The Maintenance Phase

The Maintenance Phase

The Maintenance Phase

The financial independence community does not speak with a single voice. It is a varied population with many nuances involved when it comes to such concepts as enough and early retirement. This is important. Discourse requires that at least two distinct opinions exist. For instance, there are those who believe the safe withdrawal rate of 4% is iron clad and once it is reached, retirement is a sure thing. There are others who are much more conservative, and would never settle till their number was somewhere closer to 2%. The vast majority of us, likely, fall somewhere in-between. Thus, instead of arguing the finer points, I have decided to take a middle ground. The maintenance phase.

We understand and are very comfortable with the accumulation phase. This is the journey to reach enough. And the deaccumulation phase or withdrawal strategy is also the topic of many a blog post.

But at 45 years old I realize that retirement could be as long as fifty years. That’s a lot of time in which almost anything can happen. I prefer to hedge my bets. I prefer to hang out in the maintenance phase.

Half Retirement

It is no secret that I didn’t fully retire. By scaling back my medical practice to an administrative role as a hospice medical director, I was able to continue to find meaning and purpose in my work life while letting go of undue stress. This has solved a number of potential problems.

Working a few days a week provides structure, social interaction, and a sense of social mission. This is of utmost importance when you are looking at potentially decades of leisure. Habit and structure are major components to mental health.

Furthermore, those irritating conversations about what you do for a living are almost completely absent. I’m a hospice doctor! Simple enough.

But most importantly, I have entered the maintenance phase of my career. I am no longer actively building new businesses or revenue streams. No longer searching for new patients to build a practice. Yet I am far from out of the game. This allows maximal enjoyment of my daily work activities with much less of the fear.

Money Anxiety

Most of us have lived with money anxiety for the majority of our careers. To believe that suddenly a certain number in the bank account will make those go away is quite optimistic.

Sometimes we are irrational. No matter how strong our financial plan is, there is always some white or black swan event that makes us worry.

I say, stop worrying. This is one of the best reasons to stave off the deaccumulation phase and remain in the maintenance phase instead. Cut down on work to a half retirement sort of situation which provides enough revenue to pay the monthly bills, but enough freedom to let go of the traditional stresses of the W2 job.

Happy Medium

The Maintenance Phase

I think you can really have it all. You can have the safety of financial security with the freedom of financial independence. You can stop worrying about that pesky safe withdrawal rate and stare down sequence of returns risk with unblinking determination.

Stay in the maintenance phase for awhile. This is the best version of risk mitigation. It is yet another form of asset diversification. You are holding on to the W2 asset class. Maybe you have diminished your holdings a little. But you haven’t abandoned it completely.

Final Thoughts

I am a big proponent of the maintenance phase. If compounding does its job, you will not only stop from withdrawing funds, but your wealth will even accumulate more. In the meantime you will mitigate against the biggest post retirement fears.

You also will provide much needed structure for the decades to come, and maintain social connections.

What could be better?

Doc G

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

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8 Responses

  1. Joey says:

    I think I’m close to the maintenance phase. I’m an academic (not a physician) at a large state university, and currently am a department chair. I will be in that gig for another 3.5 years, then will slide back into a 100% faculty role. There will be a pay cut associated with that – at least 10%, but if I choose to not work in the summers, it will be closer to 33%. The pay cut would hurt, but is doable. My wife is a lecturer at another university, and takes summers off now. I’m 53, so still young enough to physically do the things I want to do, like take long motorcycle trips. I think its a reasonable tradeoff to delay full retirement for a few years so I can do retirement-like stuff now. Especially since I still enjoy my job. And tomorrow is not guaranteed. A couple of things have really made this point to me. One was this summer. I was on a bike trip to Mt. Rainier and ended up chatting with an elderly gentleman in an RV. He and his wife have lived full time in the RV for several years and love it. As we chatting, I talked about this idea of going to 9 months. His eyes teared up a bit and he said I should do it. He had owned a car repair shop in Denver, and said he had lots of regular customers who had been saving up for years and had big plans for their retirement, and just as they got there, one spouse would get sick or die and all those plans and dreams went out the window. Closer to home, one of my colleagues was a year away from retiring and got a cancer diagnosis. He seems to be doing well and just retired, but who knows if it is really gone. This was his second cancer diagnosis.

  2. Ckarion says:

    After much soul-searching I have come to the same conclusion as you did regarding keeping my day job partially. It felt like a cop-out from FIRE at first, but as a like my colleagues and most of my work, and would probably turn into a recluse without a job, it is really for the best 😊
    It is good that there are so many different voices and ways to organize ones life in the FIRE community.

  3. Dont know mind says:

    In terms of security, financial security is about getting a stack big enough to feel secure. But this is an illusion because the future is unknown. We can never be secure from all the possible universes. I guess as you get older maybe you just don’t worry about it as much and it doesn’t really matter. I guess it is about finding balance and peace.

  4. Joe says:

    I’m in the maintenance phase and I’ve always been a big proponent of this phase. I call it the Holdfast phase. Just hold on and avoid/minimize withdrawal. It’s way better than a hard transition into retirement. You have more time to adjust and it’s much easier on your finance. Best of both world.
    Not sure if you’ve seen this one.
    https://retireby40.org/unusual-early-retirement-withdrawal-strategy/

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