Personal finance media has spent two decades pushing one message harder than any other: save aggressively for retirement, and start yesterday. The advice is technically correct, and it has produced a generation of people who under-save. It has also produced a quieter group who over-save into anxiety, and that side of the ledger almost never gets discussed.
The honest version of retirement planning involves a tradeoff between two different ways of wasting your life โ running out of money in old age, or sacrificing your healthiest decades for a future you may not get to spend in.
The compounding pitch ignores time and health
Charts showing what $500 a month becomes in 40 years are mathematically true and rhetorically dishonest. They quietly assume you will be alive, healthy, and able to enjoy that money at the end. Average life expectancy obscures wide variation: a meaningful percentage of people die before retirement, and a larger one becomes too unwell to do the things they were saving for. The years between 25 and 45 are the years your knees work, your friendships are forming, and travel, hobbies, and relationships are easiest to invest in. Money saved in those years is real. So is the experience deferred. The compounding chart shows only one side.
Anxiety isn’t a financial plan
The FIRE community and aggressive savings culture often shade into something closer to disordered behavior โ extreme frugality, guilt over normal spending, a spreadsheet-mediated relationship with daily life. People in this mindset aren’t planning rationally. They are managing fear of poverty by stockpiling well past any defensible target, and then continuing to stockpile because the fear doesn’t reduce when the balance grows. Therapists who specialize in money issues describe this pattern routinely. It is not the same as being responsible. It is a form of avoidance that uses retirement saving as its respectable cover, and it costs people relationships, experiences, and present-day quality of life that they cannot recover later.
A defensible target and then a life
A more sensible frame: identify a savings rate that puts you on track for a reasonable retirement under reasonable assumptions โ typically 10% to 15% of income for someone starting in their twenties or thirties, more if you start later โ and then stop optimizing past that. Beyond a sensible contribution, additional dollars saved have steeply diminishing returns on retirement quality and steeply rising costs in current quality of life. Spend on health, relationships, learning, and the experiences that have a window. Buy back time when you can. Treat retirement as a constraint to satisfy, not a goal to maximize.
The bottom line
Save enough that future-you isn’t broke. Don’t save so much that present-you doesn’t get a life. The financial industry profits when you save more, and most retirement messaging is implicitly shaped by that incentive. The quieter truth is that money is a means, time is the actual scarce resource, and a plan that ignores the second to perfect the first is not financial wisdom. It’s just a different kind of mistake.
Leave a Reply