Comparison and the Path to FI

Comparison is the thief of joy and I desperately want to be FI. Two things can be true at once. If I’m getting my point across correctly in this post, it’s that sometimes being on the FI journey is hard. It can be especially hard if one compares themselves to others who are farther along or have retired already.

As I find myself reading and listening to FI content, I often find myself unintentionally comparing where we are along the journey to the influential “leaders” of the community. The big bloggers and podcasters who are work optional, FI, or retired already.

I found the FI community at the age of 23 when I was just figuring out my money and navigating my first full time job after college. Six months into my job and I was already feeling the stress of living paycheck to paycheck while I felt stuck on the hamster wheel. Between paying about 50% of my income to rent while I lived alone to having to learn to meal prep, it felt like being an adult was hard. I mean, how did everyone else seem to have enough money to go around? How did people retire?

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The Baby Case Study

I’m 28, Mr. Fipolar is 28, and we’re seriously thinking about the next chapter of our lives together. Next year we will have been together for 10 year and well, to be frank, I have baby fever. People around me are starting to have babies and now I want my own little munchkin. It’s not just that I want a baby, I want a family that’s bigger than just me and my husband and dog.

And well, of course, the finances have been on my mind a lot. When we moved to our mountain town, it was still an affordable, low cost of living area. Now, just a few years later, it’s medium bordering on high cost of living. The change is insane and kind of unbelievable. Regardless, we really like it here and the alternative to be close to our parents would be to move back to the Bay Area which is even more unattainable without a tech salary.

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February 2023 Budget Round-up

February was a busy month. I attempted to study for and then postponed my Professional Engineering Exam. Frankly, I’m pretty burned out of studying while working full time and doing all of the things adults do like cooking dinner. I’m trying to be better about listening to what I need and not just pushing through to the end.

In February, I spent a magnificent day skiing with a friend, spent time with family, played Wingspan, lead a photography meetup at a local park, and started sewing again. I’ve been really enjoying my hobbies and even though they are expensive, I’d like to keep pursuing them.

Part of FIRE is finding joy in life now while saving and investing for the future. Without that joy and my hobbies, life feels pretty flat. I think that I’m solidly out of my depression after failing the first Profession Engineering Exam in January and now, I’m just stable, enjoying life, and doing what I can to find purpose and joy.

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December 2022 Budget Round-Up

December 2022 Budget Round Up

December was fairly calm. We celebrated Christmas and New Year’s Eve with close family in a small stress-free gathering. It snowed a bunch in early December but then rained on Christmas. I knit my family members mittens for Christmas, worked on content creating, studied hard for my big test in January, and binged watched The Sex Lives of College Girls on HBO. Mr. Fipolar was content and happy with his hobbies too.

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November 2022 Budget Round-Up

Nov 2022 Budget Round-up

November was a jam-packed month for us. I celebrated my 28th birthday, we celebrated Thanksgiving with family and friends, and we got our Christmas tree. We ended up taking advantage of some Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales to buy a couple of camping items and a new tv stand for our living room. These are items that we’ve been watching for and even though the expenses were somewhat unplanned, we still ended up mostly on budget.

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CoastFI and the Urge to “Look Rich”

I hit CoastFI in my early twenties, bought a house, got a dog, and financed a new car. Somewhere along the way, my okayness with not “looking rich” escaped me. After taking a year off from intensely saving and investing for health reasons, I slipped into being “normal” again. In this case “normal” meant that urge to “keep up with the Jones’s”.

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