Financial Independence Is Plan B

Financial Independence IS An Escape HatchFinancial Independence Is Plan B

My origin story is unique.  Not because I climbed out of a simmering pit of debt.  Not because of some side hustle that netted me a million bucks a year.  I am unique because my path to financial independence was quite accidental (Ok, true, there is also PoF and Accidental Fire-but that put’s me in good company).  Based on my experiences, I am going to claim something rather counterintuitive.  Financial independence is not a goal!  Financial independence is plan B.  An escape hatch!  It is a secret pathway, a hidden door, an option when things go south.

I know it’s easy for me to say this being comfortably FI.  But if I have learned anything from this path, it is that retirement is not a goal.  It’s a goal post.

Plan A

Plan A is life.  It’s purpose.  What were you put on this earth to become?  Maybe a father or husband.  Certainly a friend.

This purpose usually involves some kind of work.  For me, it was becoming a doctor.  I spent the first 2/3 of my life gaining the knowledge and skills to enter my profession.  Not because it made me money.  Not because it was a sure path to financial independence.

Being a physician has given me joy and pain.  A consistent reason to wake up every morning and trudge out into the world.  My experiences have lent color and emotion.  I have been bequethed by my father an incredible gift.  Everyday I have the ability to touch those around me and leave a mark.

I can say the same about my businesses and side hustles.  While on the surface they may appear a ruse to increase the bottom line, they actually have been the food that has nourished me.  The thoughts that race through my head when trying to sleep at night.

I wouldn’t give this stuff up for anything.  Not even retirement.

You Are What You OwnPulling The Rip Cord

A few years ago, work started to become less of a joy and more of a hassle.  Electronic medical records where sapping my interaction with patients.  Paperwork was piling up on my desk faster than I could discharge of it.  Patients were angry, insurance companies stubborn, and every day was becoming more of a chore.

Financial independence is plan B.

Back in 2014, I looked at my financials and realized that I was no longer required to lean on my W2 income.  So I exercised plan B.  Not by quitting my job totally, but by whittling it into exactly what I wanted.  I jettisoned the most bothersome aspects of my daily routine.

Is it perfect?  No!  But it’s fun enough to keep showing up every morning.  And that is enough.

Don’t Throw The Baby Out

Even though financial independence is plan B, it would be silly not to prepare accordingly.  In fact, I would argue that you should put as much effort into developing plan B as you do plan A.

Thus, you still have to live frugally and budget appropriately.  I would still save a large percentage of income and learn about investing.

You wouldn’t want to rely on a faulty escape hatch.

In Summary

I strongly encourage you to look at your life and job as plan A.  Go into the work place with every intention of enjoying yourself and changing the world.  Don’t waste decades of your life being miserable and wasting precious hours.

You can never get those hours back.

Financial independence is plan B.  Work on plan B in parallel to plan A.  Have your escape hatch well-defined and mentally practice using it every once in a while.

And when plan A gets frayed, tangled, and torn, you will be happy that plan B is firmly in place.

Now all you have to do is learn how to avoid the one more year syndrome!  But that, in itself, is its own blog post.

How about you?  Do you see financial independence as plan A or Plan B?  Are you going to quit the minute you hit a certain net worth or do you plan to stay in the workplace?

Doc G

A doctor who discovered the FI community but still struggling with RE.

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39 Responses

  1. Dave says:

    Great post, Doc. There is a large gap between Plan A and reaching FIRE. If I just focused on retirement for 2-3 decades life would have passed me by. My approach was to try to bring as much as possible to the daily unpleasantries of work. Like you, I also focused on Plan B or reaching FI. After I reached FI, I have started to focus less on the negatives of work.

  2. Great concept. Retirement should not be the carrot that keeps you going. If you spend every day longing for the future, it saps the joy out of today.

    Dr. Cory S. Fawcett
    Prescription for Financial Success

  3. Xrayvsn says:

    I agree that if you only concentrate on the end goal you wind up missing potential joys in the present. As I do approach the goal posts I find myself able to have a better attitude at work, taking more time off (I highly recommend that everyone experiences a 4 day work week which does wonders for your mental health). If I could get it down to 3 day work week I honestly could extend my career by a decade.

  4. This is a great way to look at it. Too many times in life, we think we’ll be happy “WHEN”.

  5. Waiting for fire is a bad way to live. Living your life with options is a great way to go. Good post

  6. Ms ZiYou says:

    See, my day job isn’t really as purposeful as being a doctor, hence I vote financial independence is my Plan A. Don’t get me wrong I like and enjoy my job, but I have no illusion I am doing anything other than increasing shareholder value.

  7. Okay, this is the way I’m going to explain FI to new people now when they ask why I’m so focused even though I don’t want to RE. Well said.

  8. Gasem says:

    During the course of my plan A I didn’t think much about plan B except I was relentless about funding B. I was focused on A, building a practice enjoying my family and friends, getting my kids ready to be adults, and plan A suited me just fine. One day I was looking at my medicare wages and added them up and saw I had way more in the bank than I had spent on the preceding 50 work years of my life, the expensive 50 years when I became debt free, sent 2 kids to college, bought a house, bought several cars vacationed all over the place, purchased a retirement portfolio etc etc. I realized on that day, every day I went to work, all I was purchasing with my time was risk. I wasn’t going to live another 50 years. Even I’m not stupid enough to pay for risk with my remaining time. I realized I’d already made all the money and helped all the people. A little dab more dough or a few more people wasn’t going to make a lick of difference. My partner and I had already succession planned the future at the center where we were the anesthesiologists, since he was about 3 years older than me and getting ready to pull the trigger, so that jam had already been kicked out. I realized I was a month from completing one more year of SS eligibility, so I got together some health care for me and my family and 2 months later I was AMF. So for me it was an exercise in risk management not wealth procurement or job satisfaction. It was a natural and organic progression from A to B. My diligence in purchasing B meant my future security and my wife’s future security are assured. My time is 100% my own.

    • Doc G says:

      Gasem, you are a perfect example. Plan B was well formed but you had no intention of exercising it till the right time!

  9. Another great post Doc, and thanks for the mention. I am indeed well into my Plan B, while still trying to maintain the existence of my Plan A, or at least the less sucky parts. So far Plan B is suiting me well 🙂

    • Doc G says:

      I would say that you are actually still in Plan A since you are working. But that’s the magic of having a great Plan B. You can do whatever you want!

  10. Lane Beck says:

    Absolutely agree. FI like money is just a tool. Your life is a precious journey with personal contentment and making a positive contribution to society as important goals,… for me, anyway.

    • Doc G says:

      Hey Lane. Thanks for stopping by.
      Your life is a precious journey with personal contentment and making a positive contribution to society as important

      I like this!

  11. My plan A is exactly as you described. Living a full life and having a meaningful career. Raising kids and spending money. No plans to retire early. But I’m very very cognizant of plan B as well. It’s a parallel plan, running in the background. I check it and feed it regularly, making sure it’s healthy and strong. Then one day, when plan A gets a little tired and old, I’ll cut back my hours and go to plan A-/B+.

  12. This is a great post. I do think Plan A and B should be worked concurrently. However, seeing as my Plan A (job wise) isn’t nearly as fulfilling as being a doctor, should I sacrifice pay and do something I enjoy more? That would delay my Plan B though, and potentially by a significant amount. It’s definitely a tough question, but one I’ve been pondering for a little while now. I’m sure I’ll come to a conclusion in the near future 🙂

  13. Annabelle says:

    I really enjoyed this article because many times, when I read an article in the FIRE community, it seems like FIRE is the ultimate life goal and that part always bothers me a little bit. I try to enjoy life to the fullest. I enjoy time with my family: I see my parents daily as we live 2 blocks from each other. I get to take my daughter to school and do homework with her and spend meaningful time with her. I have date nights with my husband. I also enjoy going to my office every morning. I work with people I like and I have wonderful patients who care about me as I care about them. I travel often (5tines a year) because that’s my hobby, one of my passions. I work on plan B and hope I can reach FI, mainly to give me peace of mind but at the end, we need to live for today cuz tomorrow is not a guarantee

    • Doc G says:

      Hey Annabelle. My father died st the age of forty so I know what you mean. FIRE is a great goal, but it’s just a road marker, not a destination!

  14. Dr. McFrugal says:

    This is an excellent way to conceptualize financial independence. I have to do a better job of living Plan A while not overly obsessing about Plan B…

  15. I do agree the financial Independence for most(me at least) is probably more than just retiring early. It’s more about finding your path in life and for a lot of people that doesn’t include the 9 to 5 job they may currently be doing. I’m not necessarily trying to get out of the grind, I’m just trying to give myself some options when I’m in my 40s and potentially getting tired of the grind.

  16. Joel says:

    Awesome post. Looking forward to the one on ‘how to avoid the one more year syndrome’ 🙂 Wish I read it a few years ago!
    Cheers!

  17. Joel says:

    4.45 is the new 5am! That’s awesome. How long have you been doing that for? I’m curious to hear your routine too!

    • Doc G says:

      About 5 years. I’m 44 now so getting older. I usually see patients early in morning and Home 2-3pm.

  18. Thank you for referencing this article today in our group chat. As someone who is also fulfilled with my job, this bit of perspective is refreshing and comes about a week before the birth of my second child. Never sacrifice Plan A in hopes of some day creating Plan B. Mic drop.

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