Location:

United States

Description:

Funding the adventurous life.

Language:

English


Episodes
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Is My Rent Too High?

4/22/2024
In normal times, rent prices, like most everything else, slowly yet surely increase at about 2-3% per year. This is inflation. But in terms of the housing market, these aren’t normal times. In the pandemic era, as demand surged in supply-restricted markets, both sale and rent prices soared, with year-over-year inflation rates at 30% or more in some markets. To speak generally of the world of pricing, what goes up might come down. So, when I approached our landlord a few weeks back about lowering the price of our rent, she wasn’t so surprised. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Subscribe to the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:00:30:29

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An Emerging Revolution in the Treatment of Chronic Pain

4/8/2024
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, chronic pain—pain lasting at or beyond three months—affected over 20% of U.S. adults, or 51.6 million people, in 2021. Symptoms were severe enough to substantially restrict daily activity for 6.9% of Americans that same year. And with chronic pain comes soaring medical costs, pharmaceutical over-reliance, and addiction. Mounting multidisciplinary research suggests that most chronic pain is not of structural origin. In other words, most chronic pain can not be directly attributed to injury or physical abnormality. Neuroplastic pain results from the brain misinterpreting signals from the body as if they were dangerous. We habituate to pain, creating behaviors that either avoid pain or alleviate symptoms. Encouragingly, those undergoing a psychological treatment known as Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT) are showing vast improvements in pain management without pharmaceutical or other medical interventions. One major study found that two-thirds of chronic back pain patients were pain-free or nearly pain-free after four weeks of PRT interventions. In addition, patients showed visible changes in the prefrontal brain regions associated with pain after therapy. While psychological treatments are effective in managing chronic pain, this does not imply that the pain is imaginary. My guest today, Miriam Gauci Bongiovanni, suffered needlessly until she discovered the concept of neuroplastic pain. Today, now pain-free, she works from her home in Malta as a Certified MindBody Practitioner and Trauma-Informed Coach. But beyond her skills as a wonderful teacher and educator on chronic pain, I found her story of embracing a nontraditional career fascinating. Today we dive in on everything from how our personalities and fears inform our pain cycles to living a good life. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Subscribe to the website: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com Topics Discussed with Miriam Gauci Bongiovanni

Duration:01:04:06

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A Therapist on Satisfaction in Sport, Life, and Love

3/28/2024
If you haven’t noticed, the concept of achievement and even competitiveness has weighed heavily on my mind as of late. A gift of the nontraditional life is the opportunity to step back and see the world around us with a degree of unusual clarity, far from the treadmill. For years I valued athletic and professional progress in ways that weren’t making my life better, but I thought they were. I searched for and implemented solutions to the wrong problems. Meanwhile, what truly mattered—mainly my relationships—withered on the vine. The journey toward rectifying these tendencies continues today. My guest today, Lincoln Stoller, is a former mountaineer who now specializes in psycho-, hypno-, and neurofeedback therapy, in tandem with numerous other counseling and coaching services. Lincoln holds a PhD in Theoretical and Mathematical Physics from UT Austin, including a post-doc assignment at UC Berkley. Lincoln eventually moved from quantum physics to create a management and automation software platform for businesses, learned to build Norwegian log homes, traveled and lived abroad in far-flung foreign lands, and is even a certified pilot. To say Lincoln lives well outside of the bounds of normalcy is probably a half-truth at best. As he says in the interview, we should “just keep doing out-of-the-box stuff. And if people aren't calling you a little crazy or a little nutty, then you probably aren’t exploring enough of the boundaries.” Today’s conversation revolves around the high-risk potential of hard-charging performers and achievers, whether they exist in sports, business, or other areas of life. While these individuals hold our collective attention and admiration, Lincoln outlines how their psychological roots run shallow. They often struggle to stay satisfied with themselves or those around them. Lincoln might even say he holds an anti-hard-man philosophy. I think you’ll see why. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Subscribe to the website: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com Topics Discussed with Lincoln Stoller

Duration:01:34:48

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All Work and No Play Makes You…Normal

3/18/2024
The concept of play conjures the image of my three-year-old (and blonder) self, plastic shovel in hand, amorphous stains down the front of my pants. And certainly slobber. Lots of slobber. That three-year-old was certainly not concerned with social hierarchy or status, lacking a whiff of ambition to put the best version of himself forward. He played with a shovel in the sand because something needed to be dug and that was all that mattered. As we age (and start to exhibit bladder control) the nature of play changes but is not altogether lost, at least not at first. Instead of digging in the sand, we might play a game of Twister, something I played as late as my college years. I challenge you to toss out that board on the floor—putting your head through someone else’s legs—and try and stay serious and stoic. It’s impossible. You’ll be giggling like a child. And that’s the point. We need more play. Source of Inspiration: Designing Your Life: How to Build a Well-Lived, Joyful Life (Bill Burnett, Dave Evans) Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Subscribe to the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:00:16:53

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Four Years of Financial Independence: The Slow Growth

2/28/2024
For four years I’ve watched something slowly bloom. In my old life, the “before time” you might call it, I moved from task to task. If I wasn’t working, I unknowingly made a practice of turning recreational or hobbyist pursuits into something that, from an outsider’s perspective, looked an awful lot like work. Goals and accolades were everything, and the more quantifiable, the better. But the farther I’ve separated myself from this life in space and time, the more clarity I’ve gained. Grasping for metaphors, I was tempted to explain this budding awareness as a slowly growing flower. But for perhaps all the wrong reasons, I hesitated to describe my growth and awareness as floral, preferring to drop the metaphor. But I can’t quite shake it, because I have watched something slowly grow. It’s not me that has bloomed–again, all the wrong imagery–but it is the world I could not see then. I could not see the flawed logic buried in the cold and wet earth because I identified with it. It was my life, so I could not reject what protected me. And four years later I’ve watched something slowly take root. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Subscribe to the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:00:15:10

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The Psychology Behind Poor Investments and Other Important Decisions

2/12/2024
When we make important decisions, we are often not as rational or objective as we’d like to believe. The base rate fallacy is the tendency to misjudge the probability of a situation by not accounting for all relevant information. This cognitive bias affects everything from first impressions to voting preferences to broad market behavior. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Subscribe to the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:00:22:38

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A Unique Form of Real Estate Investment in a Tough Housing Economy (with Michael Farnsworth)

1/29/2024
If you follow economic news at all, you’ve taken note of the changing conditions of the American housing economy in the last few years. First, high demand, low supply, and cheap debt fueled an extraordinary (and unhealthy) price surge. In response, the Federal Reserve ratcheted up interest rates to cool an overheated economy in the wake of pandemic-related disruptions In years prior, economic conditions supported a vast proliferation of real estate investment. Individual investors to multinational corporations scooped up properties across the country for cheap. The returns were fantastic. But in my mind, those days were decidedly over. When my guest today, Michael Farnsworth, discussed his novel concept of real estate investment, I was all ears. Do many of the real estate investment rules-of-thumb still function in a world of 7%+ mortgage rates and all-time high prices? Is now really the time to start a real estate investment portfolio? Is this even the time to buy a personal residence? And when it comes to short-term rentals, what are the ethical considerations to local economies and community fabric? We cover all this and more in today’s episode. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Subscribe to the website: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com Topics Discussed with Michael Farnsworth

Duration:01:42:24

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QA12: Will A Life Of Financial Independence Meet Expectations?

1/22/2024
We’re back to the digital mailbag to answer your questions! For this week: Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Subscribe to the website: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com Q1: What’s the latest on markets and your financial situation since you left your corporate career? (00:02:38) Q2: Expectations versus experiences on the financially independent life (00:16:33) Q3: Could you provide an update on your experiences and costs with ACA (Obamacare) insurance? (00:27:42) Q4: I’d like to hear any details you’re willing to share on your remote landlord experience (00:39:36) Q5: My partner and I are taking a sabbatical! What should we do about insurance? (00:50:30) Q6: How do I prioritize retirement savings against saving for short- to medium-term savings goals, like buying a house? (00:56:20) Q7: Why are we so concerned about the loss of purpose when we stop working a traditional job? (01:04:31)

Duration:01:13:12

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Facing the Rest of the World with a Nontraditional Lifestyle

1/8/2024
When I left my corporate career in early 2020, I didn’t fully understand the ways that I would, in later years, slowly become decoupled and desynchronized from a society that values hustle, status, and self-worth generated to a large degree around our career titles. You’ll read the same thing repeatedly on the internet: Ignore the haters, do your thing. But when I actually sit down and talk with those who are living similar lives, regardless of their financial position, I find that the tidy internet talking points leave many of us dissatisfied. After all, humans are one of the most social species on the planet. We shouldn’t be surprised by the difficulty in overriding instinct, to go against the grain of what the herd values most. My thinking has evolved dramatically on this subject in recent years, so let’s dig in. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:00:16:32

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"The Rewards of Being in One Place for a While" (Meghan Walker and Callan Cooper)

