In this inspiring episode of The Real Retirement Show, hosts Yasmin and Kathleen sit down with Mike Drak—retired financial services professional turned author, public speaker, and Ironman-in-training at 70—to explore the non-financial dimensions of retirement. Mike shares his powerful journey from retirement shock to personal reinvention, revealing how he overcame fears, embraced purpose, and adopted the principles of a long, healthy, and fulfilling life. Together, they discuss the importance...
In this inspiring episode of The Real Retirement Show, hosts Yasmin and Kathleen sit down with Mike Drak—retired financial services professional turned author, public speaker, and Ironman-in-training at 70—to explore the non-financial dimensions of retirement. Mike shares his powerful journey from retirement shock to personal reinvention, revealing how he overcame fears, embraced purpose, and adopted the principles of a long, healthy, and fulfilling life. Together, they discuss the importance of physical vitality, meaningful relationships, and a growth mindset—and why financial advisors must expand their role beyond numbers to guide clients through life’s next chapter. Tune in to hear how Mike is breaking stereotypes and redefining what it means to truly thrive in retirement.
00:00 Discovering Your Purpose and Overcoming Fears
02:00 Welcome to The Real Retirement Show
02:43 Meet Mike Drak: Author and Retirement Expert
03:33 Mike's Ironman Challenge at 70
05:24 Redefining Retirement: The Retirement Rebel
08:12 The Concept of Watching Your Life Movie
09:59 Experiencing Retirement Shock
14:57 The Nine Principles for a Fulfilling Retirement
16:41 Longevity and Retirement: Bridging the Gap
18:12 Practical Steps to Extend Your Health Span
19:58 Inspiration from Clive: A Model for Active Aging
20:39 The Importance of Fun and Connection in Fitness
21:49 Balancing Purpose and Consistency in Life
23:08 Financial Mindset in Retirement
24:47 Navigating Finances with a Partner
26:38 The Role of Advisors in Holistic Retirement Planning
31:48 Personal Growth and Overcoming Fears
36:47 Resources for a Fulfilling Retirement
38:25 Final Thoughts and Encouragement
About Mike Drak
Mike is an author, public speaker and recognized authority on the non-financial aspects of retirement. After having spent 38-years in the financial services industry, Mike retired and personally faced what he called “retirement shock”. During this time, Mike found himself on a journey of self-discovery and authored three best-selling books on retirement; Victory Lap Retirement, Retirement Heaven or Hell: Which Will You Choose? and Longevity Lifestyle By Design. Mike is a Senior Contributor at Booming Encore and dedicates his time to helping other retirees design a fulfilling, meaningful retirement lifestyle for themselves.
Resources
Get both these books for free at https://boomingencore.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mike-drak-6b401095/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/retirement_rebel/
Real Retirement Video Podcast: Real Retirement - YouTube
Welcome to "Real Retirement," a groundbreaking podcast where your hosts, Yasmin Nguyen and Kathleen Mundy, delve into the multifaceted world of retirement beyond the numbers. This isn't your typical retirement discussion; it's a vibrant journey into what retirement truly means in today's world.
Each episode of "Real Retirement" brings you compelling conversations with guests who bring a wealth of expertise and authentic retirement life experiences. Our goal? To inspire and educate our listeners to approach retirement with intentionality and a broader perspective.
But "Real Retirement" is more than just a podcast. It's a community for those navigating the uncharted waters of retirement, whether you're just starting to plan or are already on this deeply personal journey. We explore a wide array of topics, including:
What sets "Real Retirement" apart? It's our commitment to authenticity. We bring you real stories from real retirees, discussing real challenges, surprises, joys, heartaches, and the myriad emotions that come with retirement. From addressing family dynamics to confronting identity shifts, we tackle the issues that truly matter to retirees.
Join Yasmin and Kathleen as they journey through the honest and often unspoken aspects of retirement. "Real Retirement" isn't just about ending a career; it's about beginning a new, exciting chapter of life with all its complexities and joys. Tune in and be part of a conversation that redefines retirement in the most real way possible.
Mike Drak: really believe that
everyone has a purpose and
they've had it all their lives
and they have certain skills.
That maybe they never had a
chance to develop and certain
interests and certain passions.
And what we wanna do is get'em
back on that path and see where
it takes them.
And that's the exciting stuff.
And you see these people
becoming, you know, like me,
maybe a writer I never wrote
before.
I had no idea.
But then I started experimenting
with and I went, wow, this is
kind of neat.
Right.
then the funniest thing is I had
this terrible fear of public
speaking.
I had it for all my life and I
never thought I would be able to
do it.
And then after writing a book, I
said, well, I gotta learn how to
public speak so I can go out and
talk about the book.
And I went and I conquered that
fear.
I couldn't believe it.
It would've been one of my
biggest regrets, that be
unresolved.
I actually went to Toastmasters,
and I can't tell you how many
times I went there and sat in
the parking lot and bailed on
the meeting, and one time I
said, you know what?
This is the last chance I gotta
go in there and I gotta conquer
this fear.
I'll never forget I walked in
the meeting and, I guess they
know you're new and you're
scared.
And so they come up and they try
to talk you down a little bit
and get a little calm.
I'll never forget, I told the
lady, I said, do me a favor, and
she goes, yeah, sure what?
And I said, can you go lock the
door?
Because at some point I'm gonna,
I'm gonna make a break.
I'm gonna try to get outta here.
and she went over and locked the
door and it was hard.
It was so hard.
You have no idea.
got through the night and I went
back the next night and got
through it again, and then I
went back the next week and got
through it again and it got a
little bit easier, but it was
hard work.
But I avoided, one of my biggest
regrets I would ever have is, my
fear of public speaking
Yasmin Nguyen: Welcome back to
The Real Retirement Show.
My name is Yasmin.
Here with my co-host Kathleen.
Whether you're retired or
thinking about retirement, we
delve into the multifaceted
world of retirement beyond the
finances.
This isn't your typical
retirement discussion.
It's a vibrant journey into what
retirement truly means in
today's world.
We bring you real stories from
real retirees and experts
discussing real challenges,
surprises, joys, heartaches, and
the myriad of emotions that come
with retirement.
From addressing family dynamics
to mental and physical health,
to finding purpose, we tackle
the issues that truly matter to
retirees and those thinking
about retirement.
Our special guest today is Mike
Drak.
Mike is an author, public
speaker, and recognized
authority on the non-financial
aspects of retirement.
After having spent 38 years in
the financial services industry,
Mike retired and personally
faced what he called retirement
shock.
During this time, Mike found
himself on a journey of
self-discovery and authored two
bestselling books on Retirement
victory Lap Retirement and
Retirement Heaven or Hell, which
will you choose?
Mike is now a senior contributor
at Booming Encore and dedicates
his time to help other retirees
design a fulfilling, meaningful
retirement lifestyle for
themselves.
Please help me welcome Mike,
Drak
Kathleen Mundy: welcome, Mike.
Yasmin Nguyen: so awesome to
have you here.
Mike, I think in our last
conversation you talked about,
this challenge that you're on
right now and you're doing an
Ironman challenge at the age of,
what is it, 70?
Is that right?
Mike Drak: Yes.
A young 70.
Yasmin Nguyen: 70.
So how's your journey going and
what inspired you to take on
this challenge?
Mike Drak: So far it's been
brutal, to be honest, because
I'm starting from such a bad
position.
I'm out of a shape.
I'm overweight, I'm slow.
kind of creaks when I walk.
But every day it's getting a
little bit better, which is
encouraging.
the reason I'm doing it is
number one, I wanna give my
health back.
lose some weight.
I want to live the best quality
of life I can for as long as I
can, and I wanna serve as a good
retirement role model to other
retirees to say, Hey, look
what's possible if you really,
if you're really want it bad
enough and are willing to do to
work, there's so many things you
can do, not just Ironman, I mean
anything.
And so that's the purpose behind
my madness.
Yasmin Nguyen: I don't know that
it's madness.
Mike, it's really inspirational
because so many people at this
stage have these limiting
beliefs that, oh, I'm too old.
My body doesn't work.
But you're really, stepping into
a whole new place of
possibilities for people.
Mike Drak: Yeah.
you have to be careful because,
your beliefs about aging and
we've been sold this thing that.
Once you've reach a certain age,
you know you're gonna be frail
and you gotta be careful or
you're gonna get hurt and you
should just play safe and sit
back and watch the world go by
and that's not what you wanna do
because that will make you grow
older faster you wanna stay away
from that.
You wanna remain vibrant, you
wanna keep experiencing and
learning new things, and it is
so important.
Yasmin Nguyen: Yeah, it
certainly is.
Hey, by the way, what does your
shirt say?
Mike Drak: Oh, it says
retirement rebel.
Yasmin Nguyen: Retirement rebel.
Well, tell me a little bit more
of what that means and what does
it, for you, what does
retirement and rebel mean to be
one?
I.
Mike Drak: you know what?
What I'm trying to express is
that we wanna throw away the old
retirement rule book.
where, traditional retirement,
you're supposed to stop work at
a certain age and you're
supposed to take it easy and
maybe play pickleball or
something like that.
And I'm saying, no, we don't
wanna be like that.
This is our time now that we
have our freedom back.
wanna do all those things that
we always dreamed about, the
things we're passionate about.
And, we wanna post about all the
exciting things we're doing on
social media.
So our friends catch on and they
come and join the party.
So I'm always on the outlook for
other retirement rebels.
And you can spot'em because
they're the ones, they're full
of energy and they're having a
lot of fun.
They're exciting and they're
doing so many interesting things
and I just enjoy it so much and
those are the people I wanna
hang around.
So I wear the shirt, it draws
retirement rebels in, we have a
few laughs and we talk about our
adventures and we inspire each
other.
Kathleen Mundy: Mike, I think I
need your shirt.
You know, it's funny because, I
think that retirement, when
you're talking about, the older
concept about slowing down and
taking things easy, that perhaps
is what our parents did.
that's not who we are.
And I love the fact that you
talked a little bit about, the
difference between heaven and
hell in retirement.
And it really has to do with the
mindset and the, decisions to
move forward and not stay stuck.
get into a place that maybe
stretches you a little bit like
your Iron Man is doing, and give
you a better understanding of
the capacity you have to accept
these challenges and succeed in
them.
So I'm, that's why I said I, I'm
thrilled with your concepts,
your ideology, the ethos of what
you're doing, and I need your
shirt.
Mike Drak: I'll get one out to
you, but you have a good word
there.
Capacity, and another good word
is potential.
And we all have so much untapped
potential.
I.
us and we've lost touch with
that.
And what we wanna do is wake
people up to that again and say,
okay, what are you really
passionate about?
Because this is your time to
chase after it, right?
Maybe it's a different type of
work that you wanna do.
Maybe it's volunteering or being
a service to others, but we all
have it within us.
And so we're trying to help
people dig it out and say, okay,
let's chase after it.
Now let's see what we can do and
how much fun we can have doing
it.
Kathleen Mundy: Does this kind
of fall into your concept?
I love this, watching Your Life
movie.
In fact, my husband's always
saying, talking about game
field.
So he looks at what's happened
and then decides what should
happen in the future.
And that kind of reminds me of
something that you are talking
about and you're wanting to make
sure that last scene in your
film is the best scene that you
can make.
Mike Drak: Exactly, because you
know, what I did was when I
wrote that section in the
chapter was I look back at my
life.
And I said, am I really happy
with what I've accomplished to
date, what I've been through?
and I really wasn't because I
was thinking, oh, I'm working in
a corporate world.
I'm working for a big bank.
Really, there's not a lot of
autonomy.
I took orders and I did what
they wanted and I was very good
at it, but I wasn't happy doing
it.
And things changed over time.
And then I said, I gotta get
away from this.
So I said, okay.
I paid my dues.
I went through that part of the
movie, now it's me.
I'm the producer now.
I'm gonna make a happy ending
for myself and hopefully it's a
long, happy ending.
That's what I'm working on.
yeah, I think about it all the
time.
And another thing I think about
is my future self, what gonna
look like and what I'm gonna be
doing in 10 years.
When I turn 80.
I think about it every day and I
say, okay.
What do I wanna be doing when
I'm 80?
Why, I put those things in place
now to help me get there?
and one of'em is my health.
I wanna be really healthy when
I'm 80.
'cause I wanna keep doing the
things I love to do, but I need
to start working on it now or
it's not gonna happen.
So yeah, that's what I think
about'em.
Yasmin Nguyen: Speaking of
movies, Mike, you know in many
movies you start with the movie
and then you've got the sequel,
and then you've got the prequel
as well.
And I'm curious if we rewound
the clock back to this journey
that you started where you
experienced retirement shock.
Can you help us understand what
was the experience that you were
going through and what is this
retirement shock?
Mike Drak: It was brutal at the
time, believe me.
it was almost like a trap
because one point when I, I was
59.
And I decided, okay, I don't
wanna work here anymore.
In the bank.
I was getting stressed out.
I didn't like, some of the
things the bank was doing at the
time, office politics and all
that stuff.
It was just like it got to me I
said, yeah, I gotta get outta
here.
So I was starting to tell people
I, I'm planning on leaving.
People were shocked because we
were part of a defined pension,
plan.
You're not supposed to do those
things like career.
to my surprise, one day someone
called me into a surprise
meeting where they gave me the
package.
Kathleen Mundy: There you go.
Mike Drak: I remember sitting
there, it was the funniest
thing, and they had someone
sitting beside me.
I guess they wanna make sure I
didn't jump out of a window and
my boss was sitting across from
me, he said, are you okay?
And I looked at him, I went, how
am I gonna play this?
I went, oh, you know what?
I'm feeling a little dizzy.
This is a shock, And he says,
maybe you should take the rest
of the day off.
I said, oh, thank you very much.
Yeah, it's, it's a big change
for me.
Thank you for understanding.
I got into the car, I phoned my
wife and I said, Hey, contest,
we hit the jackpot because I was
gonna leave anyways, and instead
of walking away with nothing, I
had their sever check.
That opened everything up for me
and I said, wow, this is gonna
be great.
And I got home and for the first
week everything was wonderful.
I didn't have to get up and
commute and I didn't have to,
report to certain people and do
all these things.
And, at the end of the first
week, the following Monday, I'll
never forget what happened.
I was sitting there on the couch
trying to find something
interesting to watch on tv.
I had one of these fancy smart
TVs.
I got 500 stations.
I couldn't find anything to
watch.
That was interesting.
And I started feeling really
miserable and I was all by
myself'cause my wife was still
working.
My friends were still working
and I'm just sitting there being
miserable and I go, there's
something wrong.
Because I got this money, I have
more than enough.
I don't have to worry about,
making any more money, but I'm
miserable and I don't feel like
doing anything.
And what really bothered me,
irritated me was no one could
understand what I was going
through.
My wife couldn't understand, my
friends couldn't understand
because everyone automatically
assumed, how can Mike be unhappy
because he doesn't have to work
anymore?
The truth is Mike was unhappy
'cause he wasn't working
anymore.
He wasn't involved in things he
wasn't doing interesting things
and dealing with people and
solving problems.
I love solving problems.
And I was doing nothing.
I was just sitting there like a
vegetable and that's when I
started sliding into retirement.
He and I spent, a year there
trying to figure things out and
that really bothered me and
concerned me because.
I saw that happen to my father
and it cost him about a year
too, and I had a good friend die
from it, he ended up drinking
himself, to death because he was
bored and he was lonely.
I.
And I said, no, this is bad and
I gotta deal with it.
I went out and I got my hands on
every retirement book I can
looking for answers.
But I was frustrated again
because all they did was the
money aspect of retirement.
No one talked about the
psychological side or the
challenges we'd be facing and
what to do about it.
And so that's what led to the
writing of the books really is,
my personal journals.
Trying to figure different
things out as I went through it.
And luckily I came up the other
side and, I found the solutions
I needed and life's never been
better.
But it took me a while to get
there and, my goal now these
days is I don't want people to
waste a lot of time and go
through the stress and anxiety
that I went through.
I'm saying, okay, let's Prep you
before you actually retire, so
you're prepared for these things
and you can jump into or use
retirement as a stepping stone
to a better life, and then try
to figure out what that life
will look like.
Kathleen Mundy: Well, it sounds
as though you mirrored that with
your personal journey, which is
I think, the best way to tell a
story and have people understand
what they can face and how to
avoid it.
you also developed nine
principles.
Have I got that correct in
Mike Drak: Yes.
Kathleen Mundy: overcome?
Can you share that with us
today?
I think that our listeners would
really be interested in knowing
what those principles were
Mike Drak: I call them in the
book, retirement Principles.
But really now I've shifted it
and I'm calling them Longevity
Principles because following
these principles will lead to a
long and healthy life.
And these are principles I
follow every day.
And really they're longevity
drivers.
what will make me happy and what
will lead to a health healthy
life.
one of the principles is
relationships.
It's so important, they've done
so much research on this, that
you have to make sure that
you're engaged and around people
and you either friends or family
or your neighbors or.
I always like to tell people,
find a tribe to join, or
multiple tribes.
I belong to a swim tribe.
I belong to, a riding tribe.
it is so nice to interact with
other people and there are
different age ranges too.
The young people, old people.
And, we feed off each other.
We feed off our energy.
we have fun and they encourage
me to follow my goals and I
encourage them.
And, we mentor each other too.
You know, we talk about all
these different things.
So, that's such an important
driver and that's just one of
them.
Another one is making sure we
have a positive attitude, right?
there's all kinds of research
done.
The famous NUN study saying that
happy nuns outlive unhappy nuns.
And it holds true for everyone
is, if you have a positive
attitude, if you look at aging
as a positive thing, guess what?
You're gonna live up to maybe
seven and a half years longer
than the average, retiree.
And then we could go down the
list.
There's so many, more of'em.
but they're all longevity
drivers.
And there's things, I practice
every day.
Yasmin Nguyen: Mike, now you
mentioned the word longevity.
what is your perception on the
difference or the intersection
between longevity and
retirement?
I.
Mike Drak: I take retirement
right outta the equation, right?
My focus on longevity is,
there's two things I look at.
There's health span that period
of time where I'm gonna be
healthy enough to do the things,
I wanna do in lifespan, and
there's a gap between'em.
And I think the average gap
right now.
Is about 11 years for retirees
in Canada.
So maybe they're, and don't
quote me on the numbers but say,
the average retiree is healthy
up to the age of 65, but then
they're gonna develop, a health
problem.
Maybe it's gonna be arthritis,
high blood pressure, or whatnot,
and it's going to impact the
quality of their remaining life.
We're saying, it doesn't have to
be that way.
If you follow the longevity
drivers, our goal is to decrease
that, that gap, let's call it
six span.
We're going to decrease that six
span as much as we can.
Best case scenario, I like to go
fishing one day, a dinner with
my wife, and not wake up the
next morning.
That would be the perfect exit
for me.
And is, it is all about pushing
our best before date as far back
as possible so we can enjoy real
quality, years and quality
lifestyle.
But you know, it takes some work
and attention.
Yasmin Nguyen: Mike, now you
talked about pushing back your
best before date.
how do people start doing that
in their own lives?
Mike Drak: it gets back to the
longevity drivers.
So we're looking at those and
we're saying, okay, here are
areas we need to focus on.
And one of them is just general
health.
Like a lot of people they.
Approach retirement.
Their health declines because
they're busy at work and they're
getting a little slow, so
they're gaining weight and, bad
things start to creep in.
And we're saying, okay, let's
nip this in the bud.
Let's turn this thing around.
And one of the most important
things is doing weight training,
getting to the gym, doing weight
training on a regular basis,
because that will keep you.
in,
Yasmin Nguyen: Yes.
Mike Drak: health.
And another thing we do is,
aerobic, exercise and then we do
a VO two max exercises.
These are all proven to extend
longevity, increase our health
span.
so we're looking at that.
We're looking at the quality of
food we eat.
we wanna eat, healthy foods, we
wanna stay away from the bad
stuff.
A lot of those snacks and potato
chip, I found the potato chips
and chicken wings.
you, you can still enjoy'em, but
it's all in moderation.
So we're changing our diets,
right?
And then we're hitting some of
the other drivers and yeah,
we'll get there.
and like I said, the goal is to
push that back as, as far as
possible.
When I was on my cruise, I met
this interesting retirement
rebel by the name of Clive.
He's 84 years old.
I wouldn't have known that and
we're in spinning class.
This guy's going hard.
He's jumping out of the saddle.
I couldn't believe it.
And then when they had the, high
speed spinning, he was pushing
the pedals, he was doing 150
RPM.
I couldn't get up over 120.
And I'm looking at this guy, I
said, Clive, when I'm your age,
I wanna be just like you.
But it is, it showed me that
it's possible.
have to work at it.
And Clive is, he was in spending
class every day, just like me.
And he was in the gym every
afternoon.
He's 84, but he doesn't look at
it, he doesn't act it because he
works at it.
That's the payoff.
And I, again, with my future
self, when I looked there and I
said, I wanna look like Clive.
I wanna act like Clive.
I wanna have Clive's lifestyle
because he spends a lot of time
traveling world on cruises and
whatnot.
And he's having a great time.
And I'm saying, wow, that's the
kind of lifestyle I wouldn't
enjoy.
Yasmin Nguyen: Wow.
I'm curious, when you talked
with Clive, did you notice any,
anything unique about his
mindset, because of course he's
taking action, but what is it
that's driving him to take
action?
I.
Mike Drak: one, it's very
youthful.
Number two, he put the fun back
in the working out for me.
