Life is Risk

Life is Risk

Life is Risk

I used to loathe being an employee. I felt like I was always a slave to the whims of my employer. Exposed. So it was with great excitement that I started a business of my own. Yet, it took only a short period of time to realize that being your own boss carried it’s own perils. The buck stops with you. And so does the revenue. The master solution, I figured, was financial independence. But even now in half retirement, I realize that risk abounds. Without a stable source of income, I could become a victim of the unforeseen. The unexpected. Thus, I have come to the conclusion that life is risk.

We can’t avoid it. Sure, you can try to minimize. We can risk mitigate. But the simple facts remains. Whenever there is choice, there are consequences. Some good. Some bad. It’s a role of the dice.

The Employee Conundrum

We hem and haw about being employees. We feel tied down by the man, strapped to a desk. We are a victim of the worse type of risks. An unfair boss can radically change our job description. Hours can unfairly be restricted or expanded beyond our control. We can get fired. Often at will. Even if we are doing everything right.

We forget, however, that businesses take huge risks by employing us. They shell out all the costs of recruitment, hiring, and training. They may cover health insurance or other perks that can be costly. The worst that can happen to an employee is that they get fired. A business, however, is always at risk for destruction due to aggressive competitors, poor management, or a change in the market.

Being an employer is innately risky also. Life is risk.

Going It Alone

I quickly found, that in medicine, I was much more likely to be able to have control of both my time and my cash flow by starting my own practice. This felt quite empowering. A lowering of risk, so to speak. There would be no boss telling me how much or when to work. No machinations by some administrator cutting my authority or threatening to fire me.

Life is Risk

Sounds great. And it was. But suddenly I was taking on huge amounts of risk and responsibilities that I had never thought about. At the blink of an eye, it was my behind that was on the line if business dried up. Or if the hospital decided to refer patients to another provider, I had no clout to stand up and fight.

I now had employees. And health insurance to cover. And overhead. I had jumped out of one difficult situation and into another. Life is risk, and it didn’t just go away because I was my own boss.

Financial Independence and (Half) Retire Early

As the stress of practicing medicine and owning my own business started to wear on me, I made one last grasp to control the uncertainty in life. Financial independence is the ultimate risk management strategy. By securing my financial future, I could release myself from the bonds of employment, as well as the peril of owning my own business.

Nothing could touch me in financial independence. Except sequence of returns risk. Except a black or white swan event like a health scare. What if the market goes up? What if the stocks goes down? Could a few bad rental market years dry up my cash flow?

Even in financial independence, there were still demons waiting behind every hidden corridor.

Final Thoughts

Life is risk. When there is choice, there is the possibility of choosing incorrectly. We love to think that we can make this risk disappear by changing our situation.

But we can’t.

We can risk mitigate. We can protect ourselves against the knowable and the forseeable. More importantly, we can make choices not out of fear but in keeping with our needs and beliefs. Those who enjoy being employees, and bask in what to them feels like a risk free environment should continue.

Those who feel stuck under the yoke of the man, and need room to grow and breath, should start their own businesses.

And those who want the choice to do neither, but are comfortable with riding the tide (and risks) of their hard earned savings, should pursue financial independence and retire early.

Doc G

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

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13 Responses

  1. Hustle Hawk says:

    What is ‘risky’ for one person may be attractive, exciting or even fun to another.

    “We can risk mitigate. We can protect ourselves against the knowable and the forseeable. More importantly, we can make choices not out of fear but in keeping with our needs and beliefs.”

    >So how can we achieve this state of fear free choice? I think through preparation, planning and practice. Moving towards FI can be a part of this (being a form of preparation and planning and and of itself). As your own story demonstrates, achieving FI can allow business owners to choose to cut-back their working hours or types of work that they would prefer not to do. For an employee, moving towards FI may allow them to choose how much to work and where and when. For the person who has retired, in the traditional or non-traditional sense, the planning and preparation entailed with moving towards FI may allow them to live life safe in the knowledge that their resources should not run out.

