Financial Feminist - 51. How to Live a Regret-Free Life with Doc G
Episode Date: October 25, 2022What do the dying have to teach us about money? Doc G (aka Jordan Grumet) learned firsthand what constitutes a regret-free life while working in hospice and now teaches others how to do the same. In t...his episode, Doc G and Tori discuss financial independence through the lens of living a full life while also getting smart with your finances, Doc G’s parable of the three brothers, and why hitting the title of “FI/RE” isn’t always what it’s cracked up to be. Learn more about our guests, read episode transcripts, get resources from the show, and more on our show notes page: https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/living-regret-free Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, financial feminists. Hello. Welcome back. So excited to see all y'all here. As
always, reminder to review, subscribe to the show, leave us a review, tell us the weirdest
way you've ever made money, tell us who you'd like to see in the show, tell us what you're
loving. If you have a topic you'd like us to cover, leave us a review, send us a voicemail.
We love hearing from you. It makes us very, very happy. Today's guest has been a longtime
friend and support of Financial Feminist. I've been on his show, and we're just thrilled to have him join us to share his incredibly unique
perspective on life, death, and how that affects what we do with our finances. If you loved Ramit
Sethi's episode we did a little bit ago, this is also in the same realm. One of the most important
and inspirational episodes I think we've ever done, and was just such a lovely conversation. So we're so excited to welcome him here today.
Jordan Grumet, aka Doc G's, interest in becoming a doctor was ignited when his father,
an oncologist, died unexpectedly in the prime of his life. This profound loss not only inspired
him to practice medicine, but it has given him a unique perspective as a finance expert,
challenging him to think deeply
and critically about concepts like wealth, abundance, and financial independence.
After graduating from the University of Michigan, Jordan received his medical degree from
Northwestern University and began practicing internal medicine in Northbrook, Illinois.
He currently is an associate medical director at Journey Care Hospice.
After years of blogging about financial independence and wellness,
Jordan launched the Earn and Invest podcast in 2018. In 2019, he received the Plutus Award for Best New
Personal Finance Podcast and was nominated in 2020 and 2021 for Best Personal Finance Podcast
of the Year. His book, Taking Stock, A Hospice Doctor's Advice on Financial Independence,
Building Wealth and Living a Regret-Free Life was released in August 2022
and is available wherever you get your books. This episode is so impactful and hearing from
Doc G about his work with dying patients and how they talk about their regrets and the life they
lived will absolutely make you reevaluate the way you might be handling your finances and the way
you're living your life. We're getting into the toxic side of the financial independence movement, how you can balance saving for
retirement and living life now, and so much more. So let's go ahead and get into it.
Where are you based right now? I'm in Chicago.
That is like one of the major US citiesS. cities I've not been to.
I've like been to the airport and that is it.
And I think I'd really like it.
Don't bother in the winter, but come in the summer.
It's a beautiful place in the summer.
Is it really hot?
Is it really hot in the summer?
It gets there.
I feel like, and I don't think anyone agrees with me.
I've been like, oh, the summers have been mild and everyone's looking at me going, no, they've been horrible.
You and I have known each other for a couple of years. You were so
willing to come and have me on your show. And we are so excited to chat with you about, I think,
a really interesting topic that doesn't get discussed enough. So give us some background
for you. You're at this like interesting intersection where you're a former hospice
doctor who also teaches about personal finance. So can you give us the backstory of what brought you to that and then how it
influenced you to talk about money? So when I was seven years old, my father died suddenly
and unexpectedly, and he was an oncologist or cancer doctor. And at that age, I wanted to be
just like him. I mean, somewhere deep down inside as a little kid, I almost felt responsible like little kids do because the only lens we look at things through
is a self-centered one. So I had it in my head that this is what I was going to do with my life.
It became my identity and passion. And that carried me all the way through medical school
and practice. When I started practicing, I burned out fairly quickly. And I realized that there were
parts of medicine I loved, but I needed to get out. It was stressful. I was not sleeping. I was working too hard. And at
that point, I discovered the financial independence movement. A guy named Jim Dolly actually sent me
his book to review for my medical blog. He's the white coat investor. The book was the white coat
investor. And I read it and it was this huge epiphany. My parents had given me such great
modeling on how to manage my finances. So I had owned real estate. I was investing and it was this huge epiphany. My parents had given me such great modeling on how
to manage my finances. So I had owned real estate. I was investing. I was doing all the right things.
I was saving, but I didn't understand the vocabulary. His book taught me that I was
financially independent. The next few years, I transitioned from identifying as a doctor to
moving away from that to being more of a communicator, a blogger, a writer, a podcaster.
I really loved talking about personal finance. As you know, I started the What's Up Next podcast, which became
Earn and Invest. And we were having these 202 conversations about finance. So the 101, how to
figure out your money, how to invest, how to do real estate, all that stuff. There were so many
great people managing that already. I wanted to have that kind of next level conversation of, okay, you're getting your money in order. What next? And
strangely enough, a lot of the answers to those 202 questions I was, or the 201 questions I was
getting from taking care of hospice or dying patients who were voicing these regrets about
life. And I said, aha, like the dying have a lot to tell us about what's important,
what isn't important. And when they get to their end of life, what do they regret? And I just felt
like that could teach all of us younger people who are not terminally ill, what kind of things
should we be thinking about now so we don't have those regrets? Yeah, the dying can teach us a lot
about living. Yeah, I think you're exactly right where there's a lot of discussion about,
you know, and we do it here at Financial Feminist about, you know, how to budget,
how to save, how to start investing. But I think there's less discussion of, okay,
I got that together, what happens next? And so what sort of themes or, you know,
you said you were talking to people, what did they bring up a lot? Like,
what were the common threads that you heard? So especially with the dying, what I'd find is that they didn't regret not working nights and
weekends. They didn't regret not hitting some type of net worth number. What they mostly regretted
is that there were these themes in their life, these things of importance, and they never had
the courage or time to explore them. It wasn't what they failed
at in life. It's what they didn't put enough time into. And we have this habit of putting
off important things in our life. And often, believe it or not, money becomes an excuse
because we think about money and it becomes central in our lives of what we're spending our
time and thought process doing. The harder stuff, stuff like who am I and what do I want out of
this life? We tend to put that aside because it's kind of scary to deal with. Yeah, it's a big
question that no one really has the answer for. Yeah. And it's, you know, to face the sense of
what is meaning in my life and what am I meant to do really almost puts this aspect of how finite
life is. Like when we start thinking about
this is what I was meant to do,
then we also have to say
that there is a limited amount of time
and I might try and not get there.
So it's much easier to say,
well, I'm gonna put that off for another day
because right now I just need to make sure
that I got a job.
I need to make sure I'm making enough money,
that I'm putting food on the table,
all exceedingly important.
But some of it does become an excuse
to not do
the harder things to pinpoint. Like money can be hard. We know that, right? Making money can be
hard. Saving can be hard. But we know the steps. They're really definable. It's a lot harder to
say, what are the steps to figure out what my purpose in life is? What are the steps to really
get a hold of my identity? And so we skip out on that tougher stuff because it's emotional and
difficult. Yeah. Would you say that it was people expressing, I think you said actually already,
like the regret, right? Of like, I didn't do this or I wish I had done this.
You know what it is? It's regret that they didn't put more energy into those things that were
important, right? And so, you know, some people love travel. So is it regret that they didn't put more energy into those things that were important. Right. And so,
you know, some people love travel. So is it regret that they didn't go to that place? No,
it's regret that they didn't put the time and space aside in their life to do travel on a more
regular basis. Or it's that thing that you really always wanted to do and were afraid to do. For
some people, it's building a business. Right. So this idea of, oh, I really want to start this business and it scares the heck out of us.
And so we don't try. And that's where I think, you know, it's funny. What the dying don't regret is
they don't regret what they failed at, which is so interesting. They regret what they were too
afraid to try. And that really had an effect on me because I think we are so afraid of failure
that sometimes it stops us right at the beginning. Well, I think a lot of times with failure,
I know in my own life, when the act of failing felt like such a huge blip in the radar of my life,
right? Like when I was in it, when I didn't get the promotion that I thought I would, or when I made a mistake in my business,
or when I didn't show up in a relationship how I wanted to, those felt like these huge,
massive, catalystic events. And the majority of the time I've looked back on them as learning
moments or as like, oh, I'm really glad that happened because it informed me now,
as learning moments or as like, oh, I'm really glad that happened because it informed me now,
as opposed to feeling like that was going to, you know, scar me for life or something like that.
And funny enough, I mean, I think it's sometimes when we're failing or at least trying audaciously that we're most alive, right? It's when you're in the arena fighting the fight,
you know, that's the thing. And sometimes we forget. And this is another thing I think that
dying really helped me with. And as I try to think about my life and all of our lives,
how we kind of find happiness, this idea of happiness often isn't really about the end goal
or the end product. A lot of it is about the process. And so that process of failing,
of doing something of important, of leaving it all on the table. I mean, that I think
is actually what our lives are made up of. The end result or the end goal is sometimes like icing on
the cake. Like you might get it, you might not. And if you happen to get it, it's excellent.
Yeah. And I, you know, you said brave in the arena and I think of Brene Brown immediately,
right. And her work around vulnerability of like, I think being vulnerable is being human.
That is the human that is
the human experience and yeah when I you know I'm I'm relatively young and when I look back at my
life like my favorite moments have been when I've tried something new even if it didn't go well
right or if I was vulnerable or you know tried yeah tried something outside of what felt comfortable
and you know what I love about your listeners
and the population you really speak to is, you know, we're really talking about young people.
So when I talk about these things about money and the role it plays in our lives,
and now that my book is out, you know, I get all this positive feedback from people in their 40s
or 50s or 60s. But really, the most powerful time to start thinking about these things is when you're
in your 20s and 30s. I mean, that's the point where you can really start bringing in purpose
and identity into your life and doing a lot better than those of us who saw money as an end goal to
such an extent that once we got there, we didn't know what the heck to do with ourselves.
Yeah, it's not the I always joke that like, I don't want a stack of government issued
paper.
Like that doesn't get me anything.
You know, it's what money can buy me or the flexibility that I have when I have spending
money, when I have, you know, when I've achieved financial independence.
It's not just, yeah, like I don't want Benjamin Franklin's face on some tree babies.
Like that doesn't get me
anything yeah so the pursuit of money just for the pursuit of it is not it's not worth anything
and what i remember you know one of the fun things story about having you on my show is i remember
some of your story and things like the vending machines and that kind of stuff yeah like those
things that we do when we're young, those young businesses, those kinds of things
end up being joyful experiments. Like when we get older, it becomes this business we have to do
because we have to make money and it gets really stressful. But, but I see a lot of joy in some of
those early experiments. So it's not like our passions can't lead to money. And in fact,
I think often, especially if we start young enough and are thoughtful about it,
a lot of times they do.
And that's what's so kind of cool about it.
Thanks for remembering that, by the way.
That's very thoughtful.
Thank you.
I remember our conversation.
Yeah, you mentioned your book, and I'm going to plug it.
It's called Taking Stock, a Hospice Doctor's Advice on Financial Independence, Building
Wealth, and Living a Regret-Free Life.
And you share some stories in the book about patients.
Can you share a couple of those stories that were most impactful for you about how it changed
your view on money or what you want people to take away?
What are some particular stories that stand out for you?
So on the theme of what we just talked about, one of those stories
is the story of Ernesto. I had a patient who was dying in his 40s of leukemia. And what he ended up
often talking to the hospice team about, as well as me as the doctor, was not his death or his
fears or his pain, which he didn't have a lot of. He spent a lot of time talking to us about when he
was in his 20s and he was just getting busy in his career. He got it in his head that he wanted to climb
Mount Everest. And so right there in the middle of his career, when he was just building up peak
money-making time, he decided to take a year off to train. And then he went and attempted to climb
Mount Everest. And I say attempted
because he didn't make it right. They went about halfway up. The weather changed.
They had to call it off. They had to go back to base camp. He didn't have more time. He had to
go back home, get back into his work life, et cetera. But in his forties, you know, we talked
a lot about this idea of if he had put that thing off, if he had said, I need to work now, I need to make money, I have to put that in the stock market, it needs to compound. If he hadn't had the courage to do that thing that was utterly important to him when he was in his 20s, he would have found himself in his 40s dying of leukemia and never have had the chance because it would have been too late.
never have had the chance because it would have been too late. So that was one thing. Some things are sentinel and important enough in our lives that money can't get in the way of them. And we
have to really keep that in mind because you and I, we teach finances. This is important to us.
We want people to have enough money, but there are times when other things are important. That's
part one. Part two, again, is what we just talked about. This idea of it wasn't failing
that really bothered him. In fact, he remembers just being
on the climb. He didn't make it all the way, but he remembers trying to make it up. He remembers
the excitement and even some of the sadness when it didn't happen. That was the colorfulness of
his life that he shared with us as he got closer and closer to the end. And so that was just
wonderful. That story sticks in my mind. Another story that I really think a lot about is I took care of an older woman who was a
child of the Depression.
And what we do with people as they're dying and they come into hospice, which is end of
life care, is we do things like we make sure their pain is under control and their nausea
and we make sure they're in a safe place, all those kind of things.
But eventually we do something called a life review, which actually I would like
younger people to be doing this too. But the life review is where we go through their lives and talk
about what was important to them, what they did right, what they did wrong, what those relationships
were that were important to them. I never knew that. Is that a youth thing or is that hospice
in general? That's hospice in general. And it doesn't have to be a doctor. It can be a chaplain.
Often social workers do this or nurses.
I'm like tearing it.
That's so beautiful.
I didn't know that was a thing.
And what a like a full rounded version of health care to not just be like, what is your, you know, what are your physical needs right now?
But like, if we know that it's not looking great, let's talk about like, yeah, let's do a summation of your life.
Wow, it's beautiful.
And here's before I get back to the story, you know, here's the kind of cool thing, right?
When we do the summation of people's lives, often it is very clarifying on what they feel like they need to accomplish over the weeks or months they have left.
Right. So it can make things clear for them like, oh, I really need to get back in touch with that person because they were important in my life.
So here's the problem with that. Like what you're looking for is the last minute save, right?
You're looking for the plot twist at the end of the movie that makes everything perfect. I actually
advocate in the book that we should be doing these life reviews much early so that we don't need the
last minute save. So we can do these things earlier because you're going to be a lot more
successful. And so in this case, this patient who had earlier because you're going to be a lot more successful.
And so in this case, this patient who had lived through the depression, they had a lot of unresolved issues with money. They would have money and things stashed all throughout the house
because they lived through the depression and money insecurity was big for them. So when the
chaplain actually did the life review with her, they realized that one of the big stressors in
her life, even as she was coming close to dying,
is she was worried about her grandkids and worried that they wouldn't have money for things,
worried they wouldn't have money for college, worried they wouldn't have money for vacations, etc.
When this came out during the Life Review, the chaplain brought in the two daughters,
and the two daughters then actually opened up their finances and showed the grandmother that
they were 529 plans and that
there was a plan for college and all these kind of things. And it helped relieve some of her
anxiety. So death and money, we don't like to talk about either of them in polite company.
And this is a story where the conversation surrounding death led to a conversation
surrounding about money and actually relieved a lot of stress in this woman before she died and spoke to some of her childhood traumas of living through the depression.
Wow. Well, and yeah, I can't help, like you said before, I can't help but think of the power of
if you're doing this every year, right? At the bare minimum, maybe every decade, but like
every year, what are you learning? And I realized like
I've kind of done this in my own life where I do like a journaling practice on New Year's Day every
year where I like review like, okay, what have we learned? What were like the big moments of this
year? Like what do we want to take into the next year? But I want to, yeah, after that, I want to
be even more intentional about it. I think it's really interesting. This is why to me it's so
important in young people because I specifically did it wrong. I kind of put the horse before the cart. So
all right, the cart before the horse, I thought about money and like built this extensive financial
plan and then waited till I got there to really figure out like purpose and identity. Who do I
want to be and what do I want to do with my life? If you start that life review process early,
you actually become way more intentional about who do I want to be? what do I want to do with my life? If you start that life review process early, you actually become way more intentional about who do I want to be?
What do I want to do with my life?
And then you start looking at the financial piece and say, OK, how can I build that into
my life to live more intentional?
And for some people, that looks like doing a job they don't like to make a lot of money
to eventually retire early.
But for a lot of people, especially the younger generations, that means building a financial plan that allows them to do the things they want to do
today, whether that's passive income or side hustles, or some young people go for a passion
play, which means they actually go for a job that they love doing and fulfills a sense of purpose
from the beginning. There are lots of different answers. But when you have that intentionality,
when you realize you do the life review, when you start figuring out what's important to you, you can create a much better, more durable financial plan for the future.
I think that's very, very wise.
You mentioned financial independence before.
You and I are both financially independent, which you can tell me if you go by a different definition.
But for me, work is optional, right?
I never have to work another day if I don't want to because my investments or my savings
will support me.
You're what the industry...
There's different kinds of financial dependents, right?
There's lean fire.
There's barista fire, which is like...
Lean fire is like, I'm just on the bare necessities.
Barista fire is like, I'm still working part part-time at like a Starbucks, mostly to get
health insurance.
And you're what the industry calls like fat fire.
Can you break down what the difference is and why did you choose to go that route?
So interestingly enough, I've changed a little bit about how I think about this, especially
as I've done deeper and deeper thinking and got involved with patients who are dying.
I've written something that I call the parable of the three brothers, and it's actually kind of like the three archetypes of how we get to financial independence.
So the way I now actually define financial independence is having enough money to live a life as full of purpose, identity, and connections as possible. So ideally, unfortunately,
we're allotted a certain amount of time on this world and we can't control it. We can't buy it.
We can't sell it. I like to think of time slots, right? You can think of days or weeks or months,
however you want to. We have a certain number of these time slots. Financial independence really
is the act of being able to fill most of those time slots with things that really add a sense
of purpose and identity to your life.
The farther we go in financial independence, the more we can get rid of the stuff we don't like from those time slots and then instead put stuff that does have meaning for us. So the parable of
three brothers talks about like the three general ways to look at your career financial independence.
One way is this idea of the traditional fire movement, financial independence, retire early.
This was front-loading the sacrifice, making lots of money as fast as possible, putting
off purpose and identity for a while until you made enough money, then retiring early
and living a very purposeful life.
That's kind of one way.
Right.
So going hard for a while or, you know, picking an occupation that you know is going to pay
six figures plus, even if it's not the thing you were destined to do.
Right. And so that's like, I call it the path of the eldest brother, and it's a little bit
more old school, right? The newer path, the path of the middle brother is passive income or side
hustles. For the eldest brother, financial independence was some net worth number,
and we can argue about what number that is, but we've all heard this idea before.
For middle brothers, it's having enough passive or side hustle income to cover your monthly needs. So the minute you
get to that point, you're financially independent. And then what I call the youngest brother is more
the passion play. This is, again, someone who finds a job that they would do even if they
weren't being paid for it because it really fulfills their sense of purpose. If you find
that, let's say you're 22 and you find that job and you make enough at that job to cover your monthly needs, in my opinion, you're financially independent right away.
Now, of course, there are risks with all of these. With the youngest brother, you surely want some
good disability insurance. You might want some life insurance, et cetera. And the youngest brother,
I call them financially independent right away, but they may work till 70, especially if they
don't save much or let compound interest do its thing. So there are other ways of breaking down financial independence.
Fat FIRE, right?
This idea of being able to spend maybe, everyone defines it slightly different,
but being able to spend on your wishlist pretty much and still having enough money to
be more generous, right?
Lean FI where you have just enough to cover the basics.
Coast FI, right?
This idea where you have enough in your 401k or 403b
or what have you that it will just coast you to financial independence. And all you need to do is
really work enough to cover your monthly needs, but you don't have to worry about-
Saving anymore, investing anymore.
Exactly. And slow-fi, which is, again, taking a much more thoughtful approach to financial
independence and maybe considering this idea that it'll take you longer to get there. But in the meantime, you're building a lot of purpose and identity into your
daily life. So for me, it's about purpose, identity and connections and how we can fit that into our
financial framework. So I think all of them are good, right? That's the cool thing about it is
once you start being clear about what you want, then you can decide like and some people are going to still decide, I'm just going to grind it out because I'm a doctor.
I decided I didn't want to be a doctor, but I can make a lot of money doing that.
So I'm going to do it for five or 10 years.
I feel like I'm going to live a long time.
I'm not worried that I'm going to die tomorrow.
If that's you, that might be the way to go.
And you may go for fat fire because you're like, yeah, an extra one or two years really gets me that extra net worth.
Whereas someone else really might say, slow fire, I'm going to do
a job that's mediocre for me, but I'm going to do it part time. And then I'm going to use the
rest of my time to really do things that pursue purpose and identity. Maybe I'll even make some
side hustles that eventually make me money. But the point is there, I don't need to retire
until I'm 55 or 60, but I'm going to love every day.
And I'm only going to spend four or five hours a day doing things I don't like doing.
So I think we can toggle.
And there's so many different permutations nowadays. And I really feel like us early financial independence people didn't expand our mind
enough.
And as the FIRE movement has evolved, we're seeing that there are just so many different ways to make enough money and then really take the rest of your time to pursue what
you want to do.
Again, I'm not going to say it's easy, but we have the knowledge and there are all these
great people who are talking about different ways to do it.
And we can listen to them and borrow little pieces and find ways to cover our finances
so that we can start really doing what we want with our lives.
Well, and when I discovered the fire movement, movement even 2016 which wasn't that long ago it was like you know the beans and rice reuse your toilet paper level of like frugality that
and i'm i consider myself extremely frugal but like that was not me like and i would argue that's most people is not like i'm not willing to do that
and i think that's it's uh also just a pretty un not only unforgiving to like the general person's
lifestyle but just is a certain privilege awarded to a certain type of person or it was the you know
software tech bro who you know is straight white guy who lives in a major city.
It felt like those were the two things.
You were like frugal homesteader and or software engineer tech bro.
And I think it's evolved as the community has evolved, 100%.
Yeah.
And I want to be clear about this.
When you get to this point where you're doing things that no longer really
add to a sense of purpose and identity, then you're making money a goal instead of a tool
and you're kind of wasting your time. Right. So when you're that point, like I love the story of
the person who is so crazy about financial independence that they left a mediocre job
where they're making a lot of money sitting in some cubicle somewhere to like quit their job
at the most leanest
financial independence number they could find. But then they're spending their days like cleaning
their house and cleaning their toilets and doing the lawn stuff that maybe they used to pay someone
to do. But now they don't have the income to do it. It's like, well, you just traded time that
was mediocre for time you don't like, but now you can call yourself financially independent.
Yeah. It's the chasing of the title. If I'm a listener, you know, obviously both of us have been seeped in this community for a while, title if i'm a listener you know obviously
both of us have been seeped in this community for a while but if i'm a general listener who's
just interested in personal finance i might be sitting here thinking like i don't have the
luxury of any of those things like i don't have the luxury of any of that right if you're like
a first generation immigrant you're like this isn't even on your mind necessarily, right? Or you,
you, if you are supporting children plus family, other family members, like that's not even an
option for you. I have my own idea of how these, these like principles can apply, but like if
somebody is listening, thinking that what does financial independence even look like for that
person? So you, that is exactly the person I want to talk to. First and foremost, I come at this from a place
of huge privilege, right? When I realized what financial independence was, I was a doctor making
a high salary and had lots of money saved. I came from a middle-class family. For someone like me,
it's not that huge of a mental jump. I clearly realize that for many people it is, right?
You might be in your 20s.
You might not have gotten the job you wanted.
Your salary may be much lower than you thought it was going to be.
You may be struggling in an eight to six, right?
We're not going to call it a nine to five anymore.
We're going to call it an eight to six just to make enough money to put food on the table.
So this is exactly the person who I also think this message might help.
And here's why. We think of money as a goal and I want to reframe it as a tool.
We tend to think of it as the only tool and I want to reframe it as one of many tools.
So when you, let's say you're 22 in this case scenario or 25 and maybe you're married,
maybe you have a kid, maybe you don't, you know, it varies. But when you're that age, you might not have much of the tool of money, but you might have some
other tools. You might have a little more time. You might have a little more energy, right? I'm
49. I have a lot less energy than I had when I was in my twenties. You may have your passions,
your community, whatever it is you have. The idea is to expand to think of having many tools as
opposed to just this one tool of money. So if you're 22, you're working the eight to six, you're not making much money,
you are just paying for what you need. I'm going to suggest to you, you might have another tool,
which is a little bit extra energy. And so I'm going to say on a Saturday night, when you're
not working, you're working eight to six Monday to Friday on a Saturday night, spend three hours
on a side hustle. And here's the thing about the side hustle. I want it to be something you're not working, you're working eight to six Monday to Friday on a Saturday night, spend three hours on a side hustle. And here's the thing about the side hustle.
I want it to be something you're passionate about. Like take something you like or love
and see if you can spend three hours every Saturday for the next six months,
building something you love that brings you joy doing it. And so here's how I see this play out
after six months,
if that side hustle makes you no money, hopefully it was something that has sense of purpose and
identity for you, a hobby, something you really liked. So it's still time fairly well spent.
We talked about those time slots and you've just filled one of those time slots with something
involving purpose and identity. So that's a win right away. So if you don't make any money,
you can always either continue doing that or try something else that still is purposeful to you.
Let's say you do make a little bit of money.
Maybe that eight to six could become a nine to five.
