comfort? Excitement or contentment?
I rarely dictate financial advice, but here I share the clever money mindset that I feel steered us to financial independence in a sustainable and fulfilling way.

By Chris
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Thanks again for subscribing to our infrequent newsletter. We both hope you're enjoying TicTocLife as much as we are. If you have feedback about this newsletter, you can reply directly or use our Contact form.

Warm regards,
Jenni & Chris