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I forgot to post an update but here’s yet another cat picture and another day of me begging people to learn about my movie so today we got four or five enemies of Theseus before the big Minotaur fight what I’m thinking is he goes to the inn or whatever sleeps and then we go to a scene with the Minotaur
I NEED ADVICE ON HOW TO MAKE THE MINOTAUR CHEAP PLEASSEEEE HELP MEE
Lastest piece of financial advice bought to you by Tommyinnit
Tommy- he is rich-innit
Hello! I'm starting my career later in life at 31 (thanks pandemic ToT) but now that I finally have a foot in the door in teaching, I want to start working toward financial planning the rest of my future! I've read and seen your posts (that are wonderful!) but do you think I should seek out a financial advisor? Just to get a road map of what goals and action steps I need to set? I get so overwhelmed with anything financial so I usually give up (something I'm trying to change!) Thank you!
Congrats, honey!!! And this is such an exciting question for me (hi it's Jess today) to answer because a few years ago I might have said something COMPLETELY different.
Yes: I think it would be worthwhile to talk to a financial advisor. BUT you should make sure they are a...
a fiduciary
someone who specializes in lower-income individuals.
Lauren actually changed my mind on financial advisors for non-rich-folks in the below episode of our podcast. In that discussion we also talk more about the value to you and what you can expect from a financial advisor. Good luck, cutie!
Season 3, Episode 3: “I Want To Hire a Financial Advisor. Can They Be Trusted, or Are They Full of Shit?”
Did we just help you out? Say thanks on Patreon!
Trapped by Your Income? Break Free with the Best Personal Financial Advisor
There's a point in many high-earning careers where the paycheck stops feeling like freedom and starts feeling like a leash. The income is excellent. The lifestyle is good. But at some point, along the way, the work is no longer negotiable, not out of passion but out of financial necessity. That tension is real, and it has a name: golden handcuffs. Hiring the best personal financial advisor can be that initial, real early step to break out of that cycle.
At anybody else’s home, all money talk dies at savings and retirement accounts. But the much larger question, and the only one that really matters, is this: What does freedom look like, and how on earth can you get there on your own terms?
The Golden Handcuffs Problem
High income does not automatically mean financial security. Indeed, quietly, the opposite can occur. Lifestyle inflation, student loan debt from training years, and delayed wealth building can make some of the highest-earning among us feel backed into a financial corner.
As Kiplinger notes in their coverage of escaping the golden handcuffs, high earners today face a much broader version of this trap than previous generations, one that goes beyond compensation packages and touches lifestyle, identity, and cost of living all at once.
The trap looks like this:
Spending scales with income, leaving little room for flexibility
Debt from training years lingers far longer than expected
No defined exit strategy means working indefinitely by default
Tax inefficiencies quietly erode wealth over time
The career is lucrative. The schedule is relentless. And without a plan, it’s hard to conceive of slowing down.
Financial Planning Is Actually an Exit Strategy
This reframe changes everything. Financial planning shouldn't just be about wealth building. It is about buying back time and choice. Research conducted by the National Institutes of Health also discovered that financial stress is a leading cause of burnout in high-earning professionals and reaffirmed that through formalised financial planning, the burden decreases over time.
A good plan grows real possibilities. Going part-time or half-time with none of the financial panic. Passive income that doesn’t involve being there every day. Retiring a sequence of years before the schedule never adopted. The target isn’t simply a comfortable retirement in the distant future. The goal is having leverage right now.
What the Right Advisor Actually Does
Not all financial advisors are equipped for this kind of work. General advisors often miss the nuances that come with high-earning medical careers. Complex tax situations, practice ownership, deferred compensation, and very specific cash flow patterns require a different level of expertise.
The right advisor brings real depth to the table:
Understands the full financial lifecycle of a demanding medical career
Builds strategies around tax reduction, not just investment returns
Creates a clear roadmap toward reduced work or full financial independence
Aligns the plan with personal goals, not just industry benchmarks
That depth of guidance is not optional for anyone who is serious about financial autonomy. It is simply necessary.
Conclusion
The income is not the problem. The lack of a plan around it is. Financial freedom is not about earning more. It is about structuring what is already there with intention and real expertise.
Read more about us here to understand the story and mission behind MD Wealth Fortress and why it was built for professionals in this exact position.
The path to working less, stressing less, and living more starts with one conversation.
Book a call with MD Wealth Fortress today and start building a financial strategy that actually fits the life being worked toward.
FAQs
Q: When is the right time to start working with a financial advisor? The earlier the better, of course, but even a mid-career jump leads to much better long-term outcomes.
Q: Can a financial advisor actually help reduce clinical hours sooner? Yes, by utilizing income, investments, and tax strategies to cater to their lifestyle without needing full-time work.
Q: What qualifies a financial adviser as a good match for high earners? Tax complexities, debt reduction, and wealth-building strategies for high-income professionals.
Q: Is financial planning only for those near retirement? Not at all. It is most powerful when used early as a long-term strategy for designing the career and life someone actually wants.