The $80,000 Lifestyle Change|Joel from FI 180 - a podcast by Cody of Fly to FI and Justin aka Saving Sherpa

from 2019-04-02T08:11:01

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On today's episode, Cody and Justin are joined by Joel from FI 180. It's so inspiring to hear someone who had real spending issues and quickly got them under control. Joel wasn't forced to in order to take on debt, he had a wake-up call in the form of a car crash involving his wife.

Unfortunately, sometimes it takes a potentially life-altering event to step back and reevaluate your life. Thankfully Joel's wife is fine and they don't miss their old spending ways.

The transition they made was remarkable. They were set for a life of working into their 70's and quickly make changes that have allowed Joel to retire at 34 and his wife the option to do so whenever she chooses.

Well, go take a listen to today's episode and let us hear what you think.
Episode SummaryJoel’s parents never made a lot of money ($35k per year)
Out of college though Joel started making ~$55kNever having money before he just started blowing it all on crazy things like $3500 t.v.
His wife has always had more financial restraintJoel simply didn’t know how to manage money because he had never had it but wasn’t in debt
Joel’s wife didn’t want to merge finances because of his spending habitsTo combat his spending, he would just continue to work more
About 6 years ago after his wife got in a bad car wreck Joel made his “financial 180”He states that he really doesn’t miss the spending since making his changes
That lavish spending just became normal and wasn’t fun anymoreNow with low spending, anything lavish really seems like a treat
Joel comments on how people don’t see from the outside how much strain the work it takes to live a lavish lifestyle can take on your life when you’re simply viewing a lavish lifestyle on Facebook/InstagramIn 2012 they spend $107,000

$16k shopping, $13k food, $12k travel, $12k bills, $11k cars, etcNow they spend between $25k-30k per year
Their first big move on lowering expenses was going to a one car householdThey continued their transition to lower spending by targeting one thing each month
It took them about three to four years to fully make their transitionJoel states that for them cooking for themselves was the hardest part of the transition
They cut cable, extra car insurance, water delivery, and home monitoring and other things included slowing internet speed, lowering cell phone data packageAfter one year they cut an additional $1,080 a month from their budget
By 2015 they lowered their spending to $34k per yearThey actually went too far and got over 80% savings rate and decided that was the deprivation
Joel has stepped away from working but his wife enjoys work and continues to do soWe discuss how the retire early part of FIRE gets all the attention while the Financial Independent part is much more important
Joel is 34 and they are considering having children but aren’t sureHe talks about how not having a job doesn’t ensure you’ll be productive that it still has to be something you’re motivated to do
It took Joel a few months to build that structure that led to a proactive dayJoel even discusses feeling younger since retiring
We then talk about how Joel built up the confidence to quit his jobHe came up with the quote that “His worst case scenario, is everyone else’s everyday scenario”
That means that if he needs to go back to work, so what, everyone else works, it’s not that scaryThey also decided to pay their house off quicker to remove that fixed cost and make it a little less scary
We end the episode with Joel stressing finding a good work-life balance and not focusing so much on one particular numberKey Takeaways

Having money can be a problem: Joel came out of college with decent pay and no major debt worries. Sounds good right? Well, he also wasn't prepared for how to handle it. He wasn't forced to learn frugal habits early on. While we may never feel sorry for someone in Joel'...

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