Milestones to Financial Freedom
Moderator: Global Moderator
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Another engineer INT* here. ; ). And I wholeheartedly recommend Shop Class as Soulcraft as well. Great book.
Nice list, Jake. The only things I'd add are a few steps between 1x annual spending in savings and 33x in savings, as that's a wide gap.
The moment your potential monthly investment volatility is comparable to your monthly income. This is when it really starts to sink in that 1) risk management matters, and 2) you're playing the long game and need to stop checking the markets every day. (it's why I love the PP)
The moment when paying of a mortgage (or choosing to keep "good" debt at a low rate) is a financial choice and not a pipe dream.
The moment before investment income covers your expenses, but when a low-paying but fun job is enough to make up the difference. This is where many make the jump to semi-retirement.
Nice list, Jake. The only things I'd add are a few steps between 1x annual spending in savings and 33x in savings, as that's a wide gap.
The moment your potential monthly investment volatility is comparable to your monthly income. This is when it really starts to sink in that 1) risk management matters, and 2) you're playing the long game and need to stop checking the markets every day. (it's why I love the PP)
The moment when paying of a mortgage (or choosing to keep "good" debt at a low rate) is a financial choice and not a pipe dream.
The moment before investment income covers your expenses, but when a low-paying but fun job is enough to make up the difference. This is where many make the jump to semi-retirement.
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Add me to the engineer column... Don't remember my profile but I can pretty much believe I am a very typical numbers/analysis type...
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Good point, I agree completely. The difficulty I had was defining something that felt like a real turning point between those two. Maybe 5 years of expenses? Maybe when you bank a decade's worth of expenses? I like your suggestions too and will think more about it.Tyler wrote: Nice list, Jake. The only things I'd add are a few steps between 1x annual spending in savings and 33x in savings, as that's a wide gap.
Re personality types, I'm ENTP

Last edited by Jake on Wed Oct 17, 2012 2:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Pointedstick
- Executive Member
- Posts: 8883
- Joined: Tue Apr 17, 2012 9:21 pm
- Contact:
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Still a Rational!Jake wrote:Good point, I agree completely. The difficulty I had was defining something that felt like a real turning point between those two. Maybe 5 years of expenses? Maybe when you bank a decade's worth of expenses? I like your suggestions too and will think more about it.Tyler wrote: Nice list, Jake. The only things I'd add are a few steps between 1x annual spending in savings and 33x in savings, as that's a wide gap.
Re personality types, I'm ENTP![]()

http://www.keirsey.com/4temps/rational_overview.asp
Human behavior is economic behavior. The particulars may vary, but competition for limited resources remains a constant.
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Yes, that describes me pretty well. ENTJ.Pointedstick wrote:Still a Rational!Jake wrote:Good point, I agree completely. The difficulty I had was defining something that felt like a real turning point between those two. Maybe 5 years of expenses? Maybe when you bank a decade's worth of expenses? I like your suggestions too and will think more about it.Tyler wrote: Nice list, Jake. The only things I'd add are a few steps between 1x annual spending in savings and 33x in savings, as that's a wide gap.
Re personality types, I'm ENTP![]()
http://www.keirsey.com/4temps/rational_overview.asp
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
In what discipline/academic field is your PhD? I am ABD with my UK degree (economic history) having taken the Masters when my postgrad supervisor was forced to retire because of a neurological illness.stone wrote: Like you guys I too was a recipient of the previous UK education system benevolence and finished a PhD debt free.
- MachineGhost
- Executive Member
- Posts: 10054
- Joined: Sat Nov 12, 2011 9:31 am
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Au contraire! INFJ.Pointedstick wrote: I wonder how many of us are engineers (I am too). It's sort of interesting how many engineer types are attracted to mastering money and adopting small government/libertarian ideals. The INTJ profile strikes again!
"All generous minds have a horror of what are commonly called 'Facts'. They are the brute beasts of the intellectual domain." -- Thomas Hobbes
Disclaimer: I am not a broker, dealer, investment advisor, physician, theologian or prophet. I should not be considered as legally permitted to render such advice!
Disclaimer: I am not a broker, dealer, investment advisor, physician, theologian or prophet. I should not be considered as legally permitted to render such advice!
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Engineer / INT(J|P) here.
