The main ideas include not only saving your money and properly utilizing it when you reach retirement but also considering
what happy retirees are doing and how their lives are set up.
The main ideas include not only saving your money and properly utilizing it when you reach retirement but also considering
what happy retirees are doing and how their lives are set up.
Not exact matches
While the traits of
happy retirees aren't intended to serve as a checklist — after all, we're all individuals — they can help you map out
what you might need, both financially and emotionally, to increase your chances of being
happy when you retire.
He mixes in easy to understand examples of
what makes either a
happy or unhappy
retiree along with intelligible decisions on how to build your wealth.
The point of this exercise is to take a real look at your retirement savings and your retirement plan, and figure out exactly
what you need to be a
happy retiree.
A fellow I know named Wes Moss wrote a book about
what makes a
happy retiree and
what makes somebody unhappy in retirement.
Researchers for New York Life recently surveyed 500
retirees 80 and older to find out
what makes for a
happy and successful retirement.
This prompted me to ask
what percentage of
retirees get «stuck» in Phase One and are
happy to spend the rest of their lifetimes in permanent vacation mode.