Jacob Lund Fisker Quotes



Best 26 Early Retirement Extreme Quotes by Jacob Lund Fisker

Early Retirement Extreme Quotes

“A salary or even the potential of a future salary seems to be a gateway to the debt drug. So many people could probably reduce the risk of getting into debt by simply quitting their jobs.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Any connection with nature and most connections with technology are lost. There's a belief that nature is irrelevant and that anything can be solved using the current methods--now technology; previously magic or praying.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Conspicuous consumption is not a natural state for all of us.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Doing something that is considered very difficult at least once in your life is highly recommended.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Dollar cost averaging naturally provides steady employment for fund managers and most everyone else associated with the stock market. Regular contributions are therefore sold to the public as something that is beneficial. In reality, dollar cost averaging is a double-edged sword. Proponents usually imagine a scenario of an initial market decline that recovers. In this case, even though the starting and ending price are the same, the average cost is lower, thus resulting in an overall investment gain. Now consider the scenario of a rising market that subsequently declines. In this case, the average cost is higher than the start and ending price, and the investor will have lost money. In fact, given that markets rise much more slowly than they drop, a dollar cost averaging investor is more likely to make an entry and invest larger amounts while the market is rising than during its decline. At its best, dollar cost averaging provides no benefit, but regardless, dollar cost averaging is an excellent way of providing steady work for Wall Street, which collects fees and commissions to invest the steady stream of money from workers.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Education is very different from training. Training is what you know whereas education is who you are as a person.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Health is thus a condition of well-being and an ability to appreciate life. It's not necessarily optimizing or conforming to a set of measurable quantities like life expectancy or blood pressure, nor is it removing all symptoms using drugs. Health is the presence of something positive, rather than the absence of something negative.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“If you have debt, you're not a free person. You're explicitly owned by your debt and implicitly owned by the creditor.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Many profit-driven corporate strategies are based on fashion, planned obsolescence, unneeded upgrades, and masterful emotional manipulation causing people to continuously replace goods which are still in good working order.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Nobody thinks of using improvements in technology and productivity to allow people to work less and require fewer assets to achieve the same standard of living. Instead, while everybody is richer, at least in terms of stuff, no one is any wealthier. Their wealth is "safely" out of reach. If it weren't, how many would still show up for work the next day?”

Early Retirement Extreme

“People with more money than time buy $3,000 road racing bicycles with ultralight carbon frames to shave two pounds off the bike, regardless of the fact that they themselves are probably at least 10 pounds overweight.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Preventing catastrophic, that is, irrecoverable losses is the only reason to carry insurance. Effectively, this means carrying as high a deductible as possible while at the same time having enough funds, which you can invest, to cover losses up to the deductible. Most of us don't insure our clothes or tools. For a financially independent person, this will extend much further since almost everything can be replaced many times over.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Realize that economic agents all represent special interests that typically interpret the situation according to their own interests or political views.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Tally up the sum total of your earned income so far, subtract your savings, and compare the difference to your pile of stuff. Was it really a good deal?”

Early Retirement Extreme

“The Dark Ages gradually ended six centuries ago with the Renaissance, which seeded new ideas for a different world. The Renaissance ideal dominated our culture until three centuries ago, from the 14th to the 18th century, when it was superseded by modernism. Not surprisingly, this human ideal has almost been forgotten in our culture. The Renaissance, literally "re-birth", was a revival and rediscovery of classical Greek and Roman culture following the decline of culture, trade, and technology during the Dark Ages.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“The ERE Wheaton Table identifies a few representative mindsets along the personal economics journey as mastery is developed in spending efficiency and overall life skills.

These descriptions are based on 10 years of experience talking to different people in the personal finance world.”

Early Retirement Extreme

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“A life worth living might be measured in many ways, but the one way that stands above all others is living a life of no regrets.”


More quotes by Gary Keller

“The mass education in high schools reflects the mass production of the real world. The teaching style has one teacher (supervisor) lecturing (leading) 20-25 students (workers) sitting in rows, much like a manager and his employees.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“The question “How much do you need to retire?” is pretty much standard. Conversely, "How little do you need to retire?” is extremely rare.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“The question you need to answer is what you want to do with your life given that you don't have the time to do everything? Do you want to spend most of your life paying off the interest of a 30-year mortgage and working so you can fill increasingly bigger houses with increasingly more stuff while being stuck in your daily commute in increasingly nicer cars? Or are you prepared to give up the stuff so that you can do whatever you want, whenever, and wherever, within reason? What will your legacy be--what you owned or who you were?”

Early Retirement Extreme

“The real problem is not how much we earn; it's how much we waste, perhaps to demonstrate our supposed wealth, when we spend it.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“To live together, a couple has to agree on certain things, like not signing up for debt, and how much to spend on common items like housing. A compromise must be reached. For other things, whereas it would be nice to agree on them, like where to squeeze a tube of toothpaste, whether to have a TV or a car, it's not a crucial issue.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“To paraphrase Einstein, you can't solve your problems with the same mindset that created them.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Unfortunately for the existing mature systems in nature, the rapid expansion of the human bubble is destroying them. Unfortunately for us, we can't exist without them any more than a living person can exist without oxygen or a body can exist without a head. In this sense, it is actually a conceptual error to define the environment as the rest of the biosphere save humans, and think of ourselves as apart from it, since we can't exist without it.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Walkers easily travel three miles by foot. Drivers get in their cars to get from one side of the parking lot to the other. Neither quite understand why the other is so crazy, when it's so easy to do things their way.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“We have an economic model that is based on pulling resources out of the ground and mostly turning them into unnecessary products, getting people to buy the products by convincing them that they need them, then getting them to throw the products away because they're obsolete. This makes people buy the next model and bury the other one in the ground. The sole goal of this seemingly pointless exercise is to work faster and grow the gross domestic product, which measures the resource churn.”

Early Retirement Extreme

“Why do we still work eight hours a day, 50 weeks a year, when we're twice as productive as we were 50 years ago?”

Early Retirement Extreme

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“Research in psychology backs me up: People who spend money on time-saving purchases experience greater life satisfaction, regardless of their income.”


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