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I have two years before I'm going to retire.

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My goal when I first started my business eight years ago was

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to pay off the mortgage by the time I'm 50 and retire at 50.

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Can you believe it now?

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To be fully transparent with you, I am 48 this year.

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I have two years left before I'm going to retire.

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When I said this to my husband, he laughed.

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He's like, I cannot imagine you not working.

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And I thought, oh yeah, we'll see.

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We'll see.

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Business is hard, right?

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Owning your business is hard.

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I would never go back to my corporate role.

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Ever go back to my corporate role.

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But owning a business can be hard.

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It has its ups, it has, its down.

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There's so many things you need to focus on in terms of your mindset, in

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terms of the systems, the processes, the client journey, the clients, the

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rejection, the sales, all the things, man.

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And I was like, maybe I'm just gonna be tired and maybe I'm just

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going to retire by the time I'm 50.

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Is that even a thing these days?

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Today, I thought we'd jump into that and go, are you setting

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yourself up for retirement?

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Do you even wanna retire?

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When I think about my parents retiring and the next generation after them retiring,

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it looked so, so different kids are getting married, older kids are having

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babies, older kids are leaving home older.

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You know, it's not like it was 10, 20, 30 years ago anymore.

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But what I will say is that I didn't think about this enough.

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I was always a really good student of my finances.

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I was always a really good student of my superannuation when I worked in corporate,

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and then I went into my own business.

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Funny story for you.

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I rocked up to my accountant who had been our family accountant for years, and I

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said to him, I'm starting a business.

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I'll need to register for GST.

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He laughed at me and said, Emma, the chances of you making $75,000

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in the next year are very low.

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I fired him and we went on to need that within the first

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three months, so I was right.

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I. Now I know, I know that 92% of women in Australia earn less than a hundred grand.

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That statement kind of makes sense to me.

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I'm not one of those women.

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I am not one of those women.

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I had a hefty salary that I needed to replace.

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I was the main breadwinner, so I knew I needed to be disciplined and I

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needed to put that money in the bank, revenue in the bank so I could have

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the profit and pay myself properly.

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What I did do from day one in my business is pay myself superannuation.

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We forget to do that, especially if you're a sole trader.

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There are so many people that I speak to who are set up as a sole

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trader and then they take money out of their accounts willy-nilly.

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Please don't do that.

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Please get yourself some good accounting software.

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Uh, my friend Lisa Turner from Accountant for You will help you with that.

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Uh, she's a zero goddess and she will help you set that thing up.

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And when you register for a company, you need to pay superannuation.

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So that works out.

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Not only did we do that, I topped it up to the maximum that I could, and I've been

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doing that for the last five years as we know women, because they go off and have

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babies and they do all different things.

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They have less super than their male counterparts,

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husbands, partners, whatever.

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And so we need to make sure that we are intentional with superannuation.

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Investing in shares or index funds, making sure that we've

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got a good financial advisor and making sure that we get stuff done.

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I've got a great financial advisor for you.

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Her name is Sarah Pike.

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She owns Bond Financial Services.

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She will also help you with that, but I don't wanna talk about the finances.

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They're very important.

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They are so important to work out actually.

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How much money do we need when we retire?

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But I'm only 48.

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I don't wanna retire.

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I mean, I do wanna work less, but my idea for retirement, when I said to my husband,

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I wanna retire at 50, he's like, what does that look like because you love to work?

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I said, I love to work.

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I love what I do day in, day out.

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I love it.

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I support so many amazing women and some men in business, and

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I want to keep doing that.

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However, once I hit 50, our cash projections means that I can

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take a step back if I choose to.

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Now it's the, if I choose two part, that kind of gets in my way a

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little bit because I would love to work three days a week and do play

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around on those two days a week.

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Why can't I do that now?

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We talk about retirement, like it's the end goal, but we watch people

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who retire, have heart attacks, get sick, lose their purpose.

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So why would you retire?

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Why wouldn't you just create a life that you love now?

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Retirement is not a thing I wanna do.

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I think I will work until I can't work anymore, and I think I'll

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just do it with it for a couple of days a week and see how I go.

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It looks like for me, my ideal life, three days, working two days not being here.

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Evie's 11, so she's going into high school next year.

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She needs me less, but I've gotta think of other ways to connect

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with her, to keep making sure that we keep the conversation open.

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Evie and I went for a walk after dinner the other night and I learned

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so much about her in that walk.

