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Retiring too late rarely looks like a mistake while it’s happening. It often appears responsible, disciplined, even financially intelligent. Yet for many people in their 50s and 60s, the real risk is not running out of money — it is continuing to optimize a number long after sufficiency has been achieved. In an environment shaped by market volatility, inflation concerns, healthcare uncertainty, and longevity anxiety, the default response is delay. This conversation examines whether that delay is always prudent — or whether, in some cases, it becomes a costly misallocation of time, health, and optionality. Drawing from the mental models of Charlie Munger, this video reframes retirement as a capital allocation decision. Through opportunity cost, diminishing utility, inversion, and robustness over precision, we explore a question most retirement advice avoids: at what point does one more year of income stop materially improving your life? Rather than focusing only on the risk of retiring too early, we examine the second risk — retiring too late and discovering that you optimized the wrong variable. On this channel, we approach investing and retirement through calm, rational frameworks. We focus on long-term thinking, second-order consequences, and disciplined decision-making. The goal is not to chase early-exit narratives or maximize headlines, but to build durable wealth and align financial capital with real life utility. If this framework challenges your current thinking, share your perspective below. What concerns you more right now — retiring too early, or retiring too late? If you value measured, long-term discussions on investing and retirement decisions, consider subscribing for future conversations. This channel stands for: • Rational allocation over emotional reaction • Sufficiency over excess • Robust plans over fragile optimization • Mental models over market noise • Avoiding irreversible mistakes Because in the end, retirement is not about maximizing a balance sheet. It is about allocating your remaining capital — financial and personal — to its highest use, at the right time.