Our #Denver Partner, Managing Director, Fred Taylor, presented during the @givechildrensco Tammen Society Luncheon, alongside his son, Moses, to share their powerful story – 28 years after Moses received life-saving care for a critical brain aneurysm at the age of 7.
@QuettaBrowser I selected automatically use Reader Mode for a particular site, but no longer wish that to be the case for the site. Is there a way to disable that option for the site and, if so, how?
(3/3) and 3) there is a socio-economic disparity in cognitive decline in retirement because those with higher-paying, more mentally challenging jobs carry a stronger cognitive base into retirement. H/T to Dan G. for the recommendation.
(2/3) Women are less likely to decline in retirement because they are more likely to have non-work activities than men. 2) Europeans have less post-retirement decline than Americans because they are more accustomed to having leisure time;
(1/3) A client forwarded this Freakonomics, MD podcast on how retirement can affect the brain: https://t.co/horJ6TJRHq He noted three points in his accompanying comments...
Nice story about workers at factory in Italy who chipped in 20 months of their own vacation time so a struggling coworker, three years away from retirement, could retire sooner. The company picked up the remaining 16 months. https://t.co/4kiwXLL4sC?
How different are the changes in the lives of men vs. women upon retirement? Research from U. Wisconsin says that men's social networks expand more than women's, partly because women tend to have larger social networks to start with. More here: https://t.co/Yzq5bBTT4h
Specifically, they found having a moderate amount of free time was the sweet spot, even more so than having a lot. This is because with a large amount of free time, people experience a sense of low productivity and diminished purpose.
Full article here: https://t.co/KICTAsTrFW
In what to me is an unsurprising finding—especially having seen some people struggle with this issue in early retirement, researchers at Wharton have found that having too much free time is not optimal for happiness and well-being. 1/2
Your spouse is retiring. Should you? Good discussion of a few things you may want to consider before deciding one way or the other. https://t.co/MTHtoPa5yb
Dr. David Eckerdt spent 44 years studying retirement. Then he retired. He says he was more prepared than just about anybody. And some things turned out to be exactly what he expected. But other things—not so much. https://t.co/ceSmhGoaCF
But, 22 years later, here we are...Dow 36,000!! As the following WSJ article writes, "...[the book] is a reminder of a Wall Street maxim about market predictions: Forecast a number or a date, never both." More here: https://t.co/zFy81IHkOY (2/2)
I've been around long enough to remember when the book Dow 36,000 came out in late 1999. It would have been hard to do much worse in the timing of its release. The Dow—then at 10,273—would eventually peak at 12,492 in early 2000 before dropping to 7200 in late 2002... (1/2)
Utah's 529 plan, which I have used for my daughter's college savings, continues to get very high marks from Morningstar. "The Utah plan is the only one that has maintained its top rating since Morningstar started its reviews of 529s in 2012." More here: https://t.co/xK5yt7wdRn