Late Starter to FI series #12 – Mama Purple

Welcome to the Late Starter to FI series!

Like many others, I was distressed by the murder of George Floyd and what his and others’ deaths at the hands of police reveal about the injustice and systemic racism experienced by people of colour in America.

As a non American, I am not comfortable commenting on American situations. But racism and systemic racism is not confined to America. My personal experience can attest to that.

So I will take the opportunity here to say I denounce racism in all its forms – be they casual or systemic. I haven’t spoken up much in the past because I hate confrontations (even though I can be fiery). I tend to let things be and move on.

But that now seems I am complicit in not doing anything about it.

If you are a regular reader, you will know that I share stories of Late Starters in this series – specifically, those of us who start our Financial Independence journeys in our 40s, 50s and 60s.

I am committed to sharing everyone’s stories – it doesn’t matter if you are single, married, divorced, who you love, what your religious creed is and your skin colour most certainly does not matter one single iota. We are an inclusive community.

Today’s Late Starter, Mama Purple is an American woman of colour. Not only did she start her FI journey late, she has RETIRED – at age 55, showing us that it is indeed possible to start late and retire early. In the context of what we know now as systemic racial discrimination, her story is even more remarkable. This is my interpretation.

I first heard her story on Bigger Pockets Money podcast 111 and invited her to share her story with us. I am so glad she said yes. She is not a blogger though her daughter writes about finance, travel, food and her imminent retirement at A Purple Life.

Without further ado, here is Mama Purple in her own words ….

Photo by Vincentiu Solomon on Unsplash

My background

I’m a 61 year old black woman who retired from Corporate America 5 years ago. I was raised in a military family who moved every 2-3 years. I went to 4 different elementary schools in 3 different states and 1 different country during my school years (age 5-12). 

I loved moving and did not mind being the “new kid” at every school I went to. I think this is part of why I was comfortable working at 11 different companies over my 33 years in the workforce.

I have an undergraduate degree in Chemical Engineering and an MBA. However, for most of my working career, I worked in Human Resources. Now that I am retired, I feel that I am finally “living” whereas when I was working, I felt like I was only “existing”.

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My relationship with money

Ever since I was a child, I have had a very close relationship with money.

For my 10th birthday, I was given a piggy bank that was a bank vault with a combination and any money I received or found went into the vault. My older sisters would always ask to borrow money from me and I would write out IOUs for them. I loved counting and accumulating money and nothing changed as I got older.

However a bad decision from my younger days was not investing in the stock market and my 401(k) until I was 40 years old. I did not like the thought of being told I would be penalised if I withdrew my money before age 59 1/2. I also knew nothing about the stock market so I was clueless for many years.

I made sure our kids knew about investing early and how little they would have to invest if they started early. 

FIRE concept and why it is appealing

My parents retired at age 50 and I noticed how they went to visit their grandchildren in other states, every month and would stay for 2 weeks. They took exotic trips. They made decisions to do things at the last minute.

Once I had my daughter, my mother stayed with me for an entire year to care for her and help me. I lived in a different state, 800 miles from where my parents lived and by coming to live with me (so that I did not have to put my daughter into daycare until she could talk), it meant she left my father to fend for himself.

At the same time I was observing my parents and their retirement, I felt so unhappy and unfulfilled in my job. My parents’ retirement was that initial “lightbulb” moment for me to put “retirement” into my head, but I didn’t act on it for another 10 years.

My parents retired at 50 – I was 20. I didn’t start to think about FI for myself until I had my daughter when I was 30. This was when I started my first of 3 (failed) attempts at having my own side business, thinking this was the only way I could dictate my life and future.

This is also when I began taking more risks in terms of my full time jobs and staying at jobs no more than 2-3 years in search of something “better” or more “fulfilling” … but still not finding it.

The concept of FIRE was introduced to me by my daughter years later. 

My financial situation at 40

I was married for the second time and had my daughter (A Purple Life) who was 10.

Prior to age 40, I paid off my grad school debt in one year and had no other debt except our mortgage (on 2 homes – we turned our previous home into a rental).

We lived in Georgia and when I moved there, I vowed that if I ever had a child, I would never place them in the public school system. So my daughter went to private school from age 4 until she graduated from college. 

My husband and I had previously saved our money in a savings account, but made no investments. We always put more money than was owed on both mortgages so that we could own our homes sooner that the 30 year mortgage.

But because we had 3 children (my daughter and my husband had 2 from a previous marriage), private school for my child was not in the budget. I began teaching online at 2 different universities. I was able to work at my full time job and then at night, I would teach online to pay for that schooling. 

It was that teaching online job that made me realise how critical having a second source of income was and also how “freeing” it was not to be so dependent on my full time job. But it also made it possible to fund my daughter’s private school education without going into any debt. 

My parents always taught me not to live beyond my means and they also taught me to always have at least 6 months of living expenses saved “just in case”. My husband and I both adopted this way of living.

First steps on the FI path

The first step on my FI path was to plan how to pay off our mortgage on our primary residence before I retired. The next step was to determine how we would pay for our 3 children to complete college without us taking out any loans.

Once these two major hurdles were figured out, we then invested as much money as possible into our 401(k)s.

My journey took 15 years – from age 40 to 55. A significant step was never having any debt and paying off our mortgage. All our other expenses then seemed very negligible and optional.

Factors affecting my finances

We had 3 children in college at the same time. I had two parents who had health issues when they both came to Georgia to live with us. My father came and was hospitalised then passed away. My mother came to stay with us 10 years later for 2 years while she was ill.

We began investing in the stock market right before 9/11 so our timing was awful and our faith in investing was low. It was at this time however, that I put pen to paper to determine how we could retire sooner rather than later.

At age 45, I tried to convince my husband to look at my “proposal” to retire and it took 5 years plus 3 financial advisors to convince him that my plan would work.

Challenges of starting FI late

A challenge is believing that investing late in life will allow you to still retire before age 62. 

How to overcome this is to put pen to paper and write down ALL actual and possible annual expenses and then determine ALL income sources. Write down the worst case scenarios for unexpected expenses on a timeline.

Once these numbers are determined, use a retirement calculator to create an estimate of investment income needed over time.

Financial situation now

I have been retired for 5 years now (I retired at age 55). I knew that we would need a “bridge” to get us from age 55 to the age we would be drawing on social security as well as a small pension that I will receive.

That “bridge” would consist of our cash savings, distributions from our investments, my husband’s pension and our rental income. Knowing that my calculations have worked and that we are now “over the bridge”, I am feeling extremely pleased.

Social security, pensions and our current cash is enough to sustain us for the rest of our lives.

What's next?

Travelling with my soon to be FI daughter!! We are setting off in October to travel around Australia and New Zealand for 6 weeks – by far our longest vacation together!

Back to Latestarterfire

Thank you for sharing your story, Mama Purple. 

Many of us embark on our own FI journeys later in life, hoping that our calculations, our savings and investment will work out and that we will be able to retire early. But you have actually done it! 

That gives me so much hope, thank you.

Reading your story makes me reflect on intergenerational wealth – and that our money stories are powerful, that they influence the next generation. Your parents’ story influenced you and your story affects your daughter. When A Purple Life retires at 30, she will be third generation FIRE. How amazing is that! 

How did your parents' money stories influence your FI journey?

Late Starter to FI series #11 – Early Retirement Earl

Welcome to the Late Starter to FI series!

I am a Late Starter – I did not discover FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early) concept until I was 47. This was way later, I thought than others who seem to have it all together in their 20s and 30s.

Since I started to write about my own journey, I have discovered there are many more Late Starters like me, yay! It is such a relief knowing I am not alone. 

I want to share our stories, our unique perspectives and show that it is absolutely not too late for us.

