Waste hours, not years

Waste hours, not years

Psychologist Amos Tversky once said: “You waste years by not being able to waste hours.”  His quote was part of a broader conversation he was having about doing good research, but I think you can apply the sentiment to retirement as well.  Your ideal life doesn’t just happen. It takes a bit of work. Because of that, we procrastinate and, by default, end up choosing long-term dissatisfaction over short-term effort or discomfort. In short, we waste years instead of hours.

Some examples?  Not taking the time to figure out what you really want out of life and making sure you’re on a path that is taking you there.  Not having an uncomfortable conversation to end a toxic relationship.  Not getting that knee replacement surgery your doctor said you need.  Not creating that detailed financial plan with your adviser.  Not leaving a job you hate for one you enjoy.  Not starting that new hobby because it will take time to learn and being a beginner is embarrassing.  Not getting on the same page with your spouse regarding retirement plans.

In each of those situations, you could endure some short-term pain in exchange for long-term gain.  In the investment world, we call that asymmetric upside.  Big potential profit.  Small potential loss.  

Sometimes all that’s required is 20 seconds of bravery.  Sometimes it requires a bit of experimentation or iteration.  Sometimes it requires spending a few hours/days/weeks thinking and planning.  Whatever the short-term cost, pay it.  Don’t waste years of your life because you’re unwilling to “waste” a few hours setting your course.

Be Intentional,

Joe

The secret to retirement, disguised as a pottery story

The secret to retirement, disguised as a pottery story

I was listening to a podcast* recently where the guest told a story about a pottery teacher.  At the beginning of the semester, he divided the class into two groups.  His instructions to the first group were to make the absolute best pot they could make.  They only had to hand in one pot, but it had to be perfect.  His instructions to the second group were to make as many pots as possible.  Their pots didn’t have to be perfect, but they needed to make a lot of them.  At the end of the semester, he evaluated everyone’s work.  Guess which group made the best pots?  You guessed it.  Group 2.  The group focused on quantity over quality; experimentation over perfection.

That story struck a chord, because it perfectly illustrates something that I talk about fairly regularly here at Intentional Retirement: Iteration is the key to creating your ideal life and retirement.  

Experiment.  Adjust.  Improve.  Experiment.  Adjust.  Improve.  

Keep that in mind as you start the New Year.  A little real world experimentation is usually better than grandiose dreams on the drawing board.  

Be Intentional,

Joe

P.S. Just in case you want a few more articles to drive the point home:

* The podcast mentioned above is Invest Like the Best with Patrick O’Shaughnessy