And now you're spending that three hours on Saturday
and you're making a little bit of money enough
to start pulling away from that thing you don't like
and adding that thing you do like.
Or maybe you say, I love this extra money.
I'm not gonna turn that eight to six into a nine to five.
I'm gonna continue it as an eight to six,
but I'm gonna take that money
and do something that brings me joy.
Or I'm gonna take that money
and put it back into this fledgling business I'm building.
All of those are possibilities.
And again, you've added purpose and identity in your life.
You might've added a little extra money
and you're starting to give yourself some wiggle room.
So maybe after a year or two, you could replace half of your salary. Could you start working Monday,
Wednesday, Friday only, and then spending more time on that side hustle, that side hustle that
happens to have purpose for you or you're passionate about? And so the idea is what other
tools can we use in our toolkit? Maybe it's a little bit of extra energy. Maybe it's geography.
Can you move? Like I'm not saying everyone wants to move.
And in my 20s, I wanted to be my family.
I didn't want to move.
But that's another tool you might have is you might have some flexibility and you could
move to a lower cost city.
So maybe you're still doing a very similar eight to six.
Let's say you're a waiter or a waitress.
You're making just about the same amount of money.
But now your cost of living has gone down because where you live costs less. All of these things are possibilities. What other tools do we have?
It's not going to be perfect, but for people who find themselves in this position where they think
they're destitute, if we can at least start building up some of those other tools, we can
build a little wiggle room. And again, my ultimate goal is to look at all those time slots of your
life and fill up more and more of them with things you like doing and less and less of them with things you don't like doing.
And that's a beginning.
Have you heard of this concept called quiet quitting?
I haven't, but I like the sound of it already.
It's relatively new. They're just talking about it i wrote it down as you were talking because all of those are really great tips
i'm thinking of even like you have no flexibility like how do you just have more happiness or more
seeming like independence with what you do have and part of it like you know you talk about it's
like the whole internet thing of like romanticizing your life but like how can you can you like prioritize your own health? Can you like buy yourself a bouquet of
flowers every once in a while, right? There's something like that. But like quiet quitting
is this new concept that's really not that new. But it's this idea of if you don't get purpose
from your job, and or you're not being compensated fairly, First of all, try to find a job where you are. But like quiet quitting is this idea of just doing the absolute bare minimum in order to not
get fired. Like nine to five solid, like really set boundaries of like, I'm not going to go out
there and be the star player because like it's not working. Right. Or like this company isn't
interested in promoting me. So hopefully until you can find a better opportunity this like quiet quit is the
idea of like i've kind of stopped caring like i'm caring enough to do what i need to do in order to
maintain my job but like internally i've kind of quit and i kind of love it it's great it makes
complete sense because, what you're
doing is you are pivoting from a financial tool, which is money. In this case, it might be an
emotional tool, like by not worrying as much and doing just enough to get by, you're opening up
emotional space and mind space to start saying, okay, how can I start solving this problem?
And if you can build a solution that brings in more purpose and identity than that, you know, soul sucking job that you don't like
that you're doing, you're going to come out ahead. And again, I don't want to pretend this is easy
or simple. I don't think it is. But ultimately, these are kind of the tools we have and different
people are going to have different tools at different times of their lives. Hopefully,
we can help people have that money tool also over time, which even gives them more bandwidth to do
more things they like. I think if I'm a listener to the other conclusion or the other thing I'm
thinking about is the expectations that someone has for me. So, you know, my parents' expectations of who I'm supposed to be,
society's expectations of who I'm supposed to be, my own ambitions, expectations of what I'm
supposed to be. And in a country that defines success by your identity, right, or your identity
is your success, is your career, but yet you're saying like fire might be you work at Starbucks part-time in order
to do more of the things you like, right. Or like making very, very little money, but for something
you love, how would you reckon with that feeling of also knowing like, oh, somebody's going to
judge me or like I am, you know, maybe I have a master's degree, but I'm working at Starbucks.
Like, how do you, how do you reckon with that?
So first and foremost, I understand expectations, right?
I was the grew up the golden boy who was supposed to be a doctor.
And then it took me from probably 2014 to 2018 to really extract myself.
And part of that was letting go to the connection to my father.
But a lot of it was my own expectations and society's expectations, my family's expectations. I guess my best answer to that is guess who doesn't really
care about expectations when it comes down to it? You know who? Dying people. Like being told you
have a terminal diagnosis is one of the most horrible things that happens to you. But the grain
of goodness there is that for once in your life,
you can let go of all of society's expectations, let go of everyone else's expectations,
and have the clarity to think about what you actually want. I think the dying are screaming
at us. I think they're saying, do this now. You will get to a point one day where time is much
more finite than it is today
and you will wish that you thought about these things earlier so to anyone who's struggling
with this idea of what will people say in the end you're going to have to live with yourself
and you're going to have to question yourself about whether you lived a life true to who you
wanted to be i think it's a valuable,
valuable lesson that I learned from taking care of dying people. Like we have one life and
ultimately you're going to want to pursue what's important to you. And part of that is letting go
of other people's expectations. I love that so much. I, I just wanted, this is, I did not plan
this at all. There's a, there's a cafe in Seattle that in the restroom has a poem.
Have you heard this poem?
It's called Warning by Jenny Joseph.
Have you heard about this poem?
No, never heard of it.
No.
Okay.
Can I read you the first couple of lines?
Because it's literally what we're talking about.
It's my favorite.
I take a photo of it every time I go.
Okay.
I'm going to do a bad job of reading poetry.
I didn't think I was going to do this on this podcast ever. Okay. When I am an old woman, I shall wear purple with a red hat
that doesn't go and doesn't suit me. And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves and
satin sandals and say we've no money for butter. I shall sit down on the pavement when I'm tired
and gobble up samples in shops and press alarm
bells and run my stick along the public railings and make up for the sobriety of my youth.
I shall go out in my slippers in the rain and pick flowers in other people's gardens and learn
to spit. But now we must have clothes that keep us dry and pay our rent and not swear in the street
and set a good example for our children. We must have friends to dinner and read the papers. But maybe I ought to practice a little now. So people who know me are not too
shocked and surprised when suddenly I am old and start to wear purple. I love that phrase,
sobriety of youth. I mean, I think it says so much. And strangely enough, and this is going
to sound funny, when i hear that i
think of a lot of things but i also think about how we approach money because i think actually
there are a lot of similarities like there's sometimes in our lives where we should use money
to go and do something silly or stupid or have fun because it adds to our lives and our experiences. And so
we give up that compounding of our money in the stock market, but happiness and experience and
all those wonderful things compound from just saying, what the heck, and doing YOLO, right?
You only live once. And it's funny because I think us financial nerds, when we look back at our life,
we're going to say, why were we so afraid to wear purple sometimes?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think just like everything, it's a balance.
Right now, I think both of us would be bad financial experts if we're like, yeah, go blow your money, go into credit card debt, go crazy.
Right.
But there are those certain opportunities.
You know, like I just think of my best friend who literally just took a year and a half.
She's in her 30s, took a year and a half sabbatical and was like, I'm not making any money,
but like I'm going to take a year and a half off. It's been a really rough couple years and I'm
going to do that. And I love that. And actually, it's such a gift she gave herself in her 30s
because we talk a lot about that. She's eight years older than I am, which isn't insignificant,
We talk a lot about that.
She's eight years older than I am, which isn't insignificant, but also for some things it's, you know, insignificant.
And so we've talked about like traveling together.
Like, what do we want to do before we get too old to do it?
You know, and it's like there are certain things where she was just like, yeah, I want
to do this right now.
And like, yeah, it might delay my traditional retirement for a while, but I'm young and
I would rather do this right now.
Yeah.
And I think we all struggle with this, right? This idea of you only live once,
spend today because things pass and those seasons of our life disappear and we don't
know what the future holds versus deferred gratification. If you don't put enough money
away, you're going to be hurting when you're older and you haven't saved appropriately.
And so it's that continuous measuring, right? And trying to decide when does
spending today add to my sense of purpose and identity versus being frivolous? And when does
putting it away for a future time actually lead to more experiences, fun, and those other things?
And it's a question we continuously have to ask ourselves. I think the dying can help us a little
with that too. Yeah. Well, you mentioned this idea of YOLO, right? And like, again, YOLO can sometimes get
us in trouble versus like, what do you see? What is the beauty of a YOLO type philosophy?
So I think that, again, if life is about living a sense of purpose, identity and connections,
there are many times when spending money can add your sense of purpose. Ernesto, the patient who went to Mount Everest is a perfect example,
right? He kind of said, you only live once. I may never get this chance again. I'm going to spend
money. I'm not going to make money. I'm going to lose out on all that opportunity cost. And he was
right. And so what I tend to tell people is since we don't know when we're going to die, we have no way of knowing, right?
If I knew I was going to die in 10 years or 50 years or whatever, I could then financially
plan out how to use my money appropriately and really get the most out of it.
But of course, we can't do that.
So I believe the best proxy is more our fears.
We do know what scares us most.
So for a percentage of the population, it's going to really scare us this idea that we're
going to die young and never enjoy our wealth. That was my father. He died at 40 and he had a
premonition he was going to die young. So he tended to spend his money like saving for retirement
wasn't as big of a concern for him. Right. On the other hand, so dying young and not using your
money is what scares some people. What scares other people like me is I was like, I'm going
to live this long life. I'm going to run out of money and die broke. And so if you can start asking yourself that
question, what scares you most, you actually can start toggling your habits to make sense.
So my dad was worried that he was going to die young. He took a job that paid less because it
was more enriching to him. He had hobbies. He loved to travel. He loved photography.
more enriching to him. He had hobbies. He loved to travel. He loved photography.
He was learning other languages when he died. Didn't put a huge amount into his own retirement.
He did, of course, get life insurance for us, all the kind of things he should have done thinking he was going to die young. And so when he died young, at least he could say, I used most of my
money to enjoy today because there wasn't a tomorrow, right? Now, me, on the other
hand, I was kind of okay grinding it out for a while because I thought I'm going to live a long,
long time. I'm okay maybe giving up a few years, working really hard, missing a few things here
and there, but I'm going to save a lot of money because my bigger concern is I'm going to live
a long time and I want a huge amount of retirement to live that life of purpose and identity.
And so I took a different way of doing to live that life of purpose and identity.
And so I took a different way of doing it. So someone who has worries like my dad did,
maybe you take of all your extra money, you take 40% and you put in a YOLO fund and really enjoy yourself today. And then you take 10% and still put it into your retirement financial independence
because everyone should be saving for retirement financial independence regardless. And so if
you're right and you die young, you lived a pretty good life because you were
at least using your money to serve you if you're wrong and you live to an old age yeah you're not
going to retire for a while but you're still enjoying yourself with all that 40 yellow fund
and the 10 eventually will lead to retirement on the other side if you're like me and you defer
gratification i guess the real loser in the game is like me and you defer gratification, I guess the real
loser in the game is the person who defers gratification to a huge extent. So, right,
they put 40% away for retirement and only use 10% for YOLO. And then if you die young,
that's kind of losing the game. But at least you were excited about this prospect, right?
You were really into it. Yeah. I mean, I had unlearned my frugality in a lot of ways. Like,
I was so frugal that, you know, especially like the first year or two out of college,
like I had did some fun stuff, but like, and a part of it is just like learning how to
manage your own money for the first time.
But it was, oh, I can spend money on these things.
Oh, I can go to this concert.
Oh, I can go out to eat every once in a while.
Oh, I don't have to pack a lunch every single day. And so part of, yeah, it was a lot of learning in that way.
If you ever doubt it, when you talk to people who've been given a terminal illness,
they're going to talk about their relationships, their experiences, their trips. They're going to
tell you about non-financial forms of compounding. They're going to talk about your education.
They're going to talk about their hobbies.
They're going to talk about all these things that maybe they spent money on that compounded,
but it wasn't money compounding.
It was love and relationships and experiences and passions.
And those are the kind of investments that you actually really value when you find out
you're dying.
Yes, we value our monetary investments,
especially if we don't have enough when we're dying and we can't buy food and don't have
shelter. But above and beyond that, mostly it's those non-monetary investments and the compounding
that happened with those that end up giving us the wealth that we really want at the end of life.
And I would say even before the end of life for our later years. Yeah. No, it's beautiful. You talked about being a doctor and then
stepping away from that, but how that identity was hard to shake. And I think a lot of people,
myself included, and I know Kristen, our podcast producer has struggled with this lately of like,
you can relate to having a dream your whole life of being like this one thing or this one passion. And then you realize at some point that maybe that passion doesn't serve you anymore or that wasn't what you wanted. What helped you separate that, your identity from, you know, this thing you were doing? And what would you say to somebody going through something similar?
would you say to somebody going through something similar? So when I realized I was financially dependent, I knew that being a doctor was painful. It didn't feel good anymore. And there were
always these little clues that I ignored. Like I went to medical school and I didn't make a lot
of doctor friends and I hated hanging out in the doctor's lounge. And even worse, after I became a
doctor, I'd go to parties with my wife and people would ask me what I did for a living and I would cringe because I didn't want to tell them.
And I mean, these are like flashing neon signs saying, warning, warning, warning, something's wrong here.
Yeah.
But I didn't listen to them.
And part of that was that deep connection it gave me to a father who died when I was seven.
And that was my connection to him.
And that was my connection to him.
So when I realized that this really wasn't fulfilling me and I realized I had enough money
from the place of privilege I was in,
I started using something I call the art of subtraction.
So I said, it's too big an emotional thing
to walk away from medicine completely.
I don't have the capacity nor the emotional,
you know, wellbeing enough to just do that.
And this was in 2014.
So what I started doing is I started getting rid
of all the things in my work life that
cause friction.
So for me, that was I had a private practice.
I got rid of that and started doing only nursing homework and some medical side hustles, including
hospice.
After a while, the nursing homework, I was getting called in the middle of the night.
The patients were deathly ill.
So I eventually got rid of that and was just doing hospice.
Then I got rid of nights and weekends.
What I eventually ended up with is a job where as a consultant for hospice, where I worked 10 to 15 hours a week, I love doing that so much that if
the company had come to me and said, you know what, we can't pay you anymore, but we still need
your services. I would still do it. And so that's how I knew that that was the part of medicine
that still spoke to my identity. Now, again, I'm going to use the P word again. This came from a
place of privilege because I had the money to start doing that.
The key with younger people who don't have that privilege is to start trying to figure out ways to build more purpose in and use some of those non-monetary tools to give them
space, whether that's a side hustle, whether that's switching jobs, whether that's switching
companies, whether that's finding other ways to make money, whatever it ends up being,
it's starting to slowly transition
out of those things you don't like,
subtracting those things out
and then adding in other things
that really do fulfill that sense of purpose and identity.
And that's a slow process.
It's not something you generally do immediately
unless you happen to be lucky.
For me, it took a good four years
to really subtract out all the bad stuff.
And in the meantime, as I was getting rid of the bad stuff, I was creating time and
energy to start filling my space with more important things, more things that really
added to my sense of purpose.
For me, that was writing and public speaking and podcasting and blogging.
For other people, again, it might be that side hustle or that passion or that other
thing they like to do.
And if you're young, maybe some of that makes you money so that you can get away from those things you don't like to do.
I think the other thing that I take away from your story as well, or your advice is,
you know, I'm a millennial. I'm almost, I'm like right on the cusp between millennials and Gen Z.
And I have a lot of friends who are Gen Z. And I think there's this idea that like,
your job has to be your passion. And you were talking about before, you know, a lot of people
are just getting into jobs so that they can, you know, basically make as much money as possible and then get out.
If somebody is, you know, maybe not making a ton of money with what they love to do,
but also they're like, they're itching to do more, but they know, okay, you know,
what I love to do, unfortunately, is not going to make me a lot of money. And it's causing all these other, it's causing this grief in these other way. For me, my answer to that is
you can step away from your passion and do your passion on the side. It doesn't have to be the
thing that you do in your nine to five. What is your advice or your response to that?
So the passion play, if we go back to the parable of
the three brothers, the passion play is one of three possibilities, right? There's front-loading
the sacrifice, which is the eldest brother, the middle brothers, passive income and side hustles,
the youngest brothers, the passion play. I see less and less people use the passion play for a
lot of reasons. One is it can be really hard to make money on your passion. Let's say you're a
painter and you happen to make beautiful paintings,
but if there's not a huge market for it,
you can make as many paintings as you want.
If you don't have enough customers,
it's just not going to support you.
That's one of the problems.
So it's totally fine that your work life
can support your passions in other ways.
It can be what allows you to have enough money
to then pursue your passions, your free time.
I want to tell a fun story
because the other risk about the passion play, and this comes from behavioral theory, it's a little bit
complicated of an idea, but if you take something you are intrinsically motivated to do, a passion,
and you receive external rewards, i.e. money, it may actually kill your passion. I have a favorite
story that goes along with this.
So pretend that we all live on a big, long block, like when we were little kids, right?
And at the end of the block, there's this old curmudgeonly man who loves doing his yard, right? He loves to cut his grass. He has beautiful flowers, et cetera, like your dad. So pretend
your dad lives at the end of the block. And the minute he goes back
into the house, what happens? The kids on the block, they love to play football and they extend
their football game right into his yard. Trample, trample, trample. They like ruin his little plot
of heaven. Right. So the old guy kind of gets this idea of behavioral theory, this idea of,
you know, internal motivations and external reward. So he goes to the kids one day and he
says, you know what? I think you playing football on my yard is actually good for the grass. I'm going to
pay you $10 a week to go play on my yard. And the kids are overjoyed. Not only do they get to play
football, but they're going to have some extra money for candy. So they go and they play football
and their hearts are full and their pockets are full of money and candy, right? A week later,
the guy decides to turn the screws. So the old guy comes back, and candy, right? A week later, the guy decides to
turn the screws. So the old guy comes back, your dad, and says to the kids, you know what? You're
not doing nearly as good of a job as I thought you would. So I'm going to still give you some
money. I'm going to give you $5 this time. Go ahead, play, and we'll reassess you in a week.
Now, the kids are a little annoyed, right? They were getting $10. Now they're getting $5,
but they still get to play football.
So they take the $5 and they play football
and their hearts are full, maybe a little less.
Their pockets are a little less full of candy, right?
So the final time, a week later,
the old man comes and he says,
you know what, you're doing a horrible job.
I am never paying you ever again to play on my yard.
Go play football all you want.
You're never getting another cent out of me. The kids huff and puff. They stamp their feet. They look them in the
eye and they say, we are never going to play on your yard again. They turn around, walk away,
and they never do. So this idea that sometimes when we take something we're very internally
motivated to do and we get external rewards for it, it actually makes us have less joy
in that thing we are internally motivated to do.
All this being said, sometimes our passions are meant to be something we do because it speaks to our soul, not because we think we're going to get a paycheck for it. And it's a hard line to draw
because some people do follow their passions and end up having an incredibly lucrative business
and they still are passionate about it. So this is not everybody, but it's just something to be wary of. And that's okay. You don't have to follow your passion, but you do
have to start bringing your passion into your life one way or another.
I often give the metaphor in my work of like, I, as a 28 year old, I'm taking care of grandma me,
who's like 65 and drinking like Sauvignon Blanc with lunch and flirts with her much younger
Pilates instructor named Luca. Like that's my real life retirement plan. So like I have to do
some heavy lifting to make sure that 65 year old me is somehow more badass than me currently,
which I don't know how that's going to be possible, but it's going to somehow be possible. But at the same time, I don't want to
be 65 year old me and look back and be like, hey, I'm living cushy now, but 28 year old me was
feeling awful. That's the balance that I think we're all trying to find is how do we YOLO to
a certain point while also realizing that we're going to hopefully live long lives. And we also
want, you know, 40 year old us, 60 year old us, 80 year old us to be just as happy as 20 year old us.
And, you know, I think that that's the balance we're all trying to trying to achieve.
So really, if I was to take this book and give it to you in three basic ideas or rules. The first would be think
about purpose, identity, and connections first and put the money aside for a short period of time.
Just start the thought process. Step two would be then go ahead and build a path to financial
independence after you've taken purpose, identity, and connections into the process so that it can
be part of that building financial independence. And last but not least, then consider again,
are you worried about dying young or living old and being broke so you can decide how much to
spend today versus tomorrow? Those are the three steps. So how would I define a regret-free life?
A regret-free life is one in which you really build purpose, identity, and connections into your life as early as you could and started substituting it in for those things you didn't like to do in as many of those time slots as possible.
So everyone's going to have that and it's going to be different.
But you don't regret when you live according to your purpose and identity.
You don't regret when you put yourself out there and try the things that really mattered to you. You don't regret when you spend your time with
those people that add value to your life. These are all things we can do today. It's not simple.
You have to be really thoughtful and intentional. But money shouldn't be the end-all be-all,
and it certainly shouldn't be the thing that inhibits you except in very extreme cases. So for the extreme cases, there's always going to be outliers. But for everyone else,
we should find hopefully a way to start bringing that purpose identity into our lives today,
because tomorrow is not guaranteed. And yet we should still be able to financially plan for
tomorrow too. And that's the goal. And I think we can do this. I think this is doable. And I think the biggest problem is more being intentional and not being afraid to think about
these things. And having the pleasure and opportunity to interview you over the years
and watch your trajectory, it seems pretty clear to me that you've been building joy and purpose
into your trajectory. And that doesn't mean you're not working hard. It doesn mean you're not making money. Doesn't mean you're not saving for tomorrow because I
know you're doing all those things. But it means that you've connected with a sense of purpose
and identity. And it shows. And I imagine that's why people listen and will read your book and
those kind of things because it connects with them because they say, aha, here's someone who
seems like they are pursuing purpose and yet figuring out the finances. Because again, the finances
are only as important as they allow you to be your best you.
Yeah. Thank you for saying that. It's also my own struggle of, yeah, my default is like frugality
and save, save, save, save, save. And there's been certain decisions that I've made that felt
very risky. Like even starting my own business, taking that full time, like at the time, again, I
was talking like blips in the radar before, like that felt like a huge risk.
I look back now and I'm like, you had money in the bank, you had momentum, you had all
of these things.
Like it felt like a risk in that moment, but of course it ended up paying off.
And then, you know, I've been traveling for the last year.
I don't know if you know this.
I actually packed up all my stuff and lived out at Airbnbs for like the last 10 months and always told myself I wanted
to do that. But I had a million excuses. I had a million reasons why that wasn't feasible or
smart or financially sound. But wow, I had a great year. And I don't want to do it forever,
but I did it. And now I can say I've done it. And so, yeah, I think, again, to go back to what we were talking about at the beginning,
like a lot of these things seem like big, big risks or big, yeah, failures are these
like moments where we put hoops in our way so we almost don't have to make the decision
because that's scary.
But then you look at the end of your life or you look back retrospectively
at your life and you're like, wow, I wish I would have done that. Or I'm really glad I did that
instead. Remember, the Ernestos of the world, the ones who took off time in their 20s to climb
Mount Everest are still the minority. Yeah. And it's something it's it's somewhat sad, but true.
Sometimes you do have to have the courage to take a completely different path. It's a lot easier to take those chances and again, reconcile what you need in life when you're young. It's a lot easier than when you're meeting a doctor like me and I'm walking in and I'm there to talk about your emphysema, your heart failure, leukemia. It's really much, much harder to start making those pivots then.
Yeah. Thank you so much for coming on. This was such an impactful episode.
One of my favorites I think we've ever done. Where can people find you? Remind us your book.
Plug away. So the easiest way to learn everything about me is go to jordangrummet.com. That's J-O-R-D-A-NG-R-U-M-E-T. There you can, of course, order the book,
which is available wherever books are sold, especially online. But the book is Taking Stock,
A Hospice Doctor's Advice on Financial Independence, Building Wealth, and Living a Regret-Free Life.
I also create content really in three main ways. I had a medical blog from 2005 to 2018.
There are links for it there at jordangrummet.com. I have a financial blog, diversify.com.
You can see the links there
as well as the Earn and Invest podcast.
Either go to jordangrummett.com or earnandinvest.com.
All those places should have links to the book too
or just Google me.
Amazing.
Thank you.
Thanks for coming on.
Thank you for your work.
Thank you for having me.
Thank you once again to Dr. G for joining us and for his support of our work. You can get his book anywhere you get your work. Thank you for having me. Thank you once again to Doc G for joining us and for
his support of our work. You can get his book anywhere you get your books. We'll link it down
in the show notes. You can support a local independent bookstore or request a copy in
your hometown library. And of course, speaking of books, a reminder that Financial Feminist,
the book that I wrote, is out in just a few short months and available for pre-order now.
Over 7,000 of you have ordered a copy and
I cannot thank you enough. We are aiming for that top New York Times bestseller spot. So we're,
we're so appreciative of all the support and it's just so humbling. As I mentioned,
you can also request a copy of Financial Feminist or multiple at your local library to make sure
that those who can't afford to purchase the book will still have access to the life-changing
financial information and education. We have a link at herfirsthundredk.com book where you can not only order a copy yourself,
but also contribute and request one from your local library. We give you all the steps at
herfirsthundredk.com book. Thank you as always for being here. Thank you Financial Feminist
for your support of the show and your support of this movement. And we'll catch you later.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First Hundred K podcast. of the show and your for supporting the show.
For more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100K, our guests, episode show notes,
and our upcoming book, also titled Financial Feminist, visit her 100K, our guests, episode show notes, and our upcoming book, also titled
Financial Feminist, visit herfirst100k.com.