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Engineer ENTJ (I think, I'll have to check). And great posts here. I'm 25 right now and have about 7 years of expenses saved up right now (that is while still single- that value drops when I'd get married or have a kiddie.)
Last edited by Anonymous on Wed Oct 17, 2012 4:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Background: Mechanical Engineering, Robotics, Control Systems, CAD Modeling, Machining, Wearable Exoskeletons, Applied Physiology, Drawing (Pencil/Charcoal), Drums, Guitar/Bass, Piano, Flute
"you are not disabled by your disabilities but rather, abled by your abilities." -Oscar Pistorius
"you are not disabled by your disabilities but rather, abled by your abilities." -Oscar Pistorius
- Pointedstick
- Executive Member
- Posts: 8883
- Joined: Tue Apr 17, 2012 9:21 pm
- Contact:
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
You might be surprised. It depends on who you marry, of course, but I saved a bunch of money in taxes once I entered the married tax bracket since my wife doesn't work. Of course, I happen to be blessed with a wife who's almost as into minimalism and financial independence as I am. Also, kids are a lot less expensive than many people think IMHO.1NV35T0R (Greg) wrote: Engineer ENTJ (I think, I'll have to check). And great posts here. I'm 25 right now and have about 7 years of expenses saved up right now (that is while still single- that value drops when I'd get married or have a kiddie.)
Human behavior is economic behavior. The particulars may vary, but competition for limited resources remains a constant.
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Good point. My girlfriend at least right now is quite frugal and perhaps if I have a kid they can skirt the child labor laws and work to pay off their expenses such as diapers and other luxuries hahPointedstick wrote:You might be surprised. It depends on who you marry, of course, but I saved a bunch of money in taxes once I entered the married tax bracket since my wife doesn't work. Of course, I happen to be blessed with a wife who's almost as into minimalism and financial independence as I am. Also, kids are a lot less expensive than many people think IMHO.1NV35T0R (Greg) wrote: Engineer ENTJ (I think, I'll have to check). And great posts here. I'm 25 right now and have about 7 years of expenses saved up right now (that is while still single- that value drops when I'd get married or have a kiddie.)

Background: Mechanical Engineering, Robotics, Control Systems, CAD Modeling, Machining, Wearable Exoskeletons, Applied Physiology, Drawing (Pencil/Charcoal), Drums, Guitar/Bass, Piano, Flute
"you are not disabled by your disabilities but rather, abled by your abilities." -Oscar Pistorius
"you are not disabled by your disabilities but rather, abled by your abilities." -Oscar Pistorius
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Back to the topic, I wonder if a potential milestone before your 5th (Annual passive investment income becomes larger than your annual expenses) might be having a job that you love and/or believe in so much that you don't have any desire to retire?
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
5th would be annual passive investment income exceeds annual "work" gross income.BearBones wrote: Back to the topic, I wonder if a potential milestone before your 5th (Annual passive investment income becomes larger than your annual expenses) might be having a job that you love and/or believe in so much that you don't have any desire to retire?
“Let every man divide his money into three parts, and invest a third in land, a third in business and a third let him keep by him in reserve.� ~Talmud
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
If you can find that, more power to you. But I will wonder what is wrong with you...BearBones wrote:having a job that you love and/or believe in so much that you don't have any desire to retire?
I had my first passbook savings account by the time I was 10 (they paid 5-1/4% interest at the time). I calculated many times then and ever since how much I needed to have put aside to pay my expenses. Some jobs aren't bad. Some jobs are horrible. The only change is the urgency I feel to escape, but I've never had the desire to "do it til the day I die."
I just cannot see dedicating any significant portion of my time to satisfying the whims of either an employer or customers/clients. It seems that even the best job has times where kissing up is required, and with that threat my time is never fully my own. Maybe if I was fully financially independent I would keep doing some consulting where the aggravation and overhead to start a gig is small (unlike becoming an employee) and if the customer/client didn't like my opinion I could walk without worrying where/when the next gig would come.
Maybe I'm too cynical. Maybe I'm a realist. Or maybe its all a matter of perspective and from mine I'm just more interested in freedom to pursue my own interests without reporting to anyone when those interests change.
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
AgAuMoney
If I was a patient of BearBones, I'd be reassured by him being motivated out of wanting to "do it right" rather than because he needed the job.
Perhaps the ultimate financial freedom is to not have financial considerations intrude upon your choices. Perhaps no amount of money is sufficient or neccessary for that.
Perhaps, even if you did do that you would still get ample work. I guess someone who works purely out of the motivation for genuinely wanting to do a job properly can actually be more valuable to the client and some clients even have the wisdom to see that. Even some employers are like that. My guess (of course I havent a clue) is that many people in reality do work to that pattern pehaps more than they realise.Maybe if I was fully financially independent I would keep doing some consulting where the aggravation and overhead to start a gig is small (unlike becoming an employee) and if the customer/client didn't like my opinion I could walk without worrying where/when the next gig would come.
If I was a patient of BearBones, I'd be reassured by him being motivated out of wanting to "do it right" rather than because he needed the job.
Perhaps the ultimate financial freedom is to not have financial considerations intrude upon your choices. Perhaps no amount of money is sufficient or neccessary for that.
Last edited by stone on Thu Oct 18, 2012 2:34 am, edited 1 time in total.
"Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgment." - Mulla Nasrudin
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Quite so, I didn't get where I am today (ahem) by not suckling on the state teat, I'd probably spontaneously combust if I started espousing small government.stone wrote: I too was a recipient of the previous UK education system benevolence...
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
I have both a brother who is a tenured science professor and a brother who has founded a very successful company with several employees and I assure you that for both their job is also their greatest hobby. For myself, the same held for the past 10 years, although there were certainly also some uncomfortable weeks. Of course, I cannot know if it will stay like this forever: Rule 1) The future is uncertain. So striding towards FI while pursuing your greatest hobby is the best hedge against adversity in both the present and the future.AgAuMoney wrote:If you can find that, more power to you. But I will wonder what is wrong with you...BearBones wrote:having a job that you love and/or believe in so much that you don't have any desire to retire?
I had my first passbook savings account by the time I was 10 (they paid 5-1/4% interest at the time). I calculated many times then and ever since how much I needed to have put aside to pay my expenses. Some jobs aren't bad. Some jobs are horrible. The only change is the urgency I feel to escape, but I've never had the desire to "do it til the day I die."
I just cannot see dedicating any significant portion of my time to satisfying the whims of either an employer or customers/clients. It seems that even the best job has times where kissing up is required, and with that threat my time is never fully my own. Maybe if I was fully financially independent I would keep doing some consulting where the aggravation and overhead to start a gig is small (unlike becoming an employee) and if the customer/client didn't like my opinion I could walk without worrying where/when the next gig would come.
Maybe I'm too cynical. Maybe I'm a realist. Or maybe its all a matter of perspective and from mine I'm just more interested in freedom to pursue my own interests without reporting to anyone when those interests change.
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
What if you were your own boss? What if you were helping people? Or building/sculpting/painting beautiful things? Or writing children's books? Or making a specialty wine at your Sonoma valley vineyard?AgAuMoney wrote: I just cannot see dedicating any significant portion of my time to satisfying the whims of either an employer or customers/clients. It seems that even the best job has times where kissing up is required, and with that threat my time is never fully my own.
The ideal vocation is without great distinction from avocation, IMO.
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
I think it's awesome to find a job that is your calling. If your "work" is something that you would do for free anyway, then the fact that you make an income from it is a bonus. The key distinction in my mind is that if you are financially free you can do that job you love as long as you want and you also don't have to do it. You are free to change your mind about loving it and stop working, or try something else, or carry on loving doing it. It's an optional activity undertaken for fulfilment and not a requisite activity undertaken for survival.BearBones wrote:What if you were your own boss? What if you were helping people? Or building/sculpting/painting beautiful things? Or writing children's books? Or making a specialty wine at your Sonoma valley vineyard?AgAuMoney wrote: I just cannot see dedicating any significant portion of my time to satisfying the whims of either an employer or customers/clients. It seems that even the best job has times where kissing up is required, and with that threat my time is never fully my own.
The ideal vocation is without great distinction from avocation, IMO.