So in this series, I particularly highlight those of us who start our FI journeys in our 40s, 50s and 60s. And explore questions such as ‘where do we start’, ‘can we still retire early(ish)’, ‘what are the specific challenges for us late starters’. We look at our past, not to castigate ourselves but so that you can learn from us.

Please join in the conversation in the comments below. I encourage you to share your story if you fit the profile of a late starter. You absolutely don’t have to be a blogger or podcaster to share your story. Please email me at info@latestarterfire.com or connect with me on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram

 

Today, we meet Earl who writes at earlyretirementearl.com where he shares his journey to financial freedom and early retirement with the hope of quitting the rat race. His story is gritty and real. He shares very personal information here – thank you, Earl.  

Photo by Mohamed Ajufaan on Unsplash

A little about me

My name is Earl Owens. I live in Rockland County, New York and have three young children. I am 46 years old and I hope to reach FI within the next 3 years.

I have spent the last 25 years working for the same company and I work my ass off today so one day I won’t be obligated to work at all. My hobbies are my kids basically. Between the sacrifices I made at work over my career and having 3 children in my forties, I have time for very little else. I spend what little spare time I have writing about early retirement or catching up with old friends.

You can connect with me on Twitter @misterash13 and earlyretirementearl.com 

A brief look back

Looking back, I always needed to figure out how to stretch a dollar. I was raised with my brother and two sisters by a single mother. My mother passed away when I was 19 and I needed to figure out how to live on my own. As sad as this is, it taught me the value of money as well as how to stretch a dollar to its limit.

I also blame these circumstances for my recklessness in my late 20s and early 30s. As I started earning more money, it was time to party. After all, I had earned it after everything I went through. At least that is how I rationalised it in my mind. I wasted a good portion of my prime saving years engaging in wasteful spending. Although I do have to admit, I had a lot of fun.

As I grew out of that phase, I made what I thought at the time were sound financial decisions. I paid off my college loans early; I contributed to my 401k. And I stopped renting and bought a 2 bedroom condo. Even though I wasn’t very knowledgeable about personal finance, I got a bit lucky in that my employer took care of us with a great match and discretionary contribution each year. When the time came to sell my condo, I made a decent profit of about $35 000. I sold just before the crisis of 2008.

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My light bulb moment

I don’t think I can pinpoint a single moment that sent me on the path t FI. I never truly loved my career. It chose me more than I chose it. Once I got over my reckless phase and chose to fully commit to my job, I tried to take it all the way. Promotion after promotion and raise after raise, I slowly started to grow a very respectable 401k. The silver lining for me would be the final promotion where I would be making in excess of $250 000 per year.

The light went on more like a dimmer switch slowly fading to full illumination as with each passing day I realised slightly more that the promotion I had worked so hard for and sacrificed so much for, probably wasn’t going to happen.

My hopes for early retirement were tied to that promotion. What a wonderful nest egg I could build with an income exceeding a quarter of a million dollars per year. As the prospects of promotion faded so did my passion for my career. Aside from my 401k, I started saving for early retirement long before I ever discovered the FIRE movement and all the information available on early retirement. I was just fed up with work and was desperate to get enough money to have the power over my employer to tell them to scratch off.

Discovering FIRE

I can’t remember how I discovered FIRE. Like I said, it was a gradual awakening for me. I recall googling about early retirement, things like ‘how soon can I retire’ or ‘how much do I need to retire’. I think one of the first discoveries I made that really opened my eyes was the Bengan study of the 4% rule and safe withdrawal rates.

That was when the lightbulb in my mind truly went off. I couldn’t believe how little was actually required to retire or how long money could last if done right. I wrote about it here – How long will my saving last? The 4% rule simplified 

I read countless books and blog posts and listened to interviews and podcasts and just absorbed as much information about personal finance as I can. Somewhere along the way, I discovered Mr Money Mustache and ChooseFI, Campfire Finance and of course, Latestarterfire.

