Tuesday, June 30, 2026

It's Not Too Late to Take Control (And You Are Not Alone)

 For Women in Their 50s, 60s, and Beyond

You have spent decades managing everything for everyone else. The household finances. The kids' education. Maybe caring for aging parents. You have been so focused on everyone else's future that your own financial planning got pushed to the back burner. And now, as retirement approaches, you may be feeling a knot of anxiety.

Here is what you need to hear: You are not alone, and it is not too late.

The statistics can be frightening. Women retire with an average of 28% less savings than men. They are more likely to live in poverty during retirement. But those numbers do not have to be your story. The financial industry is finally waking up to the fact that women need and deserve a different kind of conversation, one that starts with your life, not with a product.

Here is what the experts want you to know:

Confidence is the secret ingredient.

It turns out that confidence matters more than knowledge. Highly confident savers put away 64% more of their income than their less confident peers. Knowledge alone only boosted savings by 12%. The takeaway? You likely know more than you give yourself credit for. Start acting like it.

You have powerful "catch-up" tools available to you.

If you are 50 or older, you can make additional "catch-up" contributions to your registered accounts. Use them. Max out your TFSA first if your income is modest (withdrawals don't count as income and won't claw back your government benefits). Then focus on your RRSP. Every dollar you put in now is a dollar that will work for you in retirement.

Women are expected to hold the majority of wealth in the coming years.

Financial advisors are beginning to understand that women have unique needs when it comes to retirement planning, including a need for guaranteed income that isn't subject to market swings. You deserve an advisor who understands that your priority is not beating the market, it is never running out of money.

It's never too late to get good advice.

Many women in your age group have never worked with a financial advisor. Or they have, but they felt talked down to or ignored. But when women do find the right advisor, one who respects them, speaks plainly, and takes their life goals seriously, their participation in investing more than doubles. It is worth the effort to find a good fit.

So, what can you do today? Gather your statements and get a clear picture of what you have and what you owe. If you are still working, increase your retirement contributions, even by 1%, it adds up. If you are retired or close to it, work with an advisor to create a sustainable withdrawal plan so you don't outlive your money.

Most importantly, stop letting the "I should have started earlier" voice paralyze you. You did the best you could with what you knew. Now you know more. And there is still time to make a difference.

The system is learning to talk to you. But you don't need to wait for it to be perfect. Start the conversation today, with an advisor, with a friend, or simply with yourself. Your future self will thank you.

 

Monday, June 29, 2026

You Don't Need to Feel Ready. You Just Need to Start.

 For Women in Their 20s, 30s, and 40s

Let's be honest. The financial world was not built with you in mind. The language is confusing. The advice often assumes a stay-at-home partner or a steady, uninterrupted career. And when you don't understand something right away, it's easy to think the problem is you.

It's not. The problem is a system that hasn't bothered to learn how to talk to you. But here's the truth: the industry is finally changing. And more importantly, you don't need to wait for it to catch up.

Here is what the experts want you to know:

You are not bad with money. You have just been left out of the conversation.

A recent study found that when women are given a financial question, they often answer "I don't know" because it feels safer. But when that option is removed, their knowledge is just as strong as men's. You know more than you think. You just need to trust yourself.

Your hesitation is expensive.

Fear is the biggest obstacle to building wealth, not a lack of skill or a low salary. Women tend to be great savers, but many keep too much money sitting in cash because they are afraid of making a mistake. Start before you feel ready. Open a retirement account. Set up an automatic monthly contribution, even if it's just 100. That consistency matters more than being an expert.

Time is your greatest asset, not a big salary.

The most powerful tool for building wealth is not earning more; it is starting now. Even small amounts invested early can grow into significant sums. Every year you wait costs you compound growth. The worst mistake is waiting for the perfect moment.

Advisors are not all the same. Find one who respects you.

Many women avoid advisors because they fear being condescended to or not taken seriously. But the right advisor, one who speaks plainly, listens to your goals, and treats you as an equal, can be transformative. When women receive personalized financial planning, investment participation more than doubles. You deserve an advisor who looks at you and sees a partner, not a dependent.

So, what can you do today? If you have a workplace retirement plan, contribute enough to get the full employer match, that is free money. If you don't have a plan, open a TFSA or RRSP with an automatic monthly contribution. Take twenty minutes this week to find a fee-only financial planner who specializes in working with women. Ask your friends for recommendations. Start the conversation.

The system is changing because women like you are demanding better. But you don't need to wait for the system to be perfect. Start where you are, with what you have. The next best time to invest is now. Your future self, the one who wants to retire with dignity, travel, or simply sleep soundly at night, will thank you.

