Freedom Through Passive Income

Ep 257 - Applying the Lesson From the 3 Acts of Your Financial Life

September 14, 2022 Flip & Dani Robison Season 1 Episode 257
Freedom Through Passive Income
Ep 257 - Applying the Lesson From the 3 Acts of Your Financial Life
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

The first act is the coming of age, when you're growing up, and learning the skills that you're going to be using in act two, Act two is the great adult adventure. And it's the main show, clock is ticking. For most of you this is in the main show right now. And then the third act is after the adventure. Today, we're going to talk about some lessons that we can draw from this, and how we can have a clear perception about where we are. And these three acts of life help us to be able to plan better for the next act, and to be able to utilize the best act that we're in or the act of life that we're in right now.

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Having a clear perception of where we are in the acts of life helps us plan better for the next act.  It can be difficult looking forward to that next phase of life because the current one is so consuming. Preparing now and investing can make a big difference later. When you invest, the more you let time work for you, the greater passive income you can generate.  It’s never too late to start investing, whatever act of life you are in!  Passive income should be a final goal for everyone.  When you decide to stop working, the amount of your passive income directly determines the lifestyle you enjoy. 

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Hey everybody! Flip and Dani and Ben here. Welcome to another episode of our podcasts, which is called Freedom Through Passive Income. That's right, and welcome to another episode. And this is, the title of this one is Applying the Lessons From the Three Acts of Your Financial Life. Yeah, and this is a follow up from yesterday's. And thank you again, Ben, for being here and walking us through some of these conversations. Yesterday's episode was really great and I'm excited to hear today's.

Well, yesterday, we spoke about the three acts of your financial life. The first act is the coming of age, when you're growing up, and learning the skills that you're going to be using in act two, Act two is the great adult adventure. And it's the main show, clock is ticking. Most of us watching this are in the main show right now. And then the third act is after the adventure. Well, today, we're going to talk about some lessons that we can draw from this, how can having a clear perception about where we are. And these three acts of life help us to be able to plan better for the next act, and to be able to utilize the best act that we're in or the act of life that we're in right now. 

So the first lesson we have is that in each phase, it can be a challenge to think about the next phase. So think about your early 20's. What are you, talk about yesterday, what your life was like in the early 20's? Right. Well, it was always, I'm doing this now. And next year, I'm gonna do the next thing because that's what I'm supposed to do. You know, it's like college. And when you're in your college, or you're doing whatever you do in these classes, because then the next year, you're going to go into those classes, and you're going to be one of those classes. In fact, I got out of college, and I actually started working at Cedar Point Amusement Park, and I didn't know what to do next. So while I just worked at the amusement park again the next year, and then I didn't know what I was going to do next. So I just worked at the amusement park again that one more year, and I just kept doing that. And then I got led to another school. And so well, I went back to college because I was just in a hamster wheel. Because I really didn't know what that next thing was. But I knew where I was, I had one, I had the next step, but it didn't have the next 5 or 10 steps. And I didn't know where I wanted to go and then that led to working on cruise ships, which well, that led me down the rabbit hole. And which led to the next step, which led you know, so I've always wanted the next step. But there was a while in my 20's, where I didn't know what the next step was. So I just did the same step again. I think when you're in your 20's, I don't know how it was for you. But for me, I didn't know what I wanted out of life yet. You know, just gotten out of high school and was a musician in high school got a full ride to scholarship to go to college for music. And I really didn't know anything other than music. I was a little band geek, right? So I just went to school and started learning, you know, different things, not even realizing what I wanted in my 30's, 40's and 50's. I don't even know that my brain was ready to tackle those questions. Exactly. 

My wife and I have a conversation with several people. In their early 20's and they will acknowledge, yes, savings is important. Yes, I can see at a time and want to pay off the house or put aside savings to live off of. But as an example, in your 20's a car is a big thing. You know, I mean, there's so much identity tied up with the cars, cars, clothes, and entertainment. Yeah. Entertainment travel, entertainment out with your friends, etc. So that's an example of being tough to think ahead. When you're in the 30's and 40's, you have a family thing going on, you have the work thing going on, life is very busy, it's tough to see beyond our need to pay the bills right now. So paying the bills and keeping up with the bills is a big thing. When you're in the 50's, then you're starting to have this empty nest, you're starting to see very clearly the end of your work career, you say, okay, I've got five or 10 years left. Now you start to think about the third act. 

So the first takeaway from the three acts of life is, it's tough to look forward to the next act, because the current act is so consuming. Yes. And enjoying it and to a large degree that should be. 

Well, that takes the second lesson, which is a little bit of preparation now, wherever you are in life can make a big difference later. So with certain investments, and here's the great news. With certain investments, you can do a little bit of work now and time will work for you. Yes. And so much of real estate is about that. Yes. Now that with the stock market. It's interesting, again, you know, to the major investment vehicles to the stock market and real estate, with the stock market that generally goes up over time, just as real estate does. But there's a bit of variability with the stock market where it can go years at a time even decades at a time where it really doesn't move up. After World War II from 45 to 65, but really didn't move up that much during that time period, was a lot of movement in between. The last decade of the 2000's, 2010's pretty much stayed within that range the whole time. So with real estate, in particular some of the funds that we offer, right now, there's a level of predictability where you can say, okay, I know two years from now, I'm gonna be here, I  know 5 years and 10 years, I'm going to be from here. So a little bit of prep. Now, this idea of, especially for those of you that are in your 30's and 40's, you can do a bit of set and forget, where you can put money into an investment, you know it's real estate, it'll continue to perform in a very predictable level. And that brings a lot of assurance, I think to people, rather than just this general idea of yes, eventually might give me this average 10% return for them. 

Third lesson is that this allows you to be able to, by doing this set and forget, you can save a little bit now, put time into motion for you, and then go ahead and use the rest of your money to live in the active life that you're in now. So in other words, we're not asking you to give up on the pleasures of active living so that you can have actively a good lifestyle now. But instead, we're saying just a little bit now, in an investment that will be able to perform for you in a predictable manner can make a big difference later. Yes. That's about that. Yeah. 100% I think that when I was younger is one thing you talked about yesterday and on cruise ships, how we were reading books, and studying and things like that. That was me. I was studying to figure out what am I doing next. Because I was still in that musician lifestyle, just trying to figure life out. And I was learning about all the financial vehicles and trying to decide, okay, so how much of my money am I going to put into this? And what is it going to mean to me later, and as a young person, you think that, oh, I don't need to start right now. I've got all the time in the world. And that was my thought process. I got fully and totally educated in it. And I invested a little bit, but I didn't stay consistent enough to see it. I would love to now do a kind of a study of if I would have just stayed consistent. What would have that, you know, grown into? You might not want to look at that. Yeah.

But it's something that now you know, where we are in life, you really kind of look back and go, I was on the right path, I just, my youth overcame my brain. Would you say that some of it, some of it is not being able to see clearly the end result. Like for instance, when I was in my late 20's, my brother comes to me and says, listen, you need to open up an IRA account. So I started putting in $2,000 a year, my business was going well. And so but I didn't see what it would mean for me all the way down the line, it's just like, I'm gonna put this in this fund, and it's just going to grow. Quote grow. Well, that doesn't draw, at least for me, that doesn't draw me nearly as much as if I put this $3,000 in, I can see that 20 years from now it's gonna grow to $30,000 or $10,000, whatever the number is. So that I think that specificness of it and the predictability of it really adds to the incentive. Or you can say, hey, I know if I put in money now this is what it's going to mean later. 