    Risk is not a static or fixed concept. The planning, preparation and practice associated with moving towards FI can transform risks which would induce fear into challenges which are known to be manageable, can be overcome and form part of the ebb and flow of daily life.

    HH

    • Doc G says:

      I think the risks are static. Maybe we switch one type for another. It’s our feelings and comfort with the risks that change.

  2. Xrayvsn says:

    Every day we wake up there is a risk we won’t make it back to bed that night. Risk is unavoidable. Some people can’t cope with it/handle any risk and it can become an unhealthy phobia like agoraphobia.

    The key is to balance between enjoying life and except some risk versus taking too much risk.

    • Doc G says:

      I agree. i think people overly use financial independence to make them feel safe. It won’t solve all problems.

  3. Gasem says:

    There’s really only one risk and that’s outliving your resources. How about retire on time? That’s the easiest and most rational way to reduce risk in your life and something you actually can control. You can’t control getting fired or going out of business or getting cancer but you can control the date of retirement. Everybody wants to get cocky and RE, but its the early part that causes the risk to multiply. You get what you pay for. RE buys you a load of extra risk. You pay in reality and psychologically every single day.

    • Doc G says:

      So how do you know what “on time” is?

      • Gasem says:

        You know by measuring the risk. At 62 you get a pension called SS, at 65 access to health care, at 70 your TIRA portfolio is converted on an annuity and you have 20 years left to live. The society is geared around 65 retirement and that is a big determinant of risk. I did a risk analysis between Mustache’s million dollar retirement and an age 70 million dollar retirement by determining the leverage in each projection. Mustache’s risk was more than twice the Geezer and increasing throughout his life because of an increasing likelihood of medical disaster or a similar age related thing. The thing about Geezerdom is the bad stuff that happens to a large extent happens and kills you off early so if you made it to 65 your likelihood of 85 is way better than 85 for the 30 year old and that winnowing process in itself quantifies the risk you have to live with and fund for. The Geezer had virtually no leverage in his life while Mustache has to worry every day and he by no means has his risk even remotely covered because he lives his life like a cheap skate. One wrong move, like a divorce, with half your assets evaporating, and your goose is cooked. So the answer to the question is how much worry are you willing to put up with every day for the rest of your life. Your so called independence is totally dependent on your appetite for worry. For me it was when the risk of continued working (lawsuit, stress, ancillaries like health care for your family) superseded the risk of retirement. At some point your human capital is depleted and the portfolio is more than adequate, based on the actuarial (which is all about risk analysis) and not a stupid 4th grade formula.

  4. Joe says:

    Driving to the grocery store is a risk. We all take risks every day.
    Being your own boss is much tougher than working for a company, but you also have a lot more freedom. It’s a tradeoff I’m willing to make.
    Sometimes you need to take a leap into the unknown. Right?

  5. I agree every choice has risks and rewards. For me, this is balanced by my 20 patients each day reminding me that nothing is ever guaranteed so I am inspired to maximize my NOW. After training, I gravitated toward security and what I thought was low risk with a salaried position until I got fired. Being forced to start my own practice and then group was stressful but I enjoyed being able to create a culture and space that matched my own priorities and I could never be an employee again. I have discovered that the risks I take must be balanced by the energy of possibility and creation and growth to my next thing. Because none of us know when today will be our last day and in reality, everything is really temporary.

  1. March 21, 2019

    […] Love these thoughts about risk from Diverse FI. Whether we decide to continue working full time, start a side hustle, pursue financial freedom, retire early, or any combination of these, there is always risk even if we think we’re mitigating some of it. Read more of his thoughts in “Life is Risk.” […]

  2. March 28, 2019

    […] Love these thoughts about risk from Diverse FI. Whether we decide to continue working full time, start a side hustle, pursue financial freedom, retire early, or any combination of these, there is always risk even if we think we’re mitigating some of it. Read more of his thoughts in “Life is Risk.” […]

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