Sunday, June 28, 2026

How the Financial Industry Is Finally Learning to Talk to Women

 (No More Jargon, I Promise)

This and the following 2 posts were written because my daughter and my daughter-in-law and all of their friends are turning 50 this year. They are starting to look at the idea of retirement, so this is meant to help them and hopefully other women as they try to figure out their options.

An article Older woman at risk of running out of money as gender wealth gap widens with age, written by Maisie Grice and published online in May 2026, highlights a critical reality: the financial system has often made women feel like it wasn't designed for them. The good news is that the industry is finally waking up and changing how it talks to women, focusing on clarity, respect, and real life, not jargon and one-size-fits-all advice.

For decades, much of the financial world spoke a language that alienated women. The research from CIRO found something important: women don't lack financial knowledge. They lack confidence, and a big reason for that is how the industry has talked to them. Give women the same question without a panic-inducing "I don't know" option, and the gender gap in financial literacy disappears entirely. The issue has never been ability. It's been a system that made women feel like outsiders.

The industry is finally getting the message.

  • Women want plain language, not jargon. A CIRO study found 57% of women say it's important that their advisor speaks without jargon, compared to just 40% of men. And 56% of women prioritize being treated with respect.
  • They want advisors who understand their life. Not just their portfolio. Women are more likely to seek advice after major life events like divorce, widowhood, or redundancy. They want someone who "gets it".
  • Women are expected to hold 60% of the UK's wealth by the end of 2025. Advisors who can't speak to women are missing the boat entirely.
  • Women drive the demand for advice. They're expected to inherit an estimated $3.2 trillion over the next decade, creating a huge demand for tailored financial planning and retirement income design.
The message is clear: financial marketing that has historically used language alienating women from pensions and investing is being called out. The industry is shifting to conversations that start with: "What's on your mind? What's keeping you up at night?"

Saturday, June 27, 2026

whenever you whisper

Did you know that whenever you whisper, "I'm sorry," a healing begins? Not a dramatic, cinematic healing with swelling music and tears, but something quieter, slow, deliberate mending of a torn seam between two people. A shouted apology often feels like a performance, desperate and demanding immediate forgiveness. But a whisper? A whisper crawls through the small space between chins and ears, carrying only truth. It says, I am small enough to admit I was wrong. It disarms the other person’s armor because there is no threat, no noise, no ego. In that hush, the listener doesn't have to defend; they only have to hear. And hearing is where healing starts. That single, soft breath can turn a grudge into a memory, a wall into a door.

Did you know that whenever you whisper, "Thank you," more is sent? Not more stuff, more kindness, more patience, more unnoticed grace. A loud thank-you is often polite but forgettable, lost in the bustle of a restaurant or the shuffle of an office. But when you lean in and whisper gratitude, into a tired parent’s ear, a colleague’s harried goodbye, a stranger’s hesitant gesture, you create a secret. You tell that person: I see you, specifically you. That whisper becomes a tiny, unrepayable debt. And human nature, curious and generous, seeks to balance the scale. The person who receives a whispered “thank you” will look for someone else to thank quietly. And so the current moves, not in waves, but in ripples. More patience is sent into a waiting room. More understanding is sent across a dinner table. More love circulates in places no one ever thinks to look.

And did you know that whenever you whisper, "I love you," days are added to your life… and a rose blooms? The science is there, if you want it: lowered cortisol, steadier heart rates, longer telomeres. But the truth is older than science. A whispered “I love you” is different from one declared from the rooftops. The rooftop shout is for the world; the whisper is only for one. It enters through the ear and settles behind the ribs, in that hollow where fear and loneliness like to hide. That whisper says, In a universe of noise, I choose your silence. Among seven billion voices, yours is the one I will lean toward. And something in the human body believes it. The cells relax. The breath deepens. Minutes accumulate like coins in a jar you forgot you had. You don't just live longer; you live more, more awake, more tender, more aware of the small, holy fact of another person’s existence.

And the rose? It blooms in the air between you. Not a physical rose, but the idea of one: fragile, fragrant, easily crushed but willing to open anyway. That rose is the moment you remember ten years later on a lonely Tuesday. That rose is the proof that softness survives. Every time you risk a whisper of real love, another unseen petal unfurls somewhere in the world’s dark corners.

So whisper. It costs you nothing but pride. It gains you everything that matters. A whisper fits through the smallest crack in a hardened heart. It asks for no reply. It expects no applause. It simply travels from your truth to theirs, and in that tiny, nearly silent space between, the world changes, not with a bang, but with a breath.