When I coached baseball many years ago, a young ballplayer came to me asking for advice. I offered my opinion: he needed to get his act together. Then, like many young men might do, he griped about me to one of the other coaches. Our paths crossed again when he was 28 years old, at which point he said, “Now that I have a family of my own, I’ve thought back on your ‘lectures’ and realized you were just answering my questions honestly. Thank you.”
Not surprisingly, my lectures as a coach weren’t so different from those I’d received from a WWII colonel turned coach and teacher at my high school. The only difference: I never asked for his opinion—it was offered as he held my shirt collar. Still, when I came home on leave from the Marine Corps a few years later, I showed up at my old high school, walked onto the practice field, and thanked him. He was a solid mentor when I needed one but was too young to know it.
Years later, as a retirement mentor, I’ve spent countless hours analyzing the habits shared by successful retirees. Six stand out, and I urge all of our readers to take these steps sooner rather than later. I’m not going to grab you by the shirt collar like my coach did, but I’m confident you’ll find this “lecture” worth reading.
Of course, some accidents and disabilities cannot be prevented, and there are times to rally behind family members truly unable to put a roof over their heads or food in their bellies. But for every truly unavoidable catastrophe, there are dozens more instances of parents enabling a freeloader.
You’ve worked too hard to sacrifice your financial independence and give up your golden years. Even if you have enough to support two generations indefinitely, being the “Bank of Parents” won’t help anyone in the long run.
There’s a lot to learn, but the information is there for the taking. I’ve known too many people who retired with a large chunk of change only to panic because they had no clue how to manage it. These folks were afraid, rightly so, because their lack of financial know-how made them vulnerable.
Give yourself a financial education while you’re accumulating wealth so you can enjoy that wealth once you retire. Otherwise, you might leave a high-stress job for a high-stress retirement.
Before Congress passed the first Social Security Act in 1935, retirement was for a wealthy few. Since then, Social Security has fostered the illusion that we need not worry about money and that retirement doesn’t require a large personal nest egg. Reality is far harsher.
I know people who’ve tried to live on their Social Security alone; now they are all back at work. A happy retirement rarely comes for people who choose to worry about retirement later.
As someone in or approaching retirement age, you’ve lived long enough to be a mentor in some area of life. So you already know that mentoring is about telling people what they need to hear—whether it’s on the baseball field, in the boardroom, or at the kitchen table (where most life lessons are learned).
I urge you to pass your own “secrets to success” on to the next generation; they will thank you for it… eventually.
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