I have spent my career helping people plan for their future. For those pursuing early retirement strategies, our comprehensive retire early guide provides expert insights on achieving financial independence. Along the way, I have watched many clients chase early retirement as if it were the only prize. I no longer think that is the right target. A growing body of evidence links early retirement with faster decline in thinking and higher rates of depression. At the same time, retirement has stretched from a brief phase to a third of a lifetime. We need a better model. My aim is simple: keep a brain that is active, a life that has purpose, and a calendar that leaves room for the good stuff.
Maybe retiring early shouldn’t be the goal.
Table of Contents
ToggleWhy Traditional Retirement Became So Hard
Retirement used to be short. A century ago, the typical person spent about two years out of the workforce at the end of life. Today, it can last thirty or more years. That shift changed everything. It changed how we save, plan our health care, and use our time.
Our minds grew up with structure. We do best with goals, deadlines, and a reason to get up. Decades without those anchors can feel empty. The data lines up with what many feel. People who leave work early often report lower mood and less social contact. Without a plan, days blend together. Purpose fades. Cognitive skills can slip faster when they are not used.
Look at someone like Warren Buffett. He is 95. He kept his head in the game for a reason. Work kept his brain on. It gave him a community and a scoreboard. He did not grind for the sake of grinding. He kept doing what he loved, at a pace that fit.
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The T-to-Tier: A Better Target Than “Retire Early”
My goal is not to stop working. My goal is to become a “T‑to‑tier.” That means I work Tuesday to Thursday. I keep my brain engaged. I keep purpose intact. I stay connected to people I enjoy. And I get four-day weekends for golf, yoga, and quick trips.
Maybe it’s becoming a t to tier, working Tuesday to Thursday, brain engaged, purpose intact, and social connection preserved.
This is not a fantasy. It is a clear plan. It has structure and freedom. It trims the parts of work that drain you. It leaves the parts that give you energy. It also creates a gradual shift from full-time work to a new rhythm. That matters. Big jumps are hard. Small steps stick.
What the Research Suggests About Work, Mood, and Cognition
Several studies suggest early retirement can raise the risk of depression and speed the decline in memory and focus. The reasons are simple. Work adds routine. It forces the practice of problem-solving, planning, and social skills. When you remove daily challenges, the brain gets less exercise. When you cut daily contact, your social health takes a hit. Both matter for long-term well-being.
That does not mean you should never retire. It means the way you exit matters. Give yourself goals. Keep learning. Stay social. Finding purpose in retirement through part-time work is one way to check those boxes. Volunteering and mentoring can do it too. The key is to use your mind and keep your ties.
The Math Has Changed: Thirty-Year Retirements
From a financial view, a thirty-year retirement is hard to fund. You must save more, invest wisely, and manage sequence-of-returns risk. Health costs also climb with age. Many people underestimate these costs. Others underestimate how long they will live.
Working three days a week can ease the burden. Income does not drop to zero. You give your portfolio more time to grow. You reduce withdrawals during bear markets. You delay Social Security or pension drawdowns to boost future income. The plan becomes more resilient.
- Longer retirements: Planning for 30+ years is common now.
- Health care costs: Premiums, prescriptions, and long-term care add up.
- Sequence risk: Early bad markets can harm a plan if you withdraw too much too soon.
- Part-time income: A three-day workweek lowers drawdowns and stress.
Designing a Tuesday–Thursday Work Life
To build a T‑to‑tier life, start with your current role. Which tasks use your strengths? Which days are best for team contact? Block Tuesday to Thursday for high-impact work. Protect Friday to Monday for living. Share the plan with your employer or clients. Show how it can work. You bring focus for three days. In return, you ask for clear goals and fewer meetings.
If your current job cannot support this, consider a contract model. Many firms want expertise without full-time cost. This is a win-win. You keep purpose and pay. They get results from someone who knows what they are doing.
Retirees with specialized skills have a strong case. The learning curve is low. The value is high. You may also pair this with teaching, coaching, or board work. These roles add variety and meaning.
The Balance: Purpose, Flexibility, and Health
A three-day schedule lets you keep your edge and protect your energy. With four days off each week, you can plan travel without dipping into vacation time. You can focus on fitness, family, and hobbies. Your week gains a rhythm. You have time to recover. You avoid the drag that often hits long, unstructured retirements.
It also helps relationships. You stay in contact with colleagues and clients. You join group activities on weekdays. You can volunteer when schools or non-profits need help. Social ties stay strong.
