6 benefits of working (apart from the money!)

We all know the benefits of reaching full financial independence and being able to quit work. No more 6am alarm clocks, no more pointless meetings, no more being told when you can take your holiday and how many days you can take.  Its no wonder the idea of FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early) and never having to work again is so appealing.

However, there are also lots of benefits of still doing some work (apart from the money) which I think can be an added advantage for semi-retire FIRE (having enough saved and invested money to never have to work full time again.) Here are a few of the advantages –

  1. You will appreciate your free time more

Life is about balance. If we have too much of a good thing, its no longer a good thing. It becomes the norm and in turn can become boring. Same with free time. If we have unlimited free time and no purpose or challenge, we can quickly become bored. That’s why I believe still working part time could bring more happiness and fulfilment than not working at all. It will make those long weekends you can now have even sweeter!

2. Provides a sense of purpose

Still having part time work of some sort will give a purpose and a structure to your week. After a few months of never working again I would imagine each day may start to blur into the next without some sort of structure. I’m sure if I never had to work again I would spend a few too many days lazing in bed!

3. Pushes you out of your comfort zone

There are many things I have accomplished in life which if it wasn’t for the fact I was getting paid for it, I would never have pushed myself to do. For example, becoming a trainer in employability skills, giving a presentation on stress to over 300 professionals and working within several prisons to give advice and guidance to inmates. It has also lead me to meeting many people from all walks of life that I wouldn’t otherwise have met. These are all experiences that have enriched my life and given me a sense of achievement but that I may not have done otherwise.

4. An opportunity for social connections

I have gained many friends over the years that I worked with and have still kept in touch with. In most jobs there is some sort of social contact everyday whether in person or virtually. Equally I have worked with people that I would happily never meet up with again! Either way, your workplace can provide a great place to meet and connect with people.

5. Perks such as company pension scheme

There are lots of perks of being an employee. Access to a company pension scheme is a big one, but there may also be things such as health insurance, employee assistance programmes and a paid for works Christmas party, though this can sometimes be a disadvantage too!

6. Developing personal skills and knowledge

There maybe free formal training available to you at work to take advantage of and provide continuous development. Equally there may be more subtle ways you are learning everyday for example how to use latest IT software and developing communication skills.

I’m sure there are many more advantages to working but these are just some that hopefully highlight that semi-retire FIRE is not necessarily a next best option to full FIRE and might actually be even more positive for our wellbeing.

Let me know in the comments below of any others you can think of.

The OG of Financial Independence: ‘Your Money Or Your Life’ by Robin and Dominguez.

A short book review of Your money or your life by Robin and Dominguez.

When anyone asks me for a book recommendation on how to get started and inspired on the FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early) journey, I often suggest the book ‘Your Money Or Your Life’ by Vicki Robin and Joe Dominguez.

Robin and Dominguez originally wrote this book in 1992 before the FIRE movement was ever a thing and before Mr Money Moustache had even started work! It has been revised several times since though so it is still as relevant today as it was then.

It was the first book I read about personal finance and it helped me view money differently. Financial independence was something I had never thought possible before. I didn’t know anything about stocks or bonds and didn’t think there was any alternative to working full time until I could get my state pension at 68 and then finally enjoy life. Quite literally reading this book changed my life and it is probably one of the most influential books I have ever read.

It brings together some interesting concepts and ideas around money, life and work. One of these is around money being life energy. For example if we spend $300 on a hand bag, and you get paid $25 dollars an hour, you will have used 12 hours of life energy to pay for it. They are not saying this is right or wrong, it is whether the value is worth it to you. If the handbag is just going to be used once and then sit in a wardrobe was this worth working 12 hours in your job for?

They also discuss investing your spare money to provide an income to pay your everyday expenses. Once you have reached the ‘crossover point’ your investment income will cover all your living expenses. This is the point you have reached financial freedom/independence. I knew nothing about investing before reading this book so it gave me lots of useful information on where to start, enabling me to do further research on how best to invest the surplus cash.

It is a detailed book but also fairly easy to read and also practical. It provides 9 steps/chapters to follow. These include ‘Where is it all going?’, ‘The American dream on a shoe string’ and ‘For love or money: valuing your life energy’. It covers the psychology of money, some philosophy of why we work and our life purpose and also how to invest. They also give lots of examples of people using financial independence to achieve their life goals and purpose.

Reading the book will help you gain an awareness of what you are doing with your money. Question why you are spending on certain things and if it will help you achieve your “deep thrills ” rather than cheap thrills.

If you are looking for a thorough overall book on finance and financial freedom I would definitely recommend reading or listening to this book.

If you have read it let me know what you think in the comments below.

Why I chose Semi-Retire FIRE over traditional FIRE

Some reasons why semi-retire FIRE is better than full financial independence retire early.

For anyone new to the concept, FIRE stands for Financial Independence, Retire Early. The movement began in the US in the 1990s and gained popularity in the UK during the 2000s.

The core idea of traditional FIRE is simple in theory:
save and invest aggressively until your portfolio is large enough to cover all of your living expenses for the rest of your life. Once you reach that point, you can stop working entirely — often decades earlier than the state retirement age.

Some people have achieved this in their 20s or 30s. For most of us, however, the reality looks very different.

Why Traditional FIRE Didn’t Fully Work for Me

I discovered the FIRE movement in my thirties, and many of its principles immediately resonated with me. I liked the focus on:

  • Spending intentionally
  • Reducing consumerism
  • Saving and investing for freedom and flexibility
  • Not working full-time until nearly 70

But when I ran the numbers for full FIRE, the timeline was sobering. Even with disciplined saving, my FIRE “number” was so high that I wouldn’t realistically retire much earlier than a normal retirement age.

That’s when I started exploring semi-retirement FIRE — and it completely changed my approach.

Instead of aiming to never work again, my goal became much simpler:

Build enough assets so I never have to work full-time again.

Over time, I realised there are many advantages to semi-retirement — and for many people, it may be a more realistic and enjoyable path than traditional FIRE.


Semi-Retirement vs Traditional FIRE: Key Differences

Before diving into the reasons, here’s a quick comparison:

FactorSemi-RetirementTraditional FIRE
Savings requiredLowerMuch higher
Time to reachShorterLonger
Ongoing workPart-time or flexibleNone
Lifestyle balanceHighAll-or-nothing
AccessibilityMore realistic for average earnersOften favours high earners

1. Semi-Retirement Can Be Reached Much Sooner Than Full FIRE

Because semi-retirement includes some ongoing income, you don’t need to accumulate such a large investment portfolio before stepping back from full-time work.

Even modest part-time income can significantly reduce how much you need invested, which means:

  • Less pressure to save extreme percentages
  • A shorter timeline
  • More flexibility if markets perform poorly

For me, this made the goal feel achievable rather than overwhelming.


2. Doing Some Work Is Actually Good for Us

The dream of never working again at 40 sounds appealing — but for many people, complete retirement can feel empty surprisingly quickly.

After the novelty wears off, unlimited free time can lead to:

  • Loss of structure
  • Reduced sense of purpose
  • Less appreciation for leisure time

Working two or three days a week provides balance. It gives structure to the week and makes the days off far more enjoyable.


3. Semi-Retirement Avoids the “Cliff Edge” of Full FIRE

Traditional FIRE can feel like an all-or-nothing leap:

  • Decades of intense saving
  • Constantly watching every expense
  • Then suddenly stopping work forever

Semi-retirement is a gentler transition. You gradually rebalance work and life instead of switching everything off overnight.

For me, that feels far more sustainable — both financially and psychologically.


4. You Don’t Have to Sacrifice Your Best Years

Reaching full FIRE often requires major sacrifices:

  • Fewer holidays
  • Tight budgets
  • Saying no to experiences

If you’re doing this throughout your 20s and 30s, those sacrifices can add up to real regret later on.

Semi-retirement allows you to:

  • Save consistently without extreme deprivation
  • Enjoy life now and plan for the future
  • Avoid postponing happiness for a date decades away

5. You Still Get Most of the Benefits of Full FIRE

The main appeal of FIRE isn’t never working again — it’s:

  • Escaping a stressful 9–5
  • Gaining control over your time
  • Spending more time on what you love

Semi-retirement delivers most of these benefits:

  • More flexibility
  • Less stress
  • More time with family and hobbies

The difference is you get them sooner.


