Life moves through seasons, and one characteristic of a season is you often don't realize you're in it until it has passed. You grow up, start working, kids come along, all of a sudden you're in the thick of parenting. Then, as children grow the nature of parenting changes, along with your schedule. And then, they're gone, and you are supporting them from afar. At each stage of the process, there are new challenges and new problems to solve. As Matt points out, one of the easiest traps to fall into is solving yesterday's problems and failing to recognize and adapt to the new phases of life.
There's a clear analogy to retirement planning. Retirement is, after all, another season of life. People often focus on the wrong questions and problems of retirement -- accumulating long after their portfolio is sufficient, rather than visualizing life in retirement and what kinds of things they want to do or roles they'd like to take on. Or perhaps they are worried about working longer, when planning for taxes may be more impactful to their retirement.
A good financial plan has seasons, just like life... because it is your life.
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