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077: Chris Mamula - The Many Paths to Financial Independence

077: Chris Mamula - The Many Paths to Financial Independence

FromMindful Money


077: Chris Mamula - The Many Paths to Financial Independence

FromMindful Money

ratings:
Length:
44 minutes
Released:
Oct 4, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Upcoming Event!How Can Mindfulness Help You Reach Financial Independence?Do you want to reduce money anxiety, but don’t know who to trust?Would you like to learn how to set up and manage your own retirement plan?Do you want to know how we create a passive income stream you can’t outlive?If yes, join us and learn how to answer the 4 critical financial independence questions:Am I on track for financial independence?What do I need to do to get on track?How do I design a mindful investing portfolio?How do I manage that portfolio and my income over time through changing markets?Learn more: https://courses.mindful.money/financial-independence-bootcampChris Mamula documented his personal path to financial independence at Eat the Financial Elephant for several years before leaving his career as a physical therapist in 2017 at age 41. Shortly after, he joined Darrow Kirkpatrick at Can I Retire Yet?, where he continues to follow his calling of helping people live their best lives. He’s the co-author of the book, Choose FI, and his mission is to spread the life-changing message of financial independence to a broader audience. Today, Chris joins the show to talk about common misconceptions around the FIRE Movement, what it means to have a valuist mindset, and why it’s imperative to prioritize saving money.? Watch on YouTubehttps://youtu.be/W-3Jks5aXMsKey Takeaways00:58 – Jonathan introduces today’s guest, Chris Mamula, who joins the show to talk about debt, helping people, and the decision to choose a path towards financial independence, retire early (FIRE)11:20 – FIRE resources and common misconceptions about the FIRE Movement 15:48 – Having a ‘valuist’ mindset 18:08 – Valuing financial independence over retirement21:45 – Statistics around retirement readiness and the vision of ‘Can I Retire Yet’25:49 – How Chris is raising his children to think about money and finances32:22 – The psychology of saving money 37:16 – One thing we can do to increase financial success and one thing to completely ignore39:47 – The last thing Chris changed his mind about41:59 – Jonathan thanks Chris for joining the show and lets listeners know where to connect with himTweetable Quotes“Debt is a part of life for most people - at the very least a mortgage. Virtually no one can buy their first house with cash unless they’re getting a lot of parental support. That’s, unfortunately, a part of life for most people.” (04:50) (Chris)“A ‘valuist’ just means you really line your spending up with your personal values. To me, that kinda just summed up exactly what we were doing.” (15:48) (Chris)“There’s this Warren Buffet idea of giving your kids enough that they can do anything, but not enough that they can do nothing.” (28:58) (Chris)“One of the bigger downsides of reaching financial independence is that I wish I had more impact. But, again, I’m trying to keep perspective of where I’m at in life.” (30:38) (Chris)“If you really dive into the big things that move the needle - housing, cars, food - change those big things, get out of debt so you don’t have your money working against you, and start saving where your money is working for you and it’s surprising how things add up. But you have to make the change and you have to do those big things.” (35:18) (Chris)“If you want to change your financial picture, you have to know where your money is going.” (37:56) (Chris)Guest Resources
Released:
Oct 4, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Do you struggle with money? You’re not alone. Money is a means, not an end. It’s a necessity of life for sure, but more money does not always guarantee a “good life”. Money enables many aspects of modern life, but as a dominant consideration it becomes destructive.  The paradox is that more time and energy spent on personal finance does NOT create better outcomes. Unlike many other parts of life, we can’t create better outcomes by being smarter, spending more time, or putting in more effort. Join Mindful Money author and experienced 40-year investor Jonathan DeYoe as he shares stories from artists, authors, entrepreneurs, and other advisors about how they mindfully minimize their need to think about money and get more out of life. If you aren’t happy with your finances, feel like money takes more time that it should, or want to place your financial decisions into the broader context of your life, this show is for you.  Each episode will draw the line between the “enough” activities that the academics tell us are additive to family outcomes, and those “little bit more” efforts that take time and sap energy, but do NOT improve outcomes. This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy