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Blog Your guide to financial planning and retirement
December 11, 2025 • 10 minutes
Most retirement advice assumes everyone wants the same thing: stop working at 65, spend less, maybe travel a bit, and hope your money lasts.
But real life doesn’t look like that.
People retire early, late, abroad, at home, with passion projects, with heartbreak, with courage, with second chances, and with dreams that look nothing like the “traditional” model. And each of these paths teaches something powerful about money, yes, but also about purpose, identity, resilience, and freedom.
Here are 12 real-world retirement journeys and the lessons hidden inside them. Think of this not as a map but as a reminder: your retirement can, and should, look like you.
After years at a desk, Jim and his wife bought a 30-foot RV, sold most of their belongings, and spent their first three years of retirement exploring national parks. They weren’t trying to “retire cheap,” in fact, their life in the RV was quite expensive. However, this couple wanted an adventure while they were still healthy enough to enjoy it.
Money Lesson: Housing is the biggest lever in retirement planning, and it is really important to have a long-term plan for what happens if and when you decide to settle down. RVing is probably just the go-go phase of retirement. Planning for the slow-go and no-go years is really important, too.
Life Lesson: You don’t have to “settle down.” Movement can be clarity, and less stuff often means more life.
What They’d Tell You: “Try living small for 30 days before you retire into an RV. If you love it, you’ve opened a door most people never consider.”
Stacy moved to Portugal for climate, culture, and healthcare, and discovered her cost of living dropped by nearly 40%.
Money Lesson: Retiring abroad can stretch your money farther than almost any other strategy, but it requires planning for taxes, visas, and healthcare well ahead of time.
Life Lesson: Reinvention is possible at any age. Community builds faster when you take small risks like joining a language group or talking to strangers at a café.
What They’d Tell You: “Visit in different seasons. If it feels good year-round, you may have found your new home.”
“Missing family is a real problem.”
Sam saved aggressively, lived lean, and left corporate life at 43. Now he spends mornings writing and afternoons coaching youth soccer.
Money Lesson: Extreme early retirement is math + mindset. Savings rate matters more than investment picks.
Life Lesson: If you retire from something instead of toward something, you’ll feel lost. Purpose needs to be part of the plan.
What They’d Tell You: “Start experimenting with your ‘post-work identity’ years before you stop working.”
Checkout 18 Important Lessons from FIRE influencers and our podcast with Scott Reickens, author of the book Playing with Fire.
Mary never stopped working, partly because she enjoys it, but the money is useful too. At 80, she still consults part-time and says it keeps her sharp and social.
Money Lesson: Working longer isn’t just income; it reduces portfolio withdrawals and preserves Social Security benefits. Going part-time once Social Security kicks in can boost income to pre-retirement levels or higher, improving your quality of life and ability to spend without stress.
Life Lesson: Work can be joy when it’s on your schedule, not someone else’s.
What They’d Tell You: “Don’t let anyone tell you when to retire. Choose the path that keeps you active, curious, and with enough money to play.”
After retiring at 62, Bob picked up a part-time job at a garden nursery simply because he was bored at home and he loves plants.
Money Lesson: While Bob is working for lifestyle reasons, many get a part-time job to help with healthcare expenses, especially when retiring before Medicare eligibility.
Life Lesson: The life of pure leisure isn’t for everyone, and the research says that having a schedule, purpose, and the social and intellectual engagement that work enables keeps you younger and healthier!
What They’d Tell You: “Retirement is better with rhythm. Structure your days around things that energize you.”
Explore the best part-time jobs for retirees and 5 tips for a second career in retirement.
She retired at 64—and six months later found herself navigating a divorce after 30 years of marriage.
Money Lesson: Divorce in retirement is financially complicated. You need clarity on Social Security spousal benefits, housing costs, and asset division as early as possible.
Life Lesson: You can start over at any age. Community matters. Ask for help.
What They’d Tell You: “Get your own financial plan on paper. Seeing it in black and white is empowering.”
Many in this situation feel the need to work with a financial advisor, and Boldin Advisors can help. Read more about Divorce After 50.
Kelly stepped away from work at 61 to care for her own mother after a stroke.
Money Lesson: Caregiving affects income, benefits, and emotional bandwidth. Emergency funds and insurance aren’t luxuries—they’re lifelines.
Life Lesson: Plans change. What matters most is having a foundation flexible enough to bend.
What They’d Tell You: “I’m still picking up the pieces. I don’t feel like I had a choice, but I wish I hadn’t acted out of pure emotion and that I had better considered the financial implications.”
Caring for aging parents is often described as a heartwrenching honor. It can also feel horrific and hopeless. It is important to get support. AARP offers a guide to finding a support group.
And, make sure that your own future is secure before taking a financial hit. Use the Boldin Planner to explore your options.
Jillian retires on a regular basis. She is only 40 and has already “retired” (taken sabbaticals) over a dozen times. She’s travelled the U.S. in a camper, lived abroad, and has travelled to over 27 countries.
Money Lesson: Mini retirements and sabbaticals don’t have to mean that you are falling behind on earning and saving. For one of Jillian’s retirements, she renovated a house and ended up $300,000 wealthier.
Life Lesson: LIfe is long, why not spread out your leisure instead of concentrating it at the end of life.
What They’d Tell You: “Many retirements, they’re not exactly easy to pull off. It takes a little bit of courage and it takes a little bit of gumption to go out and do cool things.”
Check out Jillian’s book, “Retire Often,” and listen to her talk about mini retirements on the Boldin podcast.
Brie saved a hundred thousand dollars while in high school. I know it sounds crazy, but instead of playing sports and doing extracurriculars, she simply worked hard and was extremely frugal and saved every penny she earned. At the age of 18, she was well on her way to financial independence before she even really had her own legal independence.
Money Lesson: Saving early and consistently lets compounding do most of the heavy lifting. When you give your money enough time to grow, building real wealth becomes far more achievable.
Life Lesson: Starting early isn’t just about money—it’s about building confidence, options, and a sense of control over your future. When you learn to delay gratification and make intentional choices young, you create a foundation that makes every later decision easier. But it’s also a reminder that there’s no single “right” path: discipline is powerful, yet so is balance.
What They’d Tell You: “Start sooner than you think you can, even if it’s just $25 a week. You don’t need to copy my intensity. Just build a habit you can sustain, because the habit—not the dollar amount—is what changes your life.”
Learn about the amazing life-changing power of compound interest.
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Dave didn’t save seriously until age 50. By prioritizing catch-up contributions, working a few extra years, and right-sizing spending, he retired very comfortably at 64.
Money Lesson: It’s never too late to improve your plan. Small, consistent choices compound more than people think at any phase of life.
Life Lesson: Shame is a terrible financial advisor. Wherever you are is the right place to start.
What They’d Tell You: “Don’t procrastinate on financial clarity. Knowing your numbers reduces fear.”
Learn more about catch-up contributions.
She retired at 63—and faced a major health event at 64. Because she’d planned thoughtfully, she had the coverage and cash flow to focus on healing.
Money Lesson: Good planning doesn’t prevent crises, but it prevents crises from becoming financial catastrophes.
Life Lesson: Health is wealth. Invest in it alongside your portfolio.
What They’d Tell You: “Account for the unpredictable. It’s part of the plan, not a failure of it.”
Learn about some of the unexpected skills you’ll need (like resilience) to be a successful retiree.
He has adult stepchildren and children of his own. Estate planning became essential to avoid future confusion or conflict.
Money Lesson: Everyone needs a solid estate plan, but blended families have unique needs. Wills, beneficiaries, Social Security homework, and clear communication matter more than in most situations.
Life Lesson: Clarity is love. Don’t make your family guess.
What They’d Tell You: “Talk about inheritance early. Not because you have to—because it keeps everyone connected.”
Talking about money with your heirs (and your own parents) is critically important. Learn about passing on financial values, average inheritances, and get tips for discussing finances with loved ones.
These stories prove something simple and profound:
Retirement isn’t a number. It’s not an age. It’s not a portfolio value. Retirement is a design choice. And you get to design it.
At Boldin, our work is rooted in that belief: You can run every “what if,” explore every path, and build a plan that fits the life you want—today and decades from now.
Start your personalized plan today.
Take financial wellness into your own hands and do it yourself retirement planning: easy, comprehensive, reliable.
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