Episodes

  • Ep. 57 - How Do You Get Paid in Retirement?
    Feb 19 2026

    You’ve saved for retirement. You’ve invested carefully. But now comes the most important question:

    How do you actually get paid in retirement?

    In this episode, we break down how retirement income really works — how money moves from your various accounts into your checking account, how taxes impact each source, and how to design a system that keeps income predictable and flexible.

    We cover:

    ✔️ Social Security – how benefits are set up, direct deposit, tax withholding, and Medicare deductions✔️ Pensions – predictable income, tax treatment, and coordination✔️ IRAs and 401(k)s – withdrawal rules, mandatory withholding, and tax implications✔️ Roth IRAs – tax-free income strategies✔️ Brokerage and trust accounts – capital gains and income planning✔️ Annuities – qualified vs. non-qualified taxation and LIFO rules✔️ Investment real estate – rental income, taxes, and ownership considerations


    Retirement isn’t just about accumulating assets — it’s about creating a coordinated income strategy that adapts as markets, taxes, healthcare costs, and life circumstances change.

    We also discuss:• How taxes affect each income source• How Medicare premiums are deducted• Why flexibility matters• How to integrate spouses and beneficiaries into the plan

    A well-designed retirement income plan ensures that multiple sources work together efficiently — creating confidence, clarity, and financial stability in your “last career.”

    If you’re approaching retirement or already retired, this episode will help you understand how to turn your savings into a reliable paycheck.

    Subscribe for more conversations about retirement income, tax strategy, and financial clarity.

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    24 mins
  • Ep. 56 - 10 Money Myths Even Bigfoot Doesn't Believe!
    Feb 19 2026

    Are you making financial decisions based on myths that just sound true? 👀

    In this episode of Your Bread & Butter™, Andrew and Ryan break down 10 of the biggest money myths—even Bigfoot doesn’t believe these. From “Roth is always better” to “You should pay off your mortgage ASAP” and “The market is too high to invest,” we unpack why these beliefs stick—and what the practical truth actually looks like.

    We cover:

    • When a Roth isn’t the best move

    • Why liquidity can beat a paid-off mortgage

    • The real risk of waiting to invest

    • Why estate planning isn’t just for the wealthy

    • The difference between diversification and just having multiple accounts

    • Whether you really need to eliminate all debt before investing

    • If your employer plan is enough

    • And more

    Money myths spread because they’re simple, confident, and easy to share—especially on social media. But oversimplified rules of thumb can lead to missed tax opportunities, lost compounding, emotional stress, and costly decision fatigue.

    Our goal in this episode: replace popular myths with clear, practical truths you can actually use.

    If you’ve heard a financial “rule” you’re unsure about, drop it in the comments—we might feature it in a future episode.


    🎧 Listen wherever you get your podcasts.🌐 Learn more at: www.privatefinancialdesign.com

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    37 mins
  • Ep. 55 - Retire-in-Mint Condition Part 2
    Jan 29 2026

    Retirement isn’t just about reaching a certain age — it’s about having the means and the plan to retire with confidence.

    In Part 2 of our Retire-In-Mint Condition series on Your Bread & Butter™, we break down the true cost of retirement, what expenses may decrease, what tends to increase, and how to think through the big question:

    👉 “When can I retire?”

    We also walk through the major retirement milestones (59½, 62, 65, 66–67), and how to build a smart retirement income strategy using both fixed and flexible income sources—while staying as tax efficient as possible.

    ✅ What may get cheaper in retirement (debt payments, commuting, taxes, clothing)✅ What may get more expensive (healthcare, Medicare, out-of-pocket costs, home repairs, inflation)✅ Retirement milestones by age:• 59½ – Qualified retirement account distributions• 62 – Social Security eligibility• 65 – Medicare• 66–67 – Full Social Security✅ The FIRE movement (Financial Independence, Retire Early)✅ How to generate retirement income:• Fixed sources: Social Security, pensions, annuities• Flexible sources: 401(k)s, IRAs, Roth accounts, brokerage accounts, cash✅ Staying tax efficient: knowing what income to pull—and when


    Summary:

    ✔ Have the resources (no do-overs)✔ Have a vision✔ Create a plan


    🌐 Learn more: www.privatefinancialdesign.com🎙 Subscribe to Your Bread & Butter™ wherever you get your podcasts.

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    29 mins
  • Ep. 54 - Retire-in-Mint Condition Part 1
    Jan 28 2026

    What will retirement really look like for you?

    In this episode of Your Bread & Butter™, we introduce the idea of the “Someday Window”—a simple way to uncover what your retirement lifestyle may naturally become once work obligations disappear. From travel and dining out to hiking, pickleball, and art classes, your “someday” priorities often become your biggest retirement spending drivers.

    We also break down what tends to get cheaper in retirement (commuting, work meals, payroll taxes) and what often gets more expensive (healthcare, home repairs, inflation). Plus, we discuss the Retirement Spending Smile—why spending usually rises early in retirement, dips in the middle years, then rises again later due to medical costs.

    In this episode, we cover:

    ✅ The Someday Window + Activity Map✅ What retirement spending actually looks like✅ Work, stop work, or phase out?✅ “Doughphobia” (fear of spending your own savings)✅ What gets cheaper vs. more expensive in retirement✅ Tax-friendly living (“Taxile Living”)✅ The Retirement Spending Smile + Moneymoon Phase✅ A lifestyle cost exercise you can do today


    📌 In Part 2, we’ll answer the big question: How much do you need to fund your retirement lifestyle?

    🌐 Learn more: www.privatefinancialdesign.com🎙 Subscribe to Your Bread & Butter™ wherever you get your podcasts.

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    26 mins
  • Ep. 53 - Made in America: Reindustrialization & Investment Trends
    Jan 21 2026

    Is “Made in America” making a real comeback—or is it more policy than practice?


    In this episode of Your Bread & Butter™, Andrew R. Beaudry, CFP® and Ryan T. Cummings, CFP® break down the modern U.S. reindustrialization movement and what it means for investors. From AI-driven infrastructure buildouts to reshoring critical pharmaceuticals and semiconductor manufacturing, we explore where capital is actually flowing—and where expectations may be overstated.


    Key topics covered:

    • The historical roots of “Made in America” and its modern resurgence

    • Government reshoring strategies: incentives, tariffs, and national security priorities

    • Why AI and semiconductors are driving the largest U.S. industrial buildout in decades

    • Major U.S. expansion plans from companies like NVIDIA, Apple, TSMC, AstraZeneca, and Hyundai

    • The role of data centers, energy infrastructure, and industrial backlogs

    • Why reshoring is likely to remain selective rather than universal

    • What investors should understand about long-term reindustrialization trends

    This conversation provides context—not hype—around how policy, geopolitics, and technology are reshaping U.S. investment landscapes.


    🎧 Listen to Your Bread & Butter™ wherever you get your podcasts
    🌐 Learn more: www.privatefinancialdesign.com

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    25 mins
  • Ep. 52 - Legal Documents Aren't Just for Dead People
    Jan 14 2026

    ⚖️Estate planning isn’t just about what happens after you die—it’s about protecting yourself and your loved ones while you’re alive.

    In this episode of Your Bread & Butter™, Andrew R. Beaudry, CFP® and Ryan T. Cummings, CFP® break down why legal documents like wills, powers of attorney, and health care proxies matter long before end-of-life conversations ever begin. We explore common myths (“I’m too young,” “I’m not rich”), the real-life benefits of planning ahead, and how these documents preserve your choices when you can’t speak for yourself.

    What we cover in this episode:

    💠Why legal documents are for the living—not just for death

    💠What a will (last testament) actually does—and a brief history from ancient Rome to modern probate

    💠What probate means today and how the process works

    💠When assets do not have to go through probate

    💠Durable Power of Attorney (DPOA): what it does and when it applies

    💠Health Care Proxies vs. Living Wills—what’s the difference?💠How proper planning can reduce stress, confusion, and conflict for loved ones

    Key takeaway:

    Legal documents are about empowerment, not fear. Planning ahead helps ensure your wishes are honored and your family is protected—before a crisis ever occurs.


    🎧 If you found this episode helpful, share it with someone who’s been putting off their planning.

    📍 Learn more at www.privatefinancialdesign.com

    🎙️ Subscribe to Your Bread & Butter wherever you get your podcasts.

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    28 mins
  • Ep. 51 - Mining for Meaning - Digging into Crypto's Role in Your Portfolio
    Jan 7 2026

    Bitcoin used to feel like a novelty. Now, it’s part of many serious investment discussions — and it raises big questions for everyday investors: Is crypto an investment… a gamble… or something in between?In this episode of Your Bread & Butter™, we break down cryptocurrency in plain English, explore why it attracts so much attention, and discuss where (and whether) it may fit inside a thoughtfully built portfolio.What we cover:✅ Crypto Basics: What cryptocurrency actually is and how blockchain works✅ Coins vs. Tokens: What’s the difference — and why it matters✅ The Investment Case: Why some investors see potential (and why others stay cautious)✅ Portfolio Fit: The “satellite” approach and common allocation ranges✅ Ways to Get Exposure: Direct ownership vs. ETFs/funds vs. blockchain-themed investments✅ Risk & Behavior: Volatility, emotional decision-making, and how to stay disciplined✅ What’s Next: Institutional adoption, regulation, smart contracts, and tokenizationBottom line: Crypto can be exciting — but it’s also complex and volatile. If you’re considering it, the goal isn’t to “strike it rich.” It’s to understand the risks and decide whether it belongs in your broader financial plan.🎧 Subscribe to Your Bread & Butter™ wherever you get your podcasts!💬 Share the podcast with your friends!

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    30 mins
  • Ep. 50 - Have a Ho, Ho, Ho — Not a No, No, No — Christmas!
    Dec 18 2025

    The holidays are meant to be joyful—but for many people, they also bring financial stress, overspending, and regret. In this episode of Your Bread & Butter, Andrew R. Beaudry, CFP® and Ryan T. Cummings, CFP® walk through practical, realistic ways to enjoy the holiday season without blowing your budget or damaging important relationships.Whether you celebrate Christmas, Hanukkah, New Year’s, or all of the above, this conversation focuses on avoiding common “money minefields” tied to family expectations, personal traditions, friendships, and professional obligations.In this episode, we discuss:▪️Why your **budget—not your credit card limit—**should guide holiday spending▪️How to evaluate family traditions (past and present) that impact your financesSmart personal spending strategies, including:▪️Setting and sticking to per-person budgets▪️Avoiding impulse purchases and misleading holiday “deals”▪️Shopping early, shopping around, and making intentional trade-offs▪️Choosing homemade, handmade, or experience-based gifts▪️Thoughtful gifting considerations for friends, including Hanukkah traditions and meaningful gift ideasNavigating holiday expectations in your business and career, including:▪️Client gifting▪️Centers of influence▪️Office coworkers▪️Best practices for gifting vendors and service providers while managing appropriateness and liabilityKey takeaway:The most meaningful part of the holidays is time spent with the people you care about—not the price tag attached to the gifts. The solution is simple but powerful: make a plan.

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    31 mins