Discovering FIRE not only reinforced what I was already dedicated to achieving with my freedom fund, it lit a fire (pun fully intended) under my ass and I became obsessed with achieving FI and sharing as much information as I could via my own blog.

Taking steps on the path to FI

I was on the path to FI before I knew it. I was lucky enough to have a 401k in place, and once I ‘grew up’ I was smart enough not to allow myself to go back into debt. My next step was to fully commit to saving every penny possible and consistently re evaluating and looking for ways to get better and achieve FI earlier.

About 2 years ago, I did the math and realised that if I never contributed another penny to my 401k it would probably be enough for me to live on for the rest of my life. I decided to stop all contributions except for the minimum required to get the match. 

I currently put that money into my freedom fund instead. I drive a car with 165 000 miles on it and save the $500 a month that most people put towards a car payment. Anytime I receive a bonus from work, guess where it goes? You guessed it, the freedom fund. Quarterly dividends from my 401k stocks? The freedom fund. I got a $10 cheque from a City MD for over payment recently … straight to the freedom fund it went.

One way I deviate from a good majority of FI enthusiasts is that I do not intend to pay down the mortgage. I just don’t believe in including your home equity as part of your net worth. To me, if it ain’t liquid, it ain’t money. I can cash out my shares of IBM in an instant and write a check to buy goods. The equity on my house, not so much.

My current goal is to build a freedom fund large enough that I can quit working and use the freedom fund to pay my expenses from the time I stop working to 59 1/2 when I can begin taking 401k contributions. I expect that the path I am on now would lead me to my destination in about 3 years.

I don’t know if I WILL quit working in 3 years but I certainly hope I CAN if I want to. That type of leverage over your employer must be incredibly empowering. And from what Mr Money Mustaches tells me, work is more fun when you don’t have to do it.

My Freedom Fund

As I mentioned earlier, I was lucky enough that my employer not only offered a 401k but basically forced us to activate it and then dumped money into it for us. My employer has already contributed over double what I have into my 401k and the growth has been double both my and my employer’s contributions combined. So I have been fortunate.

Once I understood that early retirement was an actual possibility, I did the math and learned that my 401k was to the point where it was basically self sustaining. At this point in my career, I contribute $1000 to my 401k each year and my employer contributes $500 plus 9% of my salary. I have been with the same company for 25 years so my salary has grown to a nice size at this point. I am 46 now so by the time I turn 59 1/2 and can withdraw from my 401k penalty free, it will have grown to the point where I could withdraw 4% every year, never run out of money and still have a pretty little inheritance for my kids.

My freedom fund is a fund I started about 3 years ago. The freedom fund is what I will live off of until the day I can begin living off my 401k penalty free. I dump every spare dollar I get into the freedom fund these days. When I first started it, I opened up an ETrade account and I was just having some fun picking individual stocks. I did OK. I doubled up on OLLI; I got in and out of companies like Intel, Seagate, Disney and Facebook with nice little chunks of profit. I had a lot of fun. Then GE happened and I realised this isn’t as easy as I thought. L Brands also hit me with a nice loss as did Kraft Heinz.

As time went on and my freedom fund quickly grew to over 6 figures, I took a safer, lower maintenance approach and started putting the bulk of my contributions into index funds. I still do individual stocks but the bulk of my funds are in index funds now. I am also fascinated by the possibility of living off dividends so I have several dividend stocks as well.

Challenges and benefits of starting late to FI

The best benefit I can think of is that I got to live my life when I was younger. I did not sacrifice which means I enjoyed my 20s and early 30s to the fullest.

The biggest challenge is simply getting out of bed in the morning to go to a job that I am no longer passionate about. I try not to dwell on mistakes of the past but it is very difficult sometimes to not look back and think about what I would have done differently.