- Pointedstick
- Executive Member
- Posts: 8883
- Joined: Tue Apr 17, 2012 9:21 pm
- Contact:
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
This is a very important point. Additionally, if you're the kind of person who's always exploring new things and constantly gaining new interests, it would suck if your you had to pass up your new ideal vocation because it didn't make you enough money to live on. That's another big flexibility that financial independence gives you: the freedom to work at a low-paid yet highly gratifying job should you so desire.Jake wrote:I think it's awesome to find a job that is your calling. If your "work" is something that you would do for free anyway, then the fact that you make an income from it is a bonus. The key distinction in my mind is that if you are financially free you can do that job you love as long as you want and you also don't have to do it. You are free to change your mind about loving it and stop working, or try something else, or carry on loving doing it. It's an optional activity undertaken for fulfilment and not a requisite activity undertaken for survival.BearBones wrote:What if you were your own boss? What if you were helping people? Or building/sculpting/painting beautiful things? Or writing children's books? Or making a specialty wine at your Sonoma valley vineyard?AgAuMoney wrote: I just cannot see dedicating any significant portion of my time to satisfying the whims of either an employer or customers/clients. It seems that even the best job has times where kissing up is required, and with that threat my time is never fully my own.
The ideal vocation is without great distinction from avocation, IMO.
Human behavior is economic behavior. The particulars may vary, but competition for limited resources remains a constant.
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Jake
I think that there are two axes to gaining that feedom and both are on a relative scale. One axis is your contentment with doing available work. And the other is your contentment with living with a certain amount of money. If you are delighted doing any kind of work and delighted living with diddly squit money then you will inevitably be financially free. If you are very fussy about what work you like (eg only want to be a mission to mars astronaut, constantly receiving heartfelt awe from everyone or whatever) or always want to have the world's biggest yatch(s) and palace(s) then you will never be financially free.I think it's awesome to find a job that is your calling. If your "work" is something that you would do for free anyway, then the fact that you make an income from it is a bonus. The key distinction in my mind is that if you are financially free you can do that job you love as long as you want and you also don't have to do it. You are free to change your mind about loving it and stop working, or try something else, or carry on loving doing it. It's an optional activity undertaken for fulfilment and not a requisite activity undertaken for survival.
Last edited by stone on Thu Oct 18, 2012 10:44 am, edited 1 time in total.
"Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgment." - Mulla Nasrudin
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Very true. But even if you are not financially free, if you really love what you do, you are much more likely to be successful. There is a giant feedback loop involved. Such people go the extra mile, they are curious, and they are happy. Because of this, they get very good at what they do, and they receive a lot of perks that make them even happier. They are also tend to be much more adaptable.Jake wrote: The key distinction in my mind is that if you are financially free you can do that job you love as long as you want and you also don't have to do it. You are free to change your mind about loving it and stop working, or try something else, or carry on loving doing it. It's an optional activity undertaken for fulfilment and not a requisite activity undertaken for survival.
So, ideally, I think that finding something you love (or just looking squarely at you attitude if it sucks) translates to fulfillment much more predictably than reaching a particular milestone to financial "freedom."
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Good point, Stone. I have been focusing on the former. But moving in the direction of Pointedstick and other EREesqe folks here is equally important. Thanks.
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
Bear Bones
I was really impressed by train cleaners in Japan. They clearly took massive pride both in getting the trains spotless and being ultra polite to the travelers. I don't think you need a particularly fancy job to have the opportunity to excel and get pride from it.if you really love what you do, you are much more likely to be successful. There is a giant feedback loop involved. Such people go the extra mile, they are curious, and they are happy. Because of this, they get very good at what they do, and they receive a lot of perks that make them even happier. They are also tend to be much more adaptable.
"Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgment." - Mulla Nasrudin
- Pointedstick
- Executive Member
- Posts: 8883
- Joined: Tue Apr 17, 2012 9:21 pm
- Contact:
Re: Milestones to Financial Freedom
My personal ideal is having a resilient life. Part of that is becoming so valuable to my employer and/or customers that they keep wanting to pay me, and I really appreciate how you highlight the importance of this part, BearBones. But the other part of my idea of a resilient life is having the financial freedom to step back and take a break from the work if you desire. Maybe you want to be the primary caretaker for your kids for a while. Maybe you want to learn to play the guitar or write video games. Maybe a relative falls ill and you want to take care of them. These are activities you are buying yourself the freedom to pursue by not being dependent on a career for your income.BearBones wrote: Good point, Stone. I have been focusing on the former. But moving in the direction of Pointedstick and other EREesqe folks here is equally important. Thanks.
Human behavior is economic behavior. The particulars may vary, but competition for limited resources remains a constant.
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan