



Most plans assume life happens in neat phases.
Work first.
Caregiving later.
Retirement after that.
But real life doesn’t follow a clean timeline.
It overlaps.
You may be at your peak earning years…
right when a parent needs help.
Right when your role at work starts to shift.
Right when decisions get heavier.
Planning requires assumptions.
What if one of yours is wrong?
The Hidden Risk Most People Miss
Traditional advice treats everything separately.
Investments over here.
Insurance over there.
Family conversations… somewhere down the list.
But the real pressure doesn’t come from one area.
It comes from when they hit at the same time.
A career change
A caregiving need
A financial decision under duress
That’s not a theory. That’s how life actually shows up.
And here’s the quiet truth:
The most capable person in the family usually absorbs it.
The Default Decision-Maker
You don’t apply for the role.
You grow into it.
You’re the one who:
answers the phone
keeps things moving
makes sure nothing falls through
Until one day, everything runs through you.
And no one questions it… because you’re good at it.
But being capable isn’t the same as being prepared.
Exercise your power while you have it.
Because when decisions are made under pressure,
they’re often made with fewer choices and less clarity.
What Keep Your Life™ Does Differently
Most approaches try to optimize one part of your life.
Keep Your Life™ brings the whole picture together.
Retirement income planning
Long-term care considerations
Family coordination
Not as separate pieces…but as one structure.
So you’re not forced to choose between:
👉 showing up for Loved Ones
👉 and protecting your own future
That’s the difference.
A Better Question to Ask
Instead of asking:
“Am I on track financially?”
Ask:
“What happens to my plan… if I become the caregiver?”
And:
“What happens to my family… if I don’t plan ahead?”
Those questions change everything.
Your Next Step
Start small.
Name one responsibility you’ve quietly taken on
Name one area of your finances that depends on things going “as planned”
Now ask:
What would I regret not preparing for… if both changed at once?
Because waiting often feels responsible…
right up until it isn’t.
Still waiting for the “right time”? CHECK THIS OUT
See how to think about these decisions before they become urgent.
So you can give your love… and keep your life™.
HOMESCHOOLING: Haven or Havoc?
Your child's school years are precious and fleeting.

Now could be your best time to step up where your school is letting your child down. Let this series of myth-busting short chapters encourage you.

2 Major Mistakes
Which one will you make?

Which of these 2 retirement mistakes are you making right now? It's impossible to entirely avoid both mistakes.
You won't know for sure which mistake will work out better for you until it's too late.
How to choose?

Finding the Will
(Part 1)

Have the will to arrange for a smooth transition when you’re no longer around to answer questions (Part 1)
Ensuring your children or other Loved Ones can readily access your important papers when you die entails a sound process versus one or two conversations. You must overcome aversion to the subject of death, procrastination of anything that is long-term, and the tendency to assume things will be fine. Family dynamics can be sweet, spicy, or dicey.

Finding the Will
(Part 2)

While the internet permits convenient access to accounts, policies, and stored documents, it presents a plethora of password management problems. which too many people avoid by succumbing to password laziness, such as:

Embrace Your Clarence

Is Clarence your future?
Golden insight from a golden retriever.

Post-Pandemic W.E.L.L.ness

Where life drastically changed forever two years ago, everyone adjusted to the best of their abilities.
Here are a few of the key adjustments--"pandemic pivots"--that sustained some and prospered others.

Prenuptial Adulting

“Mom, Dad, we’re getting married!"
“Wonderful, congratulations! Here’s what you both need to do first.”
Equipping newlyweds with essentials of responsibility leaves plenty of life yet to be discovered on their own. Adults understand that love isn’t oogly feelings; it’s a hard choice. It’s putting your commitments and your money where your mouth is.

Rethinking Competing Funds for College and Retirement


Married? Is Your Endgame 100% or Just 50%?
Are you single? That other 50% could be whoever is most important to you.

Are you more of a planner than your spouse? It’s all too common for one spouse to blindly trust the planning spouse. Countless endgame “plans” were created by 50% of a couple: