c.2019, New World Library
$16.95 ($25.50 Canada)
209 pages

Your flame has been extinguished.

Thatโ€™s it. Youโ€™re done. Burned out โ€” from overwork, underpay, or burning the midnight oil. Your careerโ€™s barely started and youโ€™re already counting the days until you turn 60-something and can retire, but first, look ahead โ€” way ahead โ€” by reading โ€œPlaying with FIREโ€ by Scott Rieckens.

When you think about it, it makes the least sense: you work at a high-paying job so you can buy nice stuff that you donโ€™t have time to use because youโ€™re working. So how many minutes โ€™til Friday?

Until a few years ago, Scott Rieckens and his wife, Taylor, thought that was the way things had to be. They had great jobs, a new baby, lots of grown-up toys, and they saved a few thousand dollars a year. They thought they were doing great, until someone told Rieckens about FIRE: Financial Independence Retire Early.

As he discovered, FIRE has one basic tenet: โ€œsave 50 to 70 percent of your income, invest those savings in low-fee stock index funds, and retire in roughly 10 years.โ€ It sounds easy, but itโ€™s not pain-free.

FIRE is flexible, but getting to the end point means work. It means giving up unnecessary luxuries, as Rieckensโ€™ wife learned. It means fixing meals at home or brown-bagging; some FIRE advocates only dine out twice a year. It means asking yourself if a purchase youโ€™re eyeing is worth the work itโ€™d take to pay for it. FIRE pushes the boundaries of comfort, especially if you like pampering yourself even just a little bit.

But the payoffs are enormous.

Says Rieckens, with FIRE, you can travel more, spend time with family and friends, be an entrepreneur, volunteer or study. You can pay cash for large purchases, saving on interest. FIRE teaches you discipline, and it works even when the market is down. Best of all, he says, itโ€™s doable and it can work for anyone at any income scale.

But hereโ€™s what you might not notice when you read โ€œPlaying with FIREโ€: most of the people profiled in this book are in their 20s and 30s. That doesnโ€™t mean older readers canโ€™t use what author Scott Rieckens espouses, but if youโ€™re staring at just one or two decades of work (rather than four or more) and youโ€™d still like to cut that considerably, youโ€™ll have some lines to read between here.

That aside, if you can adjust and if youโ€™re unfazed and challenged by changes that are possible, what youโ€™ll learn in this book is golden. Rieckens lays out methods and math for readers, and heโ€™s careful to include pitfalls and Plan Bs; reading his personal road to retirement also lends reassurance when inevitable missteps happen. Still, be prepared to do some research on your own: hidden issues such as insurance are discussed, but not much.

Overall, if youโ€™re imaginative, planning-flexible, and you want to sleep in, take back your time, or you just want a nice fat nest egg, get this book. When you see the possibilities, โ€œPlaying with FIREโ€ becomes matchless.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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