A little simple math reveals that if I had just sacrificed a few more drinks, or that vacation to Ireland etc I would be done working already. 

I try to stay motivated by looking to the future and knowing the good decisions I am making now and for the last several years will pay off. I am currently looking at retirement before the age of 50 despite a late start and making several mistakes along the way. To me, that is astounding. Coming from a single parent family, the youngest of 4 siblings, having been homeless twice in my life … I consider myself to be a great American success story.

From my past to my present

I am currently about 3 years away from FI. There are several factors that affect this and will affect my decision to retire or keep working. I am married and have kids. We spend probably more money than we should. For starters, we live in an area where property taxes alone are enough to break a frugal budget. We like to vacation. 

I love a good steak. One of my few indulgences is a Rib Eye cooked medium rare with a baked potato and some Bernaise sauce. Capital Grille makes one with porcini mushroom and balsamic rub that is quite possibly the top 2 or 3 on my list of all time steaks.

 

Photo by Alex Munsell on Unsplash

I got off track there, sorry, I am passionate about my steaks. The point is, I may opt to work longer to support a more indulgent lifestyle. I will decide when the time comes. That is the great thing about FI – the ability to choose!

OK, so before I get to what’s next for me, let’s address the elephant in the room that I glossed over earlier. Yes I was homeless. Twice. I don’t really like to advertise it but it is a big part of what made me who I am so let’s get to it.

My Dad left us when I was just a baby. My mother raised us alone with help from her mother. Dear ol’ dad contributed just about nothing. So I didn’t really have any excess growing up. We didn’t take vacations. If I wanted a new bike, I got a paper route and worked to save up for a new bike. I was delivering newspapers at 7 years old. Times were very different in the early 80s.

We didn’t have much but we lived in a decent size house with a huge backyard. Unfortunately for us when I was 10 years old, the man we rented from just sorta stopped paying his mortgage and out we went. I can’t even imagine how that must have been for my Mom. To make things worse, my grandmother, who went to live at a friend’s house had a heart attack and died a few weeks later. That was my first experience of having no home and also my first experience losing a loved one. All within the same month at 10 years old.

The second time I had nowhere to live was when my Mom died. I was 19 years old. Lucky for me, my older sister took me in so I wasn’t really homeless but still a pretty shitty situation to be in. It wouldn’t last long as I would take the little amount of money that was left to me by my Mom and use it to get an apartment on my own. A little one bedroom with hand me down furniture but it was mine.

I had spent my entire youth being responsible. Delivering newspapers to earn money. Taking care of my Mom when she became sick. And venturing out on my own after she died. Being forced to have so many responsibilities at such a young age and never really having any money to splurge led to me being reckless in my 20s and 30s. 

Some highlights:

I took out a personal loan for a motorcycle.

I would go out drinking after work every night. I mean every single night. $100 bar tabs nightly. What a waste.

I started smoking. I have since quit and what a money savings that was.

I once put a trip to Cancun on the credit card.

It got so bad that I wound up with no credit cards, living pay check to pay check and when my car broke down, I had to borrow money from a friend to rent a car just to get to work.

There were times when I would sell of part of my old baseball card collection just to have enough money to pay the rent.

It took me several years to get that out of my system. When I did, the bill came due and it wasn’t easy but luckily I knew how to be responsible. I hadn’t racked up much debt because I had no credit cards but I had a car that barely drove. I was living paycheck to paycheck, digging for spare change that last day or two before pay day, and now developed a dirty and expensive habit of smoking a pack of parliament a day. 

During these years I had purchased my first condo so I had made at least one good decision. Problem was, I was so busy spending money on leisure that I fell behind on the mortgage. My wake up call came when my cell phone rang one day while I was drinking alone at a strip club. On the line was my mortgage lender asking me why I was behind as I “make more than enough money”.