6. Semi-Retirement Is More Achievable for Average Earners

One of the biggest criticisms of FIRE is that it mainly benefits high earners.

While there’s some truth to that for full FIRE, semi-retirement is far more accessible. You don’t need a massive salary — just consistency, planning, and realistic expectations.

As an average earner myself, semi-retirement felt like a goal that actually fit my life rather than forcing my life to fit the goal.


Final Thoughts: Is Semi-Retirement Better Than Traditional FIRE?

For some people, traditional FIRE will always be the goal — and that’s great.

But for many others, semi-retirement offers:

  • A faster path to freedom
  • Less stress
  • More balance
  • Fewer sacrifices

For me, the semi-retirement journey feels not just easier, but more enjoyable and sustainable in the long run.

If you’re weighing up semi-retirement vs traditional FIRE, this middle path may be worth serious consideration.


How do I buy an index fund?

I’m currently coaching a client regarding financial freedom and building a freedom fund. She understands all the principles of FIRE (financial independence retire early) the 4 per cent rule, budgeting, compound interest and what stocks and shares are but she had one barrier to starting the whole journey. And that was ‘How do I buy an index fund?’

It was then that I realised that sometimes its just not having the knowledge of the more practical first steps that is holding people back from starting their financial freedom journey.

So this post is to try and give some pointers on where to start. However I am not a financial adviser so I don’t give individual advice and I’m based in the UK, so although the other posts on this website can hopefully be appreciated by any one from any country, this one is definitely UK skewed.

Ok where do I start?

Well put simply, in order to start investing you need these 3 things –

  • The index fund or shares that you want to buy (the investments)
  • An account that you will put your investments in (eg a stocks and shares ISA)
  • A platform that will hold your account and the investments that are inside it.

In the UK a very tax efficient way of investing is in a stocks and shares ISA. This is a type of account that you will put your investments into. This is tax free so you wont be taxed on the growth of your investments or any dividends received. You can invest a maximum of £20k each year. However, if you are currently investing in a cash ISA you can’t also invest in a stocks and shares ISA as well. However these rules could change in future.

There are lots of platforms that will hold the stocks and shares ISA such as Vanguard, Interactive Investor, Hargreaves Lansdown and many others. They all have different fees and restrictions so you will need to do your homework and see which will work best for you.

Once you have your chosen account in the platform of your choice e.g. a stocks and shares ISA on the Vanguard platform, you can then choose which fund or shares to invest in. As previously discussed in investing for beginners, many proponents of FIRE choose to invest in a global index fund. These are low cost, diverse as you are buying lots of different companies throughout the world and simple to buy. There are lots of different types depending on which platform you use, but they are easy to search through on the platform. You can also use morningstar to check the details and performance of your fund to make a more informed decision.

Often you can start investing with as little as £50 to£100 a month into the fund. You can start a regular direct debit into it each month and then just let compound interest do its thing over time. Once you have the hang of it and as you trim down expenses and increase income you can then choose to increase your contributions each month.

Hopefully this gives you some basics and pointers as to where to start when looking to buy an index fund. Do make sure you do your own research though to work out what is best for you. There is a wealth of information out there about investing so please use this post as a starting point and let me know how you get on.

Investing for beginners: Don’t be sexy and exciting, be dull and boring.

I know in most circumstances this would be terrible advice, but when it comes to investing, personally I think dull and boring is the best strategy.

I am not a financial adviser so this is just my opinion and not advice. But to me, sexy and exciting investing would be buying the latest individual hot stock, random crypto currencies or any new ‘get rich quick’ investment thats been shared on TikTok. For some people these things might be ok to dabble in now and again, but for a long term investing strategy that is going to grow your wealth over time (say 10 plus years) I think dull and boring is the way to go.

In dull and boring I mean some kind of low cost global index fund.

What is a global index fund?