A Practical Checklist to Try Now
- Define your purpose. Write down what work gives you that you do not want to lose.
- Price your lifestyle. List fixed costs, variable costs, and health costs.
- Test a three-day week. Try it for three months before making it permanent.
- Set a clear scope. Choose the projects that create the most value in fewer hours.
- Block your time. Plan deep work on Wednesday. Use Tuesday and Thursday for meetings.
- Protect four-day weekends. Put recurring plans on your calendar so they happen.
- Keep learning. Take one course or certification each year.
- Build community. Join a group that meets weekly.
Financial Planning for a T-to-Tier Path
I approach this like any plan. Start with your net worth and cash flow. Map out your guaranteed income. That includes Social Security, pensions, and any annuities. Then model part-time income for the years you plan to work three days a week. Check how this changes your required withdrawal rate from investments.
Many clients are surprised by the effect. Even modest income—say, 25% of their old salary—can cut portfolio withdrawals in half in the early years. That reduces stress. It also gives the market more time to recover from down cycles.
Asset mix still matters. You need enough growth to fight inflation, and enough stability to ride out shocks. Tax planning matters too. Spreading income across more years can reduce taxes. It can also help manage Medicare surcharges later.
What About People Who Want a Clean Break?
Some people do want a full stop. If that is you, build structure elsewhere. Volunteer on a set schedule. Coach a team. Start a small venture. Mentor younger workers. Learn a language. Create weekly goals and track them. The aim is the same: keep the mind active and the calendar shaped.
Risks and How to Manage Them
No plan is perfect. A three-day workweek can slip into four or five if you let boundaries break. Protect your time. Set clear rules and stick to them. There is also the risk of income drying up. Prepare a buffer. Keep six to twelve months of living costs in cash if your work is project-based.
Skill decay is another risk. Schedule regular training. Ask for feedback. Stay current in your field. If health issues arise, adjust. You can shift from paid work to structured volunteering with similar mental and social gains.
Real-Life Rhythms That Work
Here are patterns that I see work well:
- Consult for three days, teach one course per semester, and mentor one student per quarter.
- Contract Tuesday to Thursday, volunteer Friday mornings, and reserve Monday for family and errands.
- Seasonal work six months a year on a three-day cadence, then full four-day breaks the rest of the year.
Each path keeps purpose alive. Each protects time. Each lowers the pressure on savings.
Mindset Shifts That Make This Possible
Think of your future self not as “retired,” but as “selectively engaged.” Choose where you apply your time and care. Stop chasing busy work. Say yes to impact. Say no to noise. Treat your Tuesday to Thursday like a craft. Then treat your long weekends like a gift. Move your body. See people you love. Go outside. Read more. Learn constantly.
Where to Start This Week
Begin with a small experiment. For the next two weeks, protect Friday to Monday as if you already had the new schedule. Use those days for health, family, and rest. From Tuesday to Thursday, focus only on the most important tasks. Keep score. At the end, ask yourself two questions. Did your results suffer? Did your life feel better?
Next, talk with your employer or clients. Share a clear plan for a three-day rhythm. Show how it can work without hurting outcomes. Offer a pilot period. Measure results. If you are already retired, design a three-day slate of purpose work. It can be paid or unpaid. What matters is that it is real work on real problems with real people.
Still sharp as a tack… So maybe the goal isn’t retiring early.
That is how I am approaching my next chapter. I want to keep my mind strong, my purpose clear, and my relationships rich. I also want time to live. The life from Tuesday to Thursday gives me both. It is not an escape from work. It is a better way to work and live.
If you want to check your own readiness, start by asking what you want your days to look like. Then shape your finances to support that picture. The right target is not a date on a calendar. The right target is a life with structure, purpose, and time for joy. For me, that is a T‑to‑tier life. How about you?
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How does a three-day workweek affect my savings plan?
Part-time income lowers how much you pull from investments in the early years. That can extend portfolio life, reduce tax strain, and give your assets more time to grow.
Q: What if my employer won’t agree to a Tuesday–Thursday schedule?
Propose a pilot with clear goals and reporting. If it still doesn’t fit, consider contract roles, consulting, teaching, or structured volunteering that aligns with your skills and schedule.
Q: Can I get the same health and social benefits without paid work?
Yes. The key is structure and challenge. Set fixed days for volunteering, mentoring, classes, or community groups. Keep a weekly routine with goals and regular interaction.