At that point, I knew I was being irresponsible and needed to make some changes. It didn’t happen all at once. I slowly began taking back control of my finances. I got caught up on all my bills, applied for a few credit cards, started a little savings fund. It would take years before I could finally kick the smoking habit but by the time I did, I knew exactly what to do with the newfound money I would have from not spending 10 bucks a day on a pack of smokes.

I think I am blessed for the experiences I had and I feel came out the other end a better man. I feel I am a more dedicated father because I chose not to have kids for so long until I was ready. That was a conscious decision made by a guy who understood the level of responsibility it takes to be a father as he had watched his own father fail at it. I also saw the financial burden that it had put on my mother.

I know what it is like to grow up without a dad and what it is like to grow up poor. I will not allow my children to go through that. I would shovel shit onto a plate and eat it if that is what it took to keep food on the table for my children and a roof over their heads.

I have been through a lot. I understand I am not alone in that and many people have it worse which is why I don’t choose to broadcast my past very often.

I am proud to call myself a success. I am a millionaire who was once homeless. If my story can inspire even one person who is like I once was, then I feel I have done my duty. 

As a society through schooling and parenting, I feel we fail miserably at teaching personal finance and financial responsibility. I feel those that make it owe it to the next generation to pass on what they have learned. Nobody taught me about compound interest or the 4% rule when I was younger and it pisses me off. So I will do what I can to pass this information along to others, especially my own kids.

What's next

What’s next for me is hopefully the option to stop working some time within the next 3 years. It will be nice to be there for my children during their formative years the way my father wasn’t. I look forward to a life without the stress of work life or the obligation of having to commute an hour plus each way every day to work 9 plus hours at a job that does little to excite me.

I hope to teach my children all the values of money that were taught to me; and the principles of FI that weren’t.

I hope they are able to learn from my mistakes and be more responsible than I was while not forgetting to enjoy life.

I hope to contribute to the FI community through regular blog posts and on Twitter.

COVID 19 update

Over the last few months, quite a lot has changed in the world, America, the stock market, my portfolio and my FIRE situation.

For starters, I am lucky. I lost over 30% of my life savings in March but I remain lucky. I am still working every day and receiving an income.

I am lucky that none of my family has fallen ill with corona virus.

I am lucky that I have a fully funded emergency fund and even more lucky that I have not yet needed to tap into it.

I am lucky that I have taken the necessary steps over the last 25 years to put me into a position that a 30% loss, while quite disheartening, did not completely derail me.

I am lucky that a good portion of that loss has already come back to me and I have quickly sold some of my more risky stock investments.

Overall, my financial outlook has not changed much since COVID 19 has invaded our world. I still commit over 30% of my total net income to savings and investments although I am keeping a larger portion in cash now.

I am at about 20% cash.

I fully intend to take advantage of the penalty free 401k withdrawal in accordance with the CARES Act. I know this flies in the face of conventional wisdom. However, I feel my 401k is at a point where $50k will not have any significant impact to my livelihood in my late 60s. But it can have a huge impact in helping me to cross the finish line into early retirement.

The main lesson I have learned from COVID 19 is that no matter how much you plan, things can change drastically on a dime. This has caused me to be even MORE driven to achieve FIRE as quickly as possible and may even lead to me exiting the full time work force earlier than I had originally intended.

COVID 19 has reinforced in me the reason I desired FIRE in the first place. And that is to spend more time enjoying life on MY terms. Continuing to spend many hours at a job that I am not passionate about dose not align with my goals.

In short, life is short, live it now because later there may not be time.

Back to Latestarterfire

Thank you for sharing your story, Earl. I can’t imagine all the hardship in you suffered in your early years. And yet, those experiences have informed your choices and decisions later in life. I admire your determination to provide a better life for your children. And your desire to retire early so as to spend more time with your family.

I am very happy that COVID 19 has not derailed your FIRE plans. Instead it has reinforced your desire for FIRE and you may quit the rat race earlier than you think! Amazing!

I look forward to following your onward journey to financial freedom and early retirement. 

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