You
wake up one morning to your telephone ringing. It
is early and you cannot imagine who would be calling
at this hour… UNTIL, you answer and a friend
wishes you a Happy Birthday… your 55th birthday,
to be exact. Yeah, you're excited alright… not!
Along
with these good wishes comes a healthy dose of introspection.
You remember opening that piece of mail earlier in
the week from your credit union urging you to buy
life insurance before it too late …too late
for what, Dying? Well, we are all going to do that
sometime, right? Cannot much be helped, as they say.
And,
what about those notes and letters you get from your
bank reminding you to save for retirement? What retirement?
You go to Wal-Mart and smile graciously at the greeter,
because you figure someday that might be you.
Truthfully,
death is less feared than retirement for many people.
When you are dead, you are dead. But, when you retire,
well, things are just not the same, because you are
still here and are not very happy about it. According
to a survey done by Calvert Funds, Social Security
accounts for 53% of retirement income for women. In
2005, the maximum Social Security Benefit, at full
retirement age, was $23,534. For the woman who had
modest wages, the medium Social Security Benefit is
closer to $15,499 per year. Your money seems to be
operating on a different mortality table than you
are… in fact its expiration date might be sooner
than the milk in your refrigerator. No, not really,
but you realize that you will likely outlive the resources
you currently have.
Then,
you realize that you are still asleep and this is
a dream…. or, nightmare. It is reality, though.
The shuttering fear jolts you out of bed, even though
your employer has given you the day off for your birthday.
This
is good. Your fear is creating ACTION. You spend the
morning rifling through the drawers in the kitchen
looking for those statements you get every month.
You look for the box that you collect for the accountant.
You wonder where your 401K statements are and then
you remember…. you chose not to participate.
You are foregoing that generous employer match of
3%, which really increases your potential to earn.
You always thought that retirement was decades away
and now you are on the threshold of that decade.
Oh,
and this is your apartment, not your house. What have
you been doing since you finished college and got
a job or jobs? You have made choices and decisions
that are irrevocable…. high end furniture, snazzy
sports car, trips to the Mexican Riviera, etc. But,
you pat yourself on the back because you watch the
financial news on your 52” HDTV. Cannot turn
them in for retirement funds, can you? And, the credit
card bills for these wonderful things are still asking
for money.
Now
that you have gathered your pieces of paper and realize
that your assets are few, what are you going to do?
1)
Gather your wits about you and call the Human Resource
Office at your company. Make an appointment
and find out how to sign up for the 401K.
2)
If need be, make an appointment with a Credit
Counseling Service and get help structuring
your debt and debt repayments.
)
Make a budget that you can live with
but that has retirement in focus.
4)
Analyze your spending habits. You
should look at your check book and your credit card
bills to determine your pattern of spending. Ask yourself
why you buy the things that you buy.
5)
Enroll in a night course to educate yourself on investing.
6)
Determine, realistically, what amount of money you
are likely to need during retirement and how
long you will live in retirement. You will
need to consider your rent, your health insurance,
your car expenses, etc. This list is long. Do not
think that when you retire your expenses will go away.
In many cases they will expand.
7)
There are many factors to consider including longevity
in your family, your health, inflation, other resources
such as inheritance that might be available and how
long you plan to work or can work.
And,
most of all learn to save. Think
about the ways in which you spend a few dollars here
and there, with no real purpose or plan. Do
not carry extra cash with you. If you do, you will
spend it.
CD
200605444
Exp: 09/30/3007
RUTH
R. PETTY, CLU ChFC
Ruth Petty spent her first seventeen years in
North Carolina. After graduating from Wheaton College
in Wheaton, Illinois, Ruth left the South and did
not return until 1987. Now a resident of Boston, she
has lived on both coasts of the U.S. and in Germany.
Ruth entered the Financial Planning and Advisory arena
quite by accident -- responding to a blind ad in a
newspaper. Finding it very enjoyable, she dug into
school and obtained her second and third Masters Degrees
-- in Financial Services and Management. Her first
Masters was in Sociology. Ruth has one son who lives
in San Diego.