Tag Archives: simplicity

The Benefits of Travel

Billy and Akaisha take in the view from their hostel in Zacatecas, Mexico

By Akaisha Kaderli

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

We understand that not everyone likes to travel. No doubt it can be challenging, but there are significant benefits if you choose to enliven your routine with a little excursion.

Traveling makes you smarter

From the beginning of choosing a location, packing your suitcases and figuring out the logistics of who will water your plants or sit with your pet, traveling takes you out of your routine. Anything new and different like this that engages your brain causes new neurological pathways to grow.

Learning a new language, taking a cooking or painting class while on your trip and meeting new people all place you in unique situations, and your brain strengthens.

Traveling is healthy for you!

Traveling makes you strong

For some people, all these new patterns outside the everyday routine can be perceived as a hassle. Yes, and that’s good! We learn flexibility, creativity and self-reliance. Those are great attributes to have and they are useful to daily living.

Flexibility of mind, finding new solutions to new challenges and our sense of who we are and how we cope all get stronger.

Traveling helps you become an interesting story teller

When things don’t go according to plan, those seemingly challenging circumstances make for the best stories!

If everything goes perfectly on your trip or vacation, and people ask “How did you enjoy yourselves? How was your trip?” then all you can say is “Great!” Continue Reading…

Simple investing isn’t easy

By Steve Lowrie, CFA

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

In my last post I covered why simplicity often beats complexity, especially when investing.  To quote myself:  “Simplicity is … the art of designing good, simple habits you can effectively implement and readily sustain.”  This keeps you on track toward your personal financial goals, with minimum fuss and maximum cost-management.

So why doesn’t everyone invest simply?  Because it isn’t easy.  We’re often done in by a host of human habits like fear, greed, loss aversion and herd mentality.  These and many other instinct-driven biases trick us into abandoning our good, simple plans whenever the next “all you need to do …” trend comes along.

All you need to do is buy some dividend-paying stocks and you’ll have the income you need.”

All you need to do is buy a few ETFs and you’ll be all set.”

All you need to do is buy a couple hours of financial advice to get you up and running.”

While dividend-paying stocks, ETFs and hourly advice might still have valid roles to play in your plans, these sorts of “how to invest” fads shouldn’t override why you’re investing to begin with.  Plain and simple, your “why” should be guided by your long-term financial goals, like how much wealth you’d like to create or preserve over what period of time.  Your “how” should be grounded in robust academic evidence and time-tested solutions.

Unfortunately, the data tells us investors are often unable to take it easy on hyperactive trading.  For example, a 2017 Vanguard white paper, “Principles for Investing Success,” found that investors would move in and out of mutual funds and ETFs alike in reaction to market mood swings.  They’d also pile into and out of funds according to recent Morningstar ratings.  Instead of patiently embracing an efficient, long-term discipline, they were buying hot, high-priced funds and selling them low, after they’d cooled off.

Vanguard concluded (emphasis ours): “Investors should employ their time and effort up front, on the plan, rather than in evaluating each new idea that hits the headlines.  This simple step can pay off tremendouslyin helping them stay on the path toward their financial goals.”

Simple?  You bet.  Easy?  The evidence suggests otherwise.  That’s why I prefer to work with families upfront and ongoing with respect to their planning and investing.  That’s the only true way I know to ease their way over the long haul.

Steve Lowrie holds the CFA designation and has 25 years of experience dealing with individual investors. Before creating Lowrie Financial in 2009, he worked at various Bay Street brokerage firms both as an advisor and in management. “I help investors ignore the Wall and Bay Street hype and hysteria, and focus on what’s best for themselves.” This blog originally appeared on his site on June 5, 2018 and is republished here with permission. 

Why simplicity beats complexity

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Complexity. It’s hard to avoid.  Tune into the news, and something’s always breaking.  Even in your own life, how many “other” tasks get in the way of the good stuff?

I’m not suggesting you should only do what is immediately gratifying.  There’s considerable enjoyment to be found in taking on tough challenges.  But today I want to focus on why simplicity beats complexity, especially when it comes to your personal finances.

Simplifying your investments

When it comes to writing about investments why reinvent the wheel?  I agree with every point “A Wealth of Common Sense” blogger Ben Carlson makes in this excellent piece, “Why Simple Beats Complex.”  Instead of writing an overly repetitive post, I recommend you give this a read.  Basically, we are prone to using our oversized brains to over-complicate things, especially investments.  Simple advice:  Don’t do that.

Simplifying your finances

While I don’t want to split hairs, there is a subtle, but incredibly important difference between financial goals, financial plans and financial planning.  Knowing the difference helps simplify all three. Continue Reading…

10 tips to simplify your way to Financial Independence

life is simple but we insist on makingit complicatedIn many ways, financial independence is intimately linked with the related themes of voluntary simplicity, inconspicuous consumption and what we call (in the books and e-books) guerrilla frugality.

This blog from Midway Simplicity was published a couple of years ago but nicely picks up on all these themes.

Here at the Financial Independence Hub, we often cite the definition of Financial Independence found at Wikipedia.

But the author of today’s linked blog also has a nice definition:

“Becoming financially independent means having enough money, so that it doesn’t become the main concern or worry in your life. It means having enough money to freely live your life on your own terms. It means that the paycheck doesn’t have control over you anymore and that you can experience life freely and openly.”

Hard to argue with that definition.

So how to you achieve it? The secret is simplicity itself:

“… You achieve financial independence when your income is significantly higher than your needs. 

To achieve that you have to either:

  1. Reduce your needs.
  2. …or increase your income.”