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Don’t we all wish for retirement happiness?! And if we could, how many of us would like to retire early?<\/p>\n
However, you’ve got to ask yourself, in the image of your retirement dream is that a luxury beach retirement you see out there? Or, are those two early retirees living hand to mouth in some dingy, cheap coastal outpost?!<\/p>\n
For most, an early retirement increases the probability of a decline in standard of living, increased chances of addiction and\/or an early death<\/strong>.<\/strong><\/p>\n The retirement happiness model, requires informed, early and comprehensive planning.<\/em><\/p>\n It is not called retirement-planning for n<\/em>othing. There is a delicate balance of variables that determine the age at which to retire to achieve retirement happiness.<\/em><\/p>\n In my youth, we were raised on the standard milk-run retirement happiness cycle. Start early childhood education as soon as your parents could get you off them as your life-support system. Get into primary\/elementary school at the standard age – not a year too early or a year too late! Know what you want your career to be and concentrate on those subjects through high school. Go to university to be a doctor, lawyer or teacher – an architect was a new age profession back then! Get a job with a fancy multinational or set up a private professional practice – if you failed then you became a civil servant, ready to toil working your way up the ladder until you eventually gained political influence and power.<\/p>\n You were to spend 17 to 23 years studying and then 40 – 45 years working. You would then retire to your little farm in the country with your little retirement nest egg. This would be regularly disbursed from the company you had sweated for, or the government who had slave-driven you for 40 years. In your working years, you would have been frugal and prudent. Evidenced by saving consistently every month and never living beyond your means. Every loan you took was carefully planned, only for the acquisition of appreciating assets. Repayment within your means was non-negotiable. You would all robotically acquire a farm to give you a secondary income starting in your middle years of employment and to keep you active in your sunset years. That was the traditional model for retirement happiness.<\/p>\n David Blanchett’s, of Morningstar, conducted an\u00a0analysis of 12 survey years<\/a> of the University of Michigan’s Health and retirement study. This research finds that the most accurately hoped for and materialised age for retirement is 61. Thus, this is the best planned for retirement age, as all the variables of earning years + savings + debt repayment + remaining living years + annual living spend have been best taken account of.<\/p>\n Past age 61 the failure to reach expected retirement age increased for about half the population; this on average by a half year per year past 61. This immediately exacerbates the situation. It puts a greater strain on the ability to meet post-retirement financial needs.<\/p>\n Many of us in the workforce now aged between 20 and 40, aspire to this millenial retirement happiness dream.<\/p>\n I once interviewed an extremely high potential young man, a year removed from university. He was brash and brimming with bravado! I must say that yes, his charisma and robust confidence have him great chances for success. But that was until I asked him his career ambitions. He wanted my job within a year, my boss’s job within 2 and to be a Managing Director within 5 years! I couldn’t help myself and said, ‘you gotta be kiddin’ me!’ But no, no,no: he was stone cold serious.<\/p>\n Millenials believe in short-term reward. Their expectation cycle is much tighter than Gen Xers. As I scrutinized him, I couldn’t help but think that (if you remember my piece on cats and dogs) in these alternate species’ lifespan thinking; ‘he’s neither a cat nor a dog…he’s a rat!’ Not just 1 year is like 7, but 1 year is like 30!<\/p>\n The generational peers of Millenials are Mark Zuckerberg, Rishi Shah, Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy. They feel that they can emulate the accomplishment of these peers, maybe on a smaller scale. Early retirement is not a far-fetched dream in the mind of a millenial – but is it a dream or a potential nightmare?<\/p>\n For any millenial or even Gen Xer thinking of early retirement, I have 3 names for you: Michael Gerard Tyson, Dorothy Hamill and Johnny Unitas!<\/p>\n A Millenial’s retirement happiness planning will be derailed without competent financial planning, tax advisory, cashflow and debt management. The continued obligations they will have to close family members will present even more challenges. Most people must therefore cut back on their standard of living in retirement, when their incomes decline. With increased lifespans today and earlier curtailed income, even with the best planning a Millenial or Gen Xer, early retiree who wants to retire by 45, must now stretch retirement savings out for 40 years instead of the traditional 10 years.<\/p>\n Most of us will not adequately manage all the planning elements above. A Millenial’s poor planning in their working years will make their retirement years put Moses’ years of meandering in the wilderness look like child’s play. Buckle down Millenial and Gen X buddies and extend your work life for another 16 years, why don’t you!<\/p>\n A person’s motivations for early retirement are often not based on a firm foundation of logic.\u00a0Anti-retirement heroes<\/a>\u00a0like David Goodall, Anthony Mancinelli and Mastanamma would never say: ‘Oh, I want to travel and see the world!’, or ‘I want to have time to relax and do the things, I don’t have time to do now.’, or ‘I hate the drudgery of work. I can’t wait to stop working.’, or ‘I want freedom to do the things that I want to do.’<\/p>\n What do our anti-retirement heroes have in common? They are all centenarians who have continued their life’s working passion well past the traditional retirement age, as doctors, barbers and cooks.<\/p>\n Retirement\u00a0\u2260 addiction. In fact, the research shows that retiring later in life reduces your likelihood of alcohol overconsumption or recreational drug abuse. Age is indeed a moderator for addiction. So age, retirement and addiction must\u00a0neither<\/strong>\u00a0be automatically associated nor correlated.<\/p>\n Early retirement in itself is not bad. Poorly planned early retirement, at an earlier age increases addiction risk.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n Those who are challenged with the risk of addiction are\u00a0retirees of a younger age than standard<\/em>. When one retires early the risk of increases for boredom and a rudderlessness to set in. This is probably the aversion that our anti-retirement heroes have for ceasing their life’s work and passion. For Millenials and Gen Xers, this means that they have many more years to endure this sloth. Not only this, but their very DNA and stereotypical practices of their group identity put them further at risk for post-retirement addiction.<\/p>\n Numerous studies<\/a> indicate the positive correlation between retirement at an earlier age and both alcohol and drug abuse.<\/p>\n It doesn’t just end there.The reasons one may meet their premature death due to early retirement are not just the degradation of your body. These other reasons are inextricably linked to early retirement without a concrete plan.<\/p>\n Research<\/a> has established this correlation. These factors that contribute are psychological, leading to physiological decline and ultimately an early death. Based on Sheirisa Ngo’s<\/a>\u00a03 key factors, these manifest as:<\/p>\n <\/p>\n I must stress that I am not making a blanket condemnation of early retirement. Just do it with a plan and enable yourself to continue to be actively pursuing your life’s dreams, loves and passions, well into your sunset years.<\/p>\n The retirement happiness solution is therefore simple to map out, but has a high level of difficulty in it’s implementation:<\/p>\n And for us dog lovers, it’s the best time to spend actively with your dogs. They truly are good for the soul!<\/p>\n Don’t we all wish for retirement happiness?! And if we could, how many of us would like to retire early? However, you’ve got to ask yourself, in the image of<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":2132,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"nf_dc_page":"","om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[33],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2128","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-work-life-balance"],"yoast_head":"\nThe traditional milk-run retirement mo<\/strong>del<\/strong><\/h4>\n
The age 61 retirement-planning jackpot<\/strong><\/h4>\n
The Millenial early-retirement dream<\/strong><\/h4>\n

Decline in standard of living<\/strong><\/h4>\n

Addiction<\/strong><\/h4>\n
Retirement\u00a0\u2260 addiction<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n
Early Death<\/strong><\/h4>\n

\n
Retirement happiness<\/strong><\/h4>\n
\n