12/26/2023
By popular demand, I’ve decided to extend a travel series centered around the topic of building community or maintaining our need for social interactions when away from home. Community building is especially complicated when abroad, where cultures and languages vary considerably from our own. My guests today, veteran travelers with considerable expat experiences, are perfectly suited to discuss this topic. Meghan Walker, a previous guest who writes at awaytofi.com, spent many of her formative years living abroad in Kenya and New Zealand. Her husband, Callan Cooper, is an expat living in the United States from New Zealand, where they met. Meghan and Callan joined me in my home in Colorado for a rare in-person interview, where we discussed in detail the beauty and challenges of international extended travel, careers, evolving travel philosophies, and financial tactics that can have you living a similar life much sooner than you think. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:01:32:45

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Tyler Karow: The Tiny Future of Affordable Housing

12/4/2023
I’m a little unsure of the best way to frame this introduction. In some ways, this is a story of embracing climbing for all the right reasons. Pursuit of technical mastery and love for the outdoors over the gamification of grades and emphasis on physical training. On the other hand, this is also the story of early adulthood in the modern era. The narrative to pursue something like climbing full-time is strong in the outdoor world. But most I encounter eventually find that climbing alone leaves us yearning for meaning and purpose. My guest today, Tyler Karow, spent nearly three years on the road pursuing climbing. Today he balances considerable climbing achievements with a secondary passion for building and a desire to be a part of the solution to America’s affordable housing crisis. Karow is a 29-year-old climber known for his big wall accomplishments in Yosemite, Patagonia, and around the globe. His resume includes a ground-up free ascent of Golden Gate (5.13a) on El Cap, and Yosemite’s Triple Crown in under 24 hours, only the eighth time this feat has been achieved. Notably, Karow climbed the Triple while working a full-time (plus) job. He holds a B.S. in Civil Engineering from the University of Southern California and is a licensed civil engineer and general contractor. With this background in engineering and construction, he envisions a career helping to build prefabricated tiny home communities. This emerging approach to construction helps to reduce the cost of new housing and more efficiently add supply to a stressed housing market. This episode is an Oreo of sorts, with a focused discussion of Tyler’s climbing achievements and work/life balance in the beginning and end. The middle of this discussion takes a deep dive into the affordable housing crisis, the complex nature of new construction, and Tyler’s vision for the future of American affordable housing. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:01:35:27

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The Social Dilemma of Extended Travel (Jeff, A Way to FI)

11/20/2023
In October I published a mini episode on my thought processes on the pros and cons of extended travel abroad. Many of you left comments or emailed me your thoughts, and I’m so thankful for your input. You’ve all given me plenty to consider. One of the most insightful emails came from Jeff of awaytofi.com, a previous guest on this podcast (Episode 44). Jeff has been living abroad for over fifteen months with his wife, Rose, and as such is well-versed in discussing the impacts of extended travel, particularly on our social lives. This week’s episode is an in-depth exploration of extended travel, especially as it relates to our human need for a sense of place and community. Travel takes us away from our tribe, so how do we create new ones? Do we even need to? You can probably expect more content like this with upcoming guests and articles. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:01:49:12

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Uncertainty Is Forever (And That's Good News)

11/6/2023
Uncertainty is a fact of life, yet we yearn for known outcomes. Every day we make decisions. Some decisions are small and inconsequential, while others are profound and life-altering. Sometimes events happen regardless of our decisions. And above it all and looming like a nervous wind is uncertainty. Uncertainty is forever. But those who learn to sit with and embrace uncertainty are resilient and innovative. Those who try to fight uncertainty spend more money and live with less contentment. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:00:16:22

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James McHaffie: From Bold Climbing to Novel Writing

10/23/2023
James McHaffie needs no introduction, at least in the United Kingdom. His approach to bold onsight climbing, particularly free solos, is unparalleled. He’s repeated the hardest sport climb in Wales, Big Bang (9a), sent Britain’s hardest sea cliff, Dave MacLeod’s The Longhope Direct (E10 7a), and made the first ascent of The Meltdown, a 9a slab in the slate quarries of his home in North Wales. And now he’s written a book. But unlike many books released by elite climbers, this is not an autobiographical account of hard climbs in the face of relative adversity. Caff, as he prefers to be called, has written a fictional account of Eleri, a young woman amongst the slate quarries of North Wales who in the aftermath of a family suicide takes aim at British politicians who pushed for austerity and the conditions that led to such suffering. This conversation was such a gift. I can see even through all that rage that James is brimming with humanity, a trait sometimes in short supply. I hope you’ll enjoy this one as much as I did. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com Topics Discussed with James McHaffie

Duration:01:23:53

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Mini Episode: Is the Best Life Lived at Home?

