About Me

I was born and raised in a small desert town in Southern California. I spent most of college as a Latin major until I realized that I wouldn’t be able to help anyone very much (myself included) translating a dead language, so I added a Biology major. I graduated in 2017 from the University of Michigan Dental School with the Health Professions Scholarship Program (HPSP) in the Army. I am currently stationed in Washington State where I am serving my scholarship obligation (4 years for 4 years). I have one son who is my motivation to do everything, a loving wife, and two cats.

Random facts about me: I have been in an airplane that has called “mayday” and then landed on a highway, my childhood home was a llama ranch, and I am the youngest of 6 brothers.

The Gold Crown Podcast was made because I started looking at a 50,000 foot view of life and realized that the traditional career path for dentistry involved having to work until the age of 69 (according the ADA), and even then many dentists still don’t have enough to retire so they work well into their 70’s – much later than the average American. Now, some may say “wait, dentists just work so long because really love the profession,” but the sad reality is that 96% of dentists struggle to retire and maintain their current lifestyle according to the ADA. We dentists seem to be book smart, but we (myself included) don’t have superb finance knowledge. While I plan on doing dentistry for a long while, there had to be a more optimized career path that allowed the option to retire sooner – much sooner. I discovered FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early) blogs, books, and podcasts that encourage personal development, financial accountability and investing. I could not find any podcast on dentistry and FIRE, so rather than being frustrated about it, I thought I would start a FIRE dental podcast of my own in the hopes of helping at least one person get the information I was so hungry for.

The FIRE in Invest. Cast. FIRE.

A Million is NOT Much

Many of us have heard phrases like “If only I could be a millionaire then I’d retire” without realizing that a million dollars actually might not be enough to retire. A survey from Charles Schwab revealed the average American needs to have about $1.7 million saved to retire. While everyone’s needs are different and some might need less than $1 million to retire, it is actually not overly ambitious for the average person to strive to be a millionaire anymore. Many consider retirement a bad word due as it implies that one’s life is over at that point and you have resigned yourself to wasting away. This is the furthest from the truth. The popularity of the phrase “Financial Independence” arose to counter the stereotype about retiring because it suggests an ability to “retire” while maintaining an enjoyable work life. There are some that crave this freedom so strongly that the phrase Financial Independence Retire Early (FIRE) came into light.

Life in a Different Lens

FIRE transforms the paradigm of working at a job 40+ years then retiring too old to enjoy the prime years of life (average retirement age for dentists is 69.5 years old! I doubt all of these are because they’re just having too much fun working to quit). Advocates of the FIRE philosophy recognize the most valuable asset is time, and that money serves no higher purpose than giving the freedom to spend the little time we have left on this planet with the people and causes that matter most. Some pursue “lean FIRE,” or a plan to retire very early on a very small amount of money (and some do this fantastically by selling their cars, biking everywhere, vacationing to cheap areas, geographic arbitrage, etc). You don’t have to boot strap to the minimum like some do, just be reasonable with your indulgences.

Lean FIRE

Dentists tend to have higher expenses and require more to replace their income and maintain lifestyle. For this reason, many advocate for a “fat FIRE” philosophy. This is wise just because it is risky and a little too optimistic to aim for an ultra lean FIRE. What if there is a sudden medical expense? Litigation? Damage do your home or other catastrophe? Insurance can only cover so much. If your monthly income is $1,600 and your copay is a couple hundred, your budget is shot (yes there are some who recommend monthly income this low). If nothing else, it is exciting to see it can be done, and so could you if you really needed to. Mr. Money Mustache is well known in the FIRE community for his lean approach if you are interested https://www.mrmoneymustache.com/. Tools like Firecalc can help give you an idea of how likely your portfolio is going to succeed in a variety of market outcomes, so be sure to use it to stress test your portfolio (if mostly stock based). Whatever your flavor of FIRE, the core message is freedom to use the most precious resource in life (time) in the way you want before it’s gone. I wish you the best and feel free to email thego[email protected] with your FIRE progress!