A global index fund enables you to buy a slice of the worlds economy. Each index fund varies in size depending on what market it is tracking but there will usually be hundreds if not thousands of different companies in it. When you buy shares in the index fund you are buying every company in it. And not just any companies, some of the biggest and best most profitable ones throughout the world (think Apple, Amazon, Meta, McDonalds, oil companies, pharmaceuticals etc) An index fund just tracks the whole market. For this reason its called a passive fund and usually has cheaper fees. There are no highly paid active fund managers trying to beat the stock market.

It will still go up and down in value day by day and year by year, but if you are in it for the long run (decades rather than months or years) you will hopefully get rates of return higher than you would in just a savings account. For example historically the US S and P 500 stock market has on average returned around 10 per cent per year before inflation.

As in my previous post pay yourself first, rather than buying the latest Apple gadget or having a daily McDonalds, you could use that money to buy a part of the business instead via the global index fund. This is the path to your wealth and financial freedom.

Not sure where to start with buying global index funds? Well don’t worry we will look at this in the next post.

Grow your freedom fund!

Once you’ve mastered your budget, paid off any high debts and built up your emergency fund its time to look at the most exciting part of the plan…the freedom fund!

So what is a freedom fund??

A freedom fund is your pool of savings and investments that will be used for your path to semi FIRE or full FIRE, if that’s what you decide to do. Its the pot of money that you will be able to draw out an income each year to cover some or all of your expenses. Its your escape from the 9 to 5 rat race. Its your route to a different lifestyle and better work life balance.

In the next few posts we will cover all the things you need to know to start your own freedom fund including the 4% rule, some investing basics, compound interest and working out how much you need in your freedom fund. So keep on reading and start your journey to freedom today!

Budgeting can be fun!

I know this title is going to be a hard one to sell. But hear me out…

Most people wince or roll their eyes at the thought of budgeting. They see it as depriving themselves in some way. Not being able to buy the things they enjoy or have any fun.

But I like to think of having a budget as the opposite of that. Its all about making sure you allocate spending to the important things in life (such as financial freedom) and reducing the amount to the things not adding any value (do you really need another pair of jeans, shoes, handbag….insert as applicable).

So where to start?

A good place to start is with a budget planner or spreadsheet that you can fill in with all your monthly expenses. There are lots of free budgeting spreadsheets on the internet, here is a good one – Budget Planner: how to manage your money – MoneySavingExpert you can save the excel version to your computer or print it out. If feeling adventurous you can create one yourself, you get bonus points for that!

Then look over your bank statements from the past few months and see where your income has been going. You don’t need to beat yourself up on this. But “What isn’t measured isn’t managed” (a famous person once said) so you need to know where things stand at the moment without judging yourself, so you can manage it going forward.

Next step is to think about whether the spending in each area is adding value to your life or not. If the answer is no then this is probably an area you could cut back on or eliminate altogether. Some expenses probably can’t be changed very easily such as rent or mortgage. But other areas such as TV packages, subscriptions, eating out or clothes shopping usually can.

By reducing the expenses that aren’t adding value to your life you can pay more into the exciting expenses that align with your values like your financial freedom. You will then literally be buying more free time. Now hopefully you’ll agree that does sound like fun!

Financial independence fundamentals: Pay yourself first!

Photo by maitree rimthong on Pexels.com

Yes pay yourself first. Not McDonalds, not Costa, not Dunkin Donuts home delivery service (ok that might just be me..) but YOU.

Obviously you need to pay all your regular household bills too but if you then wait until the end of the month to save what ever is left, guess what, you will probably have aided the Dunkin Donuts CEO in his early retirement and not yours!

So how much should I pay myself?

Well it depends how quickly you want to semi-retire FIRE. But start off with something, anything, just make sure you start.

You will need to work out your budget which we will cover in another post, but getting into the habit of paying yourself first is half the battle. The other half is consistently keeping it up, month by month, year by year until hey presto eventually you will be able to quit that job, or at least work less.

Ideally set this up as an automatic payment each month. So you can set it up and not have to think about it again. It will just go from your pay cheque into your savings or investments every single month and your future you will be extremely grateful you did.

If you can get this FI fundamental up and running you are well on your path to financial freedom and Semi-retire FIRE so keep on reading and let me know how you get on.