Finding Financial Clarity After Losing a Spouse

Finding Financial Clarity After Losing a Spouse

Mary was 62 when her husband passed away suddenly. He had always been the “CFO” of the household, the one who dealt with their investments, pensions, and taxes. Mary was left with a folder of account statements she didn’t understand and an advisor she barely knew. When Mary asked that advisor about withdrawing money to…

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So You’re About to Retire: The First-Year Financial Timeline (With Real Numbers)

So You’re About to Retire: The First-Year Financial Timeline

You’ve handed in your notice and circled your retirement date on the calendar. Congratulations! Now what? The three months or so before retirement and the first six to nine months after are packed with decisions: pension paperwork, government benefit start dates, converting accounts, setting withdrawals, and making sure taxes are handled properly so your new…

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Reframing the CPP Enhancement: A 122% Increase In Benefits

Reframing the CPP Enhancement: A 122% Increase In Benefits

Whenever I write about the timing of Canada Pension Plan benefits, the response is enormous. It’s one of the most popular and polarizing retirement planning topics out there. The usual way this conversation gets framed is around age 65. That’s considered the “normal” starting point, so you’ll often hear people say, “If you wait until…

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A Young Adult’s Smart Guide to Money

A Young Adult’s Smart Guide to Money

(What I wish I’d known at 18, 24, and 30 – from parents and grandparents who’ve been there, and a financial planner who can translate those experiences into actionable advice for today.) If you’re in your late teens or twenties, you don’t need an “investment guy”, a six-figure income, or a meme stock or hot…

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Weekend Reading: Dividends, Rents, and the Illusion of “Income”

Dividends, Rents, and Unlocking the “Go-Go” Years

The dividends-versus-total-return debate has (mercifully) cooled. Most investors now accept there’s nothing magical about dividends – it’s just cash carved out of total return. The real “magic” is reinvesting, i.e., putting the slice back into the cake so it keeps baking. And yes, ex-dividend, a stock’s price typically drops by roughly the dividend amount –…

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The Credit Card Combo You’ve Been Sleeping On

The Credit Card Combo You've Been Sleeping On

We just got back from Scotland – a trip that involved epic hiking in the Highlands, duck-feeding along Loch Ness, and a quick stop in Glasgow so our daughter could “manifest” her future university choice. We covered nearly 500 miles in a rental car, used our umbrellas exactly once, and, thanks to some smart credit…

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Weekend Reading: Conscious Spending Edition

Weekend Reading: Conscious Spending Edition

Like a lot of money nerds, I’ve always loved a detailed budget. There’s comfort in seeing where every dollar goes, especially when life throws its usual mix of irregular income and surprise expenses. Still, I was curious: what would happen if I ditched the details and looked at our finances the way author Ramit Sethi…

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How I Invest My Own Money

How I Invest My Own Money

*Updated for Aug 1, 2025* Regular blog readers know that I’m a big proponent of passive investing with low cost, globally diversified index funds and ETFs. Why? Low fees are the best predictor of future returns. Global diversification reduces the risk within your portfolio. Index funds and ETFs allow investors to hold thousands of securities…

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