DutchGirl's journal

Where are you and where are you going?
DutchGirl
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by DutchGirl »

Hey delay, I'm not so sure it's so very passive. When I was officially allowed to talk about it, I did reach out to my second job, told them I was losing the first one, and asked whether they could give me more hours. Next week is the conversation about that after they had some internal discussion about it. I'm not sure whether they'll be capable to give me more hours and if so, starting when, but I'll hear it next week. The HR manager at the first job, sure, that's a passive thing. I'm curious what they might come up with, maybe they see job opportunities that I wouldn't have thought of, so I'm going to see what they might be able to offer. If it's nothing good, I'm going to pass :-) . But who knows?

And then yes, if neither of these bring a job opportunity that I like well enough, I'll have to think about something else. I am aiming to stay with my current job until it ends, which also meant I wasn't very active in finding something new in say July, because I think employers are generally speaking trying to find an employee who can start in 2 weeks to 3 months, not someone who can only start half a year from now.

Recently I have looked at some job openings and I've seen some interesting ones, so maybe after next week I'll start applying (and then I can tell them I can start in January if they want me).

delay
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by delay »

Thanks for your reply! If you explain it like that, it looks far less passive. It sounds like your skills will transfer well to a new position. So you can apply for a different job and start on short notice. And if you don't like the new job, you can move on quickly.

That's different in information technology where I work. Every company's "stack" is unique. So when I'm made redundant I lose a lot of my value. My knowledge of the processes, the technologies, and the suppliers becomes obsolete. A new job comes with a year of learning and onboarding, which gets harder as I get older.

FiscallyBlonde
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by FiscallyBlonde »

Hi DutchGirl,

Curious to hear about how your meeting at work went!

Regarding your plan to not pay income taxes, have you filled your annual pension space (jaarruimte) yet? If you combine this with donations, you might end up at €0. I think your plan is very valuable and understandable, this way you can combine working on your future and do something good for your preferred good causes. I totally understand your sentiment regarding the current government, I'm very curious to see how long they will last.

guitarplayer
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by guitarplayer »

Hope the work meeting went well @DutchGirl!

Taxes in the UK are such curiosity. If someone is on ERE level spending and income that is not very high (but might be above median), it is possible to pay negative tax (ie get a tax subsidy). The simplest way to do it is to put money into Self Investment Pension Plan (SIPP) which it is possible to put in 100% of earnings into it up to I think £60k and get tax reimbursed on it. But there is £12.57k tax free allowance. So

- one can earn £32.57k gross which there would have been £4k (20% above tax free allowance) income tax on, so £28.57k net income (ignore social security),
- but spend only £10k and put £18.57k into a SIPP to get the £4.64k income tax reimbursed (because for £18.57k to be net profit, gross pay needs to be £23.21k and 20% tax then is £4.64k). So total monies that stay with the person are then £10k + £18.57k + £4.64k = £33.21k. But the original gross income was £32.57.

Though it is true that the income tax needs to then be paid when withdrawing from a SIPP, but there are again tax free sums which make it possible to not pay tax at all - unless the total sum is sufficiently large.

At which point, I think it is reasonable to not mind paying a bit of tax, if nothing else for the privilege of dealing with 1st world problems rather than other problems.

DutchGirl
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by DutchGirl »

FiscallyBlonde wrote:
Thu Oct 24, 2024 5:11 am
Hi DutchGirl,

Curious to hear about how your meeting at work went!

Regarding your plan to not pay income taxes, have you filled your annual pension space (jaarruimte) yet? If you combine this with donations, you might end up at €0.
Good call, FiscallyBlonde :-). I had about 12k of jaarruimte this year, and I already have put in 10k. I'm not sure whether I want to fill up the last 2k - maybe I end up with too much money in retirement accounts (and getting that money out before official retirement age would be expensive and almost impossible here in the Netherlands). But I have some more time to think about it, and I will.

The meeting at work has been postponed due to illness of one of the HR people, unfortunately. So no update there yet, as I have decided to hear their offer, first and am thus still waiting on a new date.

I have other options as well, but I feel like I keep struggling with some fundamental questions. One of my passwords has been something like "IHateBeingACareProfessional123", and at that time I definitely felt like that. But the ahem, inspiration for that password came from my previous job. So do I still? I feel like I'm at a crossroads: I can dedicate some more years of my life to being in healthcare: grow my knowledge and experience, use my talents, care for people and hear their stories (I'm nothing if not curious!), be valuable, be appreciated. Or I can work part time in healthcare for a few more years, let the stash grow a little bit more, and then go do whatever I want without the stress and the claim on my time, energy and emotions.

delay
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by delay »

DutchGirl wrote:
Wed Oct 30, 2024 11:55 am
maybe I end up with too much money in retirement accounts (and getting that money out before official retirement age would be expensive and almost impossible here in the Netherlands
Why is that impossible? Just ask for a withdrawal and agree to pay the revisierente.

The other way to use your "lijfrente" money is to buy an annuity, which such a bad deal that it makes the withdrawal tax looks like a steal :D

DutchGirl
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by DutchGirl »

It's one option to pay the 20% fee. But that is a rather large fee, so I'd rather avoid it. (Especially if it would come on top of 40% income tax).But maybe you'd have it disbursed in a year where you don't have a lot of other income).

I am thinking more about using this pension account to get a retirement product that will give you a fixed interest rate per year or will give you returns based on the stock market. (Or I'll do a combination of both, and of course this depends on the interest rate I can get at that point. In Dutch: uitkerende lijfrente sparen and uitkerende lijfrente beleggen). You can set those products to last for for example 10 or 20 years, and if you die before you've spent it all, the remainder goes to your heirs.

delay
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by delay »

DutchGirl wrote:
Thu Oct 31, 2024 12:33 pm
It's one option to pay the 20% fee. But that is a rather large fee, so I'd rather avoid it. (Especially if it would come on top of 40% income tax).But maybe you'd have it disbursed in a year where you don't have a lot of other income).
Thanks for your reply! You always pay income tax, regardless of how you use your "lijfrente" money.
DutchGirl wrote:
Thu Oct 31, 2024 12:33 pm
I am thinking more about using this pension account to get a retirement product that will give you a fixed interest rate per year or will give you returns based on the stock market. (Or I'll do a combination of both, and of course this depends on the interest rate I can get at that point. In Dutch: uitkerende lijfrente sparen and uitkerende lijfrente beleggen). You can set those products to last for for example 10 or 20 years, and if you die before you've spent it all, the remainder goes to your heirs.
These options exist, but how efficient are they? For example, having the remainder go to your heirs is often implemented as an insurance against dying, for which you pay fees. You couldn't make it up :lol:

DutchGirl
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by DutchGirl »

I might actually consider taking out a lump sum at a certain moment in time, Delay, especially in a tax year when I'm not making a lot of other income. I might then get access to this money with only the 20% fee and close to 0% income tax.

I also like about using the "jaarruimte" that the money in your retirement account(s) is not counted for your box 3 tax, so for as long as the money is in the retirement account, every year you save some money on box 3 tax, too.

DutchGirl
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by DutchGirl »

These last couple of weeks I opened up this page a few times, stared at the blank space in this comment submission form, and closed it again. I was too preoccupied to type a comment that would make sense. Let's see if I can say something now.

I was too preoccupied with work. Specifically my one part time job ending, and making sure that I would continue to be a solid employee up until the end - especially for all the patients involved. I think I (and we all) did well. Yesterday was our last regular work day, yesterday evening a backup was made of all the patient data, today the patient files are sent to the new care providers - which is a digital process that luckily I am not involved in. Monday every patient can get care at their new provider of choice.

Next week I'll be at this workplace for two work days to help sort and clean stuff, potentially assist some former patients who call us instead of their new care provider because they're 85 years old and a bit lost... and then it's the holidays. In January I am supposed to go to my workplace once per week, because the employer will continue to pay all of the employees for a maximum of 12 months as long as we show up for work and show some effort to find a new job (that's mostly what you're supposed to do during your working hours). Salary payments will stop once an employee has found new work or once the 12 months are up. I am getting more work hours at my other part time job, but the total work hours per week will be 10, which I don't think is enough for me, now, and which doesn't fully cover the amount of hours I'm losing at the workplace closing down. So I also already interviewed for one other part time job, but decided that it wasn't a good match for me and so I stopped the interview process after one interview. I'm keeping an eye on several job vacancy sites and my estimate is that either in January or in February I'll be able to tell them that I've found a new job. I could of course hang around for 12 months and in that time only pretend to work on finding a new job - but that's just not my style. I also still have vacation days left, so for half of January I will now be on (a paid) holiday and won't need to go in to job search officially.

And in other news I did fill up my "jaarruimte" for 2024 with more retirement contributions, and I donated to charities as planned (with a final donation for this year scheduled after my next paycheck arrives).
And that's my news for now. See ya next time.

DutchGirl
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by DutchGirl »

So, work. I just had a two-week-holiday, which was very nice. I feel way more rested. On Monday I will have to report to my previous workplace to show that I'm serious about finding a new job, so that they'll continue paying me my monthly paycheck. So I'll be there. I will also work a few hours remote on Monday for my other part time job where I will work 10 hours/week now starting next week instead of the previous 4 hours/week. So there's a tough work week ahead of me (ha ha, not).
In December I talked to a potential new employer about a vacancy. At the end of January, I'll have a second meeting with the manager and the HR manager at that place. I think it will work out and I think we will discuss my start date at that point, but obviously that won't be in January and probably also not on the first of February as then they wouldn't have planned this meeting right at the end of January. That's fine by me, more time to relax!

I have found that I don't want to share my real numbers anymore, but looking back, in 2024 I had a roughly 66% higher income than expected at the beginning of it, my net worth went up by 13% and my expenses went up by about 20% (oops! But includes buying a small secondhand car, more charitable donations (after taxes) and dental work). I'm not counting investments, the debt repayment part of my mortgage payments, nor retirement contributions as expenses.

I feel like for part of 2024 I lost sight of FIRE as my workplace got more intense and I was interested in delivering solid work. So for 2025 I hope to drop the focus on work again and have some more other interesting things going on, too. One thing is a 4-week-holiday in the spring that I'm looking forward to and have already made bookings for :-)

delay
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by delay »

Thanks for sharing your journey. Best wishes for the new year and the job interview, and may the four week holiday bring you what you hope for!

FiscallyBlonde
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by FiscallyBlonde »

Best wishes! It’s nice your workplace still pays you to look for a new job, although i most definitely understand not wanting to wait out the 12 months and get the cash. It seems like you want to stay busy with something useful and not waste time, which is a good thing! A few holidays coming up will also be a nice thing to look forward to!

fingeek
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by fingeek »

Nice review, and nice to see how things change for you with work etc. If you were to do 2024 again, would you have changed anything?

DutchGirl
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by DutchGirl »

So it took me like three weeks to think about that question :-) . I'm glad that it was a hard question - that means I do not have big obvious regrets for 2024.

The second meeting with HR & manager for the vacancy was today, and I'm happy to say that I now have a second part time job again with enough hours to cover my expenses so that my money can grow some more in the background. I traveled to this new employer by car for the first interview and it took 25 minutes door to door, this time I tried public transport and found out I can do 30 minutes of public transport + 35 minutes of walking in a nice green area (also good to get some exercise in, except on very stormy days), or I can add a metro or bus to it to reduce the amount of walking for a total of 50 minutes of public transport + 15 minutes of walking. Plus during the morning and evening commute there are public transport options every 10-15 minutes, so if I miss one train the next one is on its way. By the way, google maps says that going by bike would take about an hour door to door, so that might very well be an option as well when the weather is fair.

Tomorrow I'll call the interim manager at my old job that I am quitting. There's an annoying thing there that for three weeks now I've been asking her to update the hours I worked. For some reason at this job I was never allowed to put my own work hours into the HR hour tracking program, and instead I've always sent in a home-made monthly spreadsheet showing when I worked. But with the interim manager she didn't put the hours in the HR program, so for 2024 I'm still showing as if I stopped working by the end of August 2024. Dear friends: I did not. So I need the interim manager to update the HR program before I quit, because otherwise I won't get paid for those hours. She told me that she asked someone at HR to do it. So tomorrow I'll nag the interim manager for the fifth time or so so that she will go and nag the HR person to actually do it. Sigh. Hopefully it will work this time. Maybe the fact that I'll be quitting and will be off their backs after they do this, will help? If not, I can also ask my union for assistance.

delay
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by delay »

DutchGirl wrote:
Wed Jan 29, 2025 6:30 pm
So tomorrow I'll nag the interim manager for the fifth time or so so that she will go and nag the HR person to actually do it. Sigh.
Thanks for your journal update! In these kinds of situations I've found non-violent communication useful. NVC says to include four components in communication: observation, feeling, need, request. For example: I notice that my hours are not in the system, I'm worried, I need the money, how can we ensure the numbers are entered? NVC suggests to make a request and not a demand: to be open to a "no" reply without trying to force the matter.

Like you write it's always good to ask the union for advice. Unions specialize in work related problems and their possible resolutions. My union doesn't take my side, but explains the situation in neutral terms. I've found that really clears things up.

fingeek
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by fingeek »

Glad to hear you couldn't much about changing 2024!

Love the idea about NVC @delay, I will research that a bit more too. It does seem like it's a short-lived one-off issue so that makes things easier. It's those persistent recurring problems that are the harder ones to deal with!

DutchGirl
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by DutchGirl »

Yeah, the issue with the work hour registration was resolved I think two weeks later. I have now officially quit my previous job, I received the pay-out for my hours and the severance pay, and this Friday I will work for the first time at the new job. I'm looking forward to it, and curious how it'll be. My week will be more scheduled, which may actually be a good thing - we'll see.

A completely different thing is that unfortunately, my brother-in-law is divorcing my sister. Turns out she signed an unfavorable prenup when she married 15 years ago (also before she found out about her chronic illness), so she's all up in arms about how she will now have to downgrade her lifestyle. She has lived a middle class lifestyle (three bedroom house with garden and balcony in a popular part of the Netherlands, nice furniture, three big trips per year, nice car etc) and would on her own probably have enough income for a lower middle class lifestyle (smaller house or in less popular part of the country, one trip per year, small car). She is my sister, and there are two lovely nieces (aged 10 and 12) involved, so I will probably help out financially to create a softer landing. This does mean that my own priorities around money have changed a bit - now I do want to earn some more in the next few years to be able to help out - at least until the nieces have become financially independent from their parents - after that things should be easier. My parents are by the way also helping and there are some legal protections when divorcing (brother-in-law, as the higher earner in the relationship, will need to pay spousal alimony for five years and both parents are responsible to support the children financially until they're 18 or until they're 21 if they go to university).
What do I owe my siblings and/or my nieces/nephews? A question I have been pondering lately, but yes, I do want to help out a bit financially.

I'm preparing our tax paperwork, but have to wait for some statements from my previous employer. We can only start filing here on March 1st, and I will probably bring the paperwork to the accountant within two weeks after that (if all the statements have arrived by then). I'll probably owe < 1000 euros in taxes for the year, and since much more was withheld, I'll get a big refund (and the current Dutch government will have to do without my contributions). Also, I'll help my MIL file soon after March 1, as she has only needs three statements (state pension, work pension, and bank statement) and has already received all of them.

My guy meanwhile is making plans to leave the small company that he founded (currently it consists of four IT guys) and then setting out on his own doing computer stuff that he is interested in doing without the need for it to make money. Maybe he'll create a piece of hardware, maybe he'll work on some software, possibly open source software. In recent days he told me he has been making a list, currently it contains 27 items of things he finds interesting. He wouldn't be leaving right away (there's a project ongoing), but maybe in a year or so? I like it for him.

Our month-long holiday is coming up pretty soon, and I'm looking forward to it. (So yes, I'll start at my new job and then after a few weeks I'll be gone for a month - but of course this was discussed during the job interviews and they still like me to start before my holiday). I'm learning some Italian on Duolingo to prepare, so now I can already order a cappuccino and say I want to buy a sweater. Molto bene.

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Seppia
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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by Seppia »

Molto bene indeed
Sorry for your sister, but she is lucky to have you.

The reply I would give to your “what do I own to my siblings nieces/nephews?” is in my opinion

Whatever you feel comfortable doing.

In these situations, there are pros and cons whatever you do.
IE if you help, you make the kids’ quality of life better in the short term, but you may also “help” your sister not to adjust her lifestyle, which again may cause other issues down the road.
This may or may not be the case, just a theoretical example of course.
Just to say that there are so many ripple effects that are outside of your control, you may just go with your instincts.

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Re: DutchGirl's journal

Post by jacob »

DutchGirl wrote:
Wed Feb 26, 2025 3:18 pm
A completely different thing is that unfortunately, my brother-in-law is divorcing my sister. Turns out she signed an unfavorable prenup when she married 15 years ago (also before she found out about her chronic illness), so she's all up in arms about how she will now have to downgrade her lifestyle. She has lived a middle class lifestyle (three bedroom house with garden and balcony in a popular part of the Netherlands, nice furniture, three big trips per year, nice car etc) and would on her own probably have enough income for a lower middle class lifestyle (smaller house or in less popular part of the country, one trip per year, small car). She is my sister, and there are two lovely nieces (aged 10 and 12) involved, so I will probably help out financially to create a softer landing. This does mean that my own priorities around money have changed a bit - now I do want to earn some more in the next few years to be able to help out - at least until the nieces have become financially independent from their parents - after that things should be easier. My parents are by the way also helping and there are some legal protections when divorcing (brother-in-law, as the higher earner in the relationship, will need to pay spousal alimony for five years and both parents are responsible to support the children financially until they're 18 or until they're 21 if they go to university).
What do I owe my siblings and/or my nieces/nephews? A question I have been pondering lately, but yes, I do want to help out a bit financially.
Well, I recently wrote this, but I realize that every family is different and that I don't know all the parameters here.
jacob wrote:
Mon Feb 24, 2025 8:40 am
In terms of other people, I agree with @Ego. Recessions are necessary in order to let those who are otherwise out of pedagogical reach learn by experiencing the consequences of their bad decisions. There are many people who are unable to see a bad decision before the outcome smacks them in their own personal face. Fair enough. However, most are unwilling to listen and ignore warnings as well. There's basically no way to reach them pedagogically w/o letting them experience the consequences of their choices. Doing so would in my mind constitute a disservice. I should note that this problem is not due to lack of intelligence but a lack of accurate beliefs about how the world works. Some just have to learn by making their own mistakes. There's no other way!

This [inability compounded with an unwillingess to listen] used to bother me a lot more---why oh why do humans always gotta human---but I've increasingly come to accept that this is just the only or preferred way some people learn. While things are going well, it's everybody else who pays the cost of their bad decisions---but they don't see that either. As such I tend to see recessions as a kind of delayed learning process even if it is ugly.

I'm sympathetic to those who made good decisions but got thrown under the bus due to other people's bad decisions. Not so much those who made the bad decisions and caused themselves and everybody else to suffer. Doesn't mean my pain tolerance in terms of bad outcomes to others is infinite, but it is proportional to the destructiveness of someone's decisions. It would be better for society (and maybe even eventually for themselves) if they learned the consequences of their choices instead of getting bailed out. The more the cost of bad decision-making can be isolated to those who made the bad decision, the better. Harsh!
Consider that there are many different ways of helping. You could help her figure out how to refocus from "three bedroom house with garden and balcony in a popular part of the Netherlands, nice furniture, three big trips per year, nice car etc" to "lower middle class lifestyle (smaller house or in less popular part of the country, one trip per year, small car)". This requires showing a path from "aspiring beyond-your-means consumerism" over "frugality" and eventually to "ERE". Lessons here extend from the practical to the theoretical. You're well-positioned to lead by example here. Note that all this knowledge might not be welcome. Human minds have great immune systems with defenses kicking in when unsolicited advice is offered. The "holy shit, my situation changed, so I gotta change"-mind is very rare. The average human will try to deny, bargain, get angry, blame the world, ... before coming around to the fact that it sucks to suck. Again, I don't know the individuals here, but this is how it usually goes. So... you might wanna hold off while that process unfolds.

The easiest thing is just to throw money at the problem. This will inevitably create expectations, entitlements, and dependencies. Many cultures put family over everything else, even the individual. If so, it's just what you do. (This is why ERE/FIRE is not a thing in cultures where "filial piety" is a core value.) If this is not you, just consider how aid and support will permanently change the relationship. Again individual outcomes may vary. Don't expect outcomes to automagically be positive. The receiver might come to resent the dependence. It would be wise to insert some kind of hard break-point. For example, in the rare case I've bailed someone out, it's been on the condition that it'll never happen again---so is now the time or would they rather hold off on calling in what is a lifetime favor as far as I'm concerned?

The way I see it, it's fundamentally a choice between changing a person (who might not be ready to change themselves) or probably changing the relationship you have with them. This is it in a nutshell. "You can never do just one thing", but you can lean in on a given direction.

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