Tag: Behavioral Finance

How To Practice for Retirement (Ep. 4)

How To Practice for Retirement (Ep. 4)

Retirement isn’t just about reaching a number or a specific age. It’s a significant life transition that requires preparation beyond financial planning.

How do you shift from a lifetime of saving to spending? How do you build new communities and find purpose when work becomes optional?

In this episode, Jamie Hopkins and Kate Duffy explore the concept of “practicing retirement” and how to prepare for this major life transition at every stage of life. They discuss the psychological challenges of spending down savings, the importance of aligning your values with your spending, and practical strategies like bucketing, visualization, and test-driving retirement lifestyle choices. 

  • Key takeaways:
  • The psychological and behavioral challenges of transitioning from saving to spending in retirement
  • The importance of retirement planning beyond finances, including identity shifts, community building, and lifestyle changes
  • How to use bucketing and visualization techniques throughout your life to align spending with your values and goals
  • Practical strategies for test-driving retirement
  • The counterintuitive benefit of stopping retirement savings 2-3 years before retiring to improve quality of life and potentially stay in the workforce longer

Resources:

Connect with Bryn Mawr Trust: 

Connect with Kate Duffy: 

Connect with Jamie Hopkins: 

Welcome to The Planning Perspectives Podcast: The Human Side of Planning with Jamie Hopkins & Kate Duffy

Welcome to The Planning Perspectives Podcast: The Human Side of Planning with Jamie Hopkins & Kate Duffy

Hosts Jamie Hopkins and Kate Duffy share their journeys, first money memories, and the life lessons behind financial planning.

From gravel shovels to fog machines, ballroom dancing to estate planning, they reveal how personal experiences shape the way we view money and life choices. Their candid reflections highlight the emotional and behavioral aspects of financial planning, underscoring why conversations about money are always deeply personal.

Key Points:

  • Jamie and Kate’s backstory of meeting and how they came together at Bryn Mawr Trust
  • First money memories and how early experiences shape money attitudes
  • Emotional and psychological factors in financial planning, from independence to fear of loss
  • Their biggest “aha” moments around money and the importance of planning before a crisis
  • Personal recharge activities like ballroom dancing, cooking, movies, and how balance ties into intentional planning

Connect with Bryn Mawr Trust: 

Connect with Kate Duffy: 

Connect with Jamie Hopkins: