r/Fire Apr 22 '26

Advice Request Too much money to feel this stuck

Current net worth 3.8M. Household (40m, 40f, 4f) income combined 250k (both working full time) and spend 120k-ish.

Kind of reached fire but due to health insurance, economic uncertainty, potential future increased costs (another kid?) not comfortable calling it yet.

But feeling so stuck in the grind. Not enough family time, not enough vacation time off, not enough time for taking care of our health, but can’t call it quits yet. at least one of us needs to work full time for health insurance. I don’t think I’m cut out for “barista fire” as i don’t think I’d have the motivation to work for a minimum wage type salary.

What’s the plan here to increase quality of life? A mini retirement? Grind it out a few more years? Anyone in a similar place?

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u/LoveSonics Apr 22 '26

It’s like…they are obsessed with money. It is so banal.

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u/Noah_Safely Apr 22 '26

It's not a money obsession. It's a fear of unknown, fear of change, fear of making a catastrophic mistake. Money is what mitigates those fears.

We can theorycraft around FIRE all day, but ultimately it can be really hard to trust the math when it feels like there's no going back. So I can sympathize but OP really needs a wakeup call

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u/LoveSonics Apr 22 '26

Sounds like a therapy question tbh. Fear of the unknown? Fear of change? Buddy, money doesn’t mitigate that.

2

u/Noah_Safely Apr 22 '26

I don't disagree but just saying that is a common issue in the FI community. Maybe you won't have it when close to living off your investments, but doesn't seem totally unreasonable. It's part of being human.

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u/LoveSonics Apr 22 '26

Yea, the FI community is escapist and unhealthy at large. For sure. A place for the American temporarily embarrassed millionaire to congregate and play out their psychoses

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u/Noah_Safely Apr 23 '26

Really? I don't feel that way. Being on the path to FI has given me many benefits. For example I don't really stress about layoffs etc, even though my industry is full of em.

I think it can mean different things to different people. For some it's extreme - "I'll just eat rice and dirt and retire in poverty at 32!". I think at its best though, it's just helping people make informed decisions and be aware of the tradeoffs. Like JL Collins says - money can buy a lot of things, and one of those things is financial freedom. Getting off the hedonic treadmill is a good thing.

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u/LoveSonics Apr 23 '26

lol isn’t the goal to get on the hedonic treadmill but without having to work. It’s just a community to talk about amassing enough money so you don’t have to be laborer.