10/16/2023
Years ago, we decided to one day try living abroad for at least a year. We always loved traveling and also always felt that we never had enough time to truly experience a place beyond the superficial. I wanted to stay for a while, learn the language, and slowly morph into a new life mode. But now I’m starting to question the wisdom of this decision. Is living abroad a bad idea? Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the FREE newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:00:13:43

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The Problem with Bucket Lists and How to Be Happy with Less

10/2/2023
It’s often said that happiness equals what you have minus (or sometimes divided by) what you want. When our wants are many, what we have is of little consequence. That is why there are hordes of unhappy millionaires and high achievers who quietly suffer (yes, suffer) under the weight of lofty and insatiable desires and ambitions. Western ideals place great importance on the “haves.” And despite an anecdotal feeling that my greater social circle is less materialistic, I’m less certain that we’ve diminished our appetite for having things. The things look and feel different. Less like fancy watches or cars or gaudy showings of riches and more like spreadsheets full of countries and crags unvisited, food not tasted, status not yet achieved, or routes not sent. We believe subconsciously or otherwise that by checking items off our bucket list we will arrive at some sense of blissful satisfaction. But biology and evolution suggest otherwise. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:00:27:16

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Dr. Jim Dahle of the White Coat Investor on Building the Ideal Life

9/25/2023
Jim Dahle is the founder of the White Coat Investor, a widely consumed personal finance and investing blog and podcast specifically designed for physicians and other high-income careers. What Jim created in 2011 as a simple blog has grown into a multi-media empire that now employs fifteen people and hosts content from a range of columnists. Jim has cut back from his full-time (plus) emergency physician career and White Coat Investor responsibilities to focus on what makes life worth living, and that’s where I wanted to pick up this conversation. Jim is a climber, husband, and father of four. Today we discuss how he’s managed to step away, at least slightly, from his hard-charging career and blogging days to what he’s now describing as his ideal life. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com Topics Discussed with Jim Dahle

Duration:01:10:24

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The Great American Student Loan Debt with Emma Crawford

9/11/2023
In America, student loan debt has exploded over the last twenty years, with the average inflation-adjusted federal loan debt per student rising from under $29,000 in 2011 to nearly $40,000 in 2020. Students and their parents are paying an increasingly costly price for college education, outpacing growth in expected starting salaries. After more than three years, loan payments are coming due again after the expiration of a Covid-era forbearance program put in place under President Trump and extended under President Biden. My guest today, Emma Crawford, is intimately familiar with student loans as both a borrower as well as a former university aid advisor, and now as a financial planner. Emma Crawford is the former Director of Financial Wellness and Financial Aid Advising for the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. She holds the Certified Financial Planner (CFP) designation and is a fee-only financial planner for Perk Planning, based out of Madison, Wisconsin. Emma joins me on the show today to discuss the evolving and complicated world of student loans for the first two-thirds of the show. The final third of the interview is dedicated to discussing the equally convoluted world of financial planners and advisors. We discuss the nature of fee-only advising and who may find this type of service appropriate. Topics Discussed with Emma Crawford Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:01:13:21

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QA11: Laying It Out in Simple Terms

8/14/2023
We’re back to the digital mailbag to answer your questions! For this week: Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Subscribe to the website: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com Q1: How has my lifestyle evolved since achieving financial independence and how do I spend my time? (00:02:49) Q2: Updated thoughts on money and markets (00:05:01) Q3: What if Vanguard failed?! (00:07:53) Q4: Can and should life insurance policies be used for retirement savings? (00:11:56) Q5: When do I stop trying to optimize my tax bracket and just let go? (00:15:30) Q6: What is a Simple IRA and how does it differ from a 401(k)? Can I still do Roth conversions? (00:18:56) Q7: Savings rates are great right now! Should I pay less on my loans to maximize my savings? (00:22:39) Q8: Big picture: Where do I start on getting my financial life together?(00:26:26) Q9: How was your presentation at the climbing gym? Can you record it? (00:34:51) Q10: Can you supply podcast transcripts? (00:40:27)

Duration:00:43:07

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The One Time to Be Average with Dave Rosen

7/31/2023
Dave Rosen is a climber and ophthalmologist in his final year of residency. And Dave grew up like so many of us: broadly exposed to the importance of money and taught a thing or two about saving, but investing was a foreign concept and his lack of knowledge was a source of shame. While Dave skimmed over it, he’s no slouch as a climber. He has bagged a pile of double-digit boulder problems up to V12, sent 5.13c, and developed numerous boulder problems, particularly in the South Mountain area near Phoenix where he and his wife lived for medical school for four years. He is hard-working, analytical, and pragmatic in his career and life approach. In this conversation, we discuss how Dave found climbing from the world of canyoneering, his early exposure to money and how that has markedly changed in recent years, the constant pull of greener grass, working backward from an ideal lifestyle, and the ethical and moral dilemmas of early retirement. Support this project: Buy Me a Coffee Get the newsletter: SUBSCRIBE ME! Show Notes and Links at Clippingchains.com

Duration:01:21:11