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I learned about friendship groups, what's going on, who's sassy, who's not,

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who the mean girls are, who the lovely girls are, who's the crocheting club?

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I, you know, that is priceless.

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I don't need to retire for those conversations.

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I can have those conversations now.

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See my parents and my dad still works, and he's 75.

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Oh my goodness.

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I don't know what he'd do if he didn't work.

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He loves to work.

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He's 75 and he loves to work.

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My mom passed away when she was 60.

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she was already retired and I honestly think she was a bit bored.

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I. Right.

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My grandfather and my grandmother on both sides, both worked until

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they could claim a pension.

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Both were in the war, so they had war pensions, and then they lived.

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They went and traveled.

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They went and did all of the things, and they had a good life.

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But that's not what life looks like anymore.

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You know, everyone talks about we need to build our nest egg.

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We need to have this many properties.

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We need to have this much stuff.

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And then what happens when you retire?

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You consolidate it all back.

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What happens if we just made life super simple?

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Now, when I talk about simplicity.

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There are some things that I know about Mark and I. We are both introverts

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and so we like our own company.

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We love being at home and we don't like travel that much.

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Having said that, I am headed to New York and Canada at the

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end of June, start of July.

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So if you are listening and you are global and you are listening to me and you would

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like to meet me in one of those, uh, beautiful countries, please let me know.

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New York and Canada.

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End of June, start of July now we have done a little bit of travel.

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We traveled when Evie was five and now Evie's 11, and we've

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taken her to a few countries.

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We like that, but it's not in our retirement plan.

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We are not sitting here desperate to travel, which I know sounds weird

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and you'll probably listen to this if you travel thinking, who even is she?

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I like a good book, a good cup of tea, and being at home, I'm just a homebody.

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Shove me in the garden.

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I'm a happy camper.

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When you think about retirement, does it like give you shivers?

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I just think what would I do with five days a week?

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Would I just catch up with buddies?

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Would I do volunteering?

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Like, what does it look like?

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And I know for me, I'm going to need to keep busy.

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I know that my exercise is going to be important.

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I know that my health is going to be important.

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I know giving back is going to be important.

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I have this, um, vision of Emma McQueen Academy.

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Ask me about that later.

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Uh, as a legacy item that I leave, I currently run thriving women

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and have one-on-one clients.

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I love my thriving women.

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Could I. Just do thriving women, and that is my whole business.

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Look, probably, would I get bored?

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Who knows?

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But if I had just that one offer, would I be happy?

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I think so.

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I think this, we strive and we strive and we strive and for the last eight

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years that has been me, I have strived and I'm also like, When is enough enough?

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Have we got enough that we can comfortably retire when we want to?

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And if we don't, what do we do now to change our future on that?

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And for you, if you are listening, you may not even thought of

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retirement, you might be sitting here going, oh, Emma, I'm only 40.

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I'm only 37.

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I'm only this.

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You do what?

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We have to start thinking about this now.

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Women outlive men.

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That means we're going to need nest eggs.

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Somewhere or other.

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And so we need to make sure that we are taking steps now,

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intentional steps now to make sure that we've got our future sorted.

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The future is in our hands, especially as business owners.

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We have the ability, the leavers to pull how much revenue we bring in and how

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much, uh, how we can manage our expenses.

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We have those levers and if we pull them now, that means we've got a

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good 10, 15 years of really solid.

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Um, dollar making time.

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What's your hope for the future?

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Are you thinking I'm nutty?

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I am nutty.

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Just quietly.

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Uh, but you know, like I, I think about these things and I often

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think, what would happen if I was to retire and would that make my

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world, that would not make my world.

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So you, you've heard it here first.

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Uh, my husband was right.

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Please don't tell him that.

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Luckily he doesn't listen to this podcast, and I want you

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to think about, are you ready?

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If in 10 years time you were living the life that you

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loved, what does it look like?

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What does it look like to live the life you love?

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I'm not far off.

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Hey, I'm so excited about this.

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I'm not far off.

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I'm a simple woman with simple needs.

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I would love to hear from you.

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If this has stirred something in you and you need a good, uh, financial advisor,

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accountant, bookkeeper, all the things I've got them, please reach out to me.

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And if this has stirred something up and you, and you are going, whoa,

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you've planned it so far in advance.

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DM me.

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I'm so happy to share what I know.

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I hope this has been super useful.

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two years before I retire.

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Whoop, whoop.

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Let's go.