And that takes us to the next lesson, which is there's still time, no matter what act of life you're in, there's still time. Now this goes back to podcast number 213, in which we talked about how you can take a lazy $100,000, that's not earning very much money. And you can still use this to create $135,000 income. So if you haven't heard podcasts 213, we recommend you go back to that. But here's what it means for you. If you're in your 30's and 40's right now, basically, if you put $100,000 into one of our funds over the next 20 years, that one time $100,000 investment plus your annual IRA contributions will lead to over the next 20 years $135,000 a year of annual income. So for people in the 30's and 40's, that one time investment means you can retire early. If you're 50 years or older. One of the important things about this lesson is time can still work for you, you can still have a good result, a happy financial ending, if you put in, so if you're 50 years old, and let's say you just have $100,000, which happens a lot for 50 year old's. Yes. They have raised children, they've paid a lot of bills, a lot of college education, and then suddenly they're 50. Yeah. They see the end of the line, you're like oh my gosh, we only have you know, between us our IRA accounts, our savings accounts, we only have $100,000. What can that do for us we're already 50. Maybe the window of savings has passed us by and it hasn't. Right. At 50 years old and we can you know the numbers are very clear. If you have a 10% return this is the power of 10%. 20 years from now when you turn 70 that one time $100,000 investment, plus your IRA contributions will create $135,000 of additional income for you beyond what your Social Security income will be on that, if you're 60 years old, you're like, wow, I'm really, you know, I want to finish by 70. And times close. If you were 60 years old, again, that 100,000 plus your IRA contributions, when you're 70 years old, that's going to create an extra $45,000 of income. So let's say that a person's social security income at 70 is going to be $3,000 a month, that's $36,000. At 60, you can start today this month, start your savings with a debt fund or one of our other funds. 10 years from now, when you turn 70, you're going to create an extra $45,000 A year of income, so $36,000, $3000 a month for Social Security, plus $45,000, from your income is going to create an $80,000 total income for you. That's a lot different than $36,000. Oh yeah. That's so powerful. Yeah, I'm so glad that you do the math for people. Because that's, I think, were the missing pieces, is understanding the end game, right? And seeing it come to fruition, because that changes the game. And it helps people to take action when they go, hey, wait a minute, I've got only $100,000 in the bank. And let me do this last one here. 65, you have $100,000, you want to retire in five years completely. Again, the same example $3,000 A month Social Security or $36,000 a year, that's your starting point to figure out what passive income is, if you go ahead for just five years, $100,000 one time investment, add your IRA contributions for the next five years, that's going to create an extra $24,000 a year of income, your $36,000 from Social Security plus $24,000, that's going to take you to $60,000. And what I'm saying is this, that two or three and one of the themes here is an extra two or three thousand dollars a month that can make a kind of an anxiety type field and create a lot of extra abundance and an extra cushion when you go there. 

So the key takeaways here for this is this for these two episodes that we've had. Number one is that passive income is a final goal for everybody. Yes, yeah. Yes, freedom through passive income is the words that we use for this podcast on purpose. And when you're in your earning years, 30's 40's and 50's, you've been focused appropriately on income producing and producing income production. But in the end, when you get to the third act, it's all about your passive income. And so the passive income is going to be the major difference when you retire whenever that is, whenever you reach the point where you're no longer interested in working, or you're no longer able to work, the amount of passive income that you have is going to directly determine the lifestyle that you enjoy. That's right. Yep, I agree. 

Well, we hope that you enjoyed this episode. I did. Make sure you head on over to our website www.FreedomCapitalInvestments.com to join the investor club and make sure you're checking us out and other social media channels as well. 

But we hope you liked this episode and we end all episodes with? Invest Smart. Invest Smart, Live Happy. Bye Everybody! 


Nothing of the show should be considered specific, personal or professional advice. Please consult an appropriate tax, legal, real estate, financial or business professional for individualized advice. Opinions and information in the show are not guaranteed, all investment strategies have the potential for profit or loss.


Transcribed by https://otter.ai





Intro
Welcome to our Podcast!
We talked about Applying the Lesson From the 3 Acts of Your Financial Life
Our 20’s
First lesson
Second lesson
Third lesson
If we had stayed consistent during our younger years
Fourth lesson
Understanding the end game
The key takeaways for these two episodes
Join our Freedom Investor Club
Make sure you’re checking us out on our social media channels!
A motto we live by... Invest Smart. Live Happy.
Disclaimer