So we're riding side by side.
It's really hard, but we're
laughing about it.
It is like we're kids Again,
it's the attitude.
It's just Clive was trying to
break me, but he was having fun
doing it and I'm trying to hang
on for dear life.
I don't want him to break me,
and we're laughing about it, so
it gave me a new goal to work
towards.
And we feed off each other's
energy and then we start talking
about, Hey Clive, what else are
you doing?
Well, I got a part-time job.
This is what I said, you got a
part-time job.
84.
He goes, yeah, I'm not gonna
retire.
Why won't I retire from doing
something I love?
You can't argue with that.
And I go, that's a great
attitude to have.
he kept working at it.
Again, addressing these
longevity drivers and that's why
he's as happy he is and doing
all the fun things he's doing,
and there's a lot of Clives out
there.
It'd be surprised, I meet him
all the time.
Yasmin Nguyen: You mentioned how
important it is to have fun and
stay connected, but do you think
you'd still be fulfilled if you
didn't have something to work
towards, like a goal or even a
part-time gig that gave you that
sense of purpose?
Mike Drak: No, you wouldn't be.
And and that's one thing my
Ironman training has taught me
too, is you have to be very
consistent.
You have to be disciplined, and
you can't just say, oh, I'm
tired today.
I'll do it tomorrow because
you'll never get there.
I.
So you have to come up with your
own strategy that will work for
you, and you have to apply it
every day.
You have to be consistent.
And if you do that, yeah, good
things happen.
Like you can improve your health
a little bit every day, you
gotta get to the gym to do it
right, or you gotta go outside
and get those walks in.
Right?
But you know, the smart people
combine things too.
I need to socialize with people
because that's a happiness
booster for me.
So why not go out for a walk
with a bunch of people?
Why not go to the gym with a few
friends and have a few laughs as
we're working out?
You gotta make it fun, but you
gotta have a purpose behind it
too, because that's what drives
it.
And purpose is one of the best
ones.
live a long, healthy life.
Who doesn't want that?
Yasmin Nguyen: It sounds like
you've really found a rhythm
that brings you purpose and joy,
but I wonder how does this
mindset show up when it comes to
your finances?
For example, is it easy for you
to spend money you've worked so
hard to save?
Or do you find yourself holding
back even in retirement?
Mike Drak: that's a complicated
question because I'll tell you,
I have a problem.
have a hard time spending money.
I have a hard time spending down
my retirement assets, and I
don't know why that is.
I think probably part of it is
'cause I spent so long trying to
save money and gain financial
independence.
And there's so many crazy things
happening in the world, like
this tariff thing, and you just
don't know what's gonna come
down next.
And we saw what happened, when
inflation kicked up and things
like that.
I don't wanna lose sleep at
night.
So I thought, okay, What can I
do?
To make life easier and reduce
my stress levels.
And the conclusion is to still
generate some level of active
income.
To me that made sense.
But I don't wanna work
full-time.
work part-time.
But the key is I'll only do work
that I love to do.
that's my standard and I hold to
that and now I'm there.
I do talks, I sell books and do
some other things.
I generate this fun money, which
is my cushion, and I don't have
any problem spending that money
at all.
And then for the rest of it, let
my wife worry about it.
Yasmin Nguyen: I'm curious, how
do you and your wife navigate
the financial side of things?
Has your approach changed or
have you shifted more of that
responsibility to her?
Mike Drak: Well, my wife's a
financial advisor.
Before a couple years back, for
many years I did my own
investing, own, saving myself.
It was like a hobby of mine.
I'd watch BNN all the time and
try to find out, where the
market was heading, pick up some
information and whatnot.
But I finally got tired.
I got bored of it really.
I said, I don't wanna do this
anymore.
And I pushed it off to her and I
said, I'm just gonna focus on
generating some additional
income and having fun.
I.
That's what I'm doing.
And it is not to watch BNN all
the time, not to check your
phone to see what the stock
prices are every five minutes.
it's nice not to be, not to do
that anymore.
So it's, yeah, taking a lot of
heat off.
Yasmin Nguyen: Mike, has your
relationship with your wife
shifted as you've stepped into
this chapter retirement, and
perhaps she's still in the
middle of her career?
I.
Mike Drak: Yeah, we have some
interesting discussions because
sometimes I feel she doesn't
view my work as real work.
Because she has to go out in the
car and drive to work and has to
sit in an office and do all
this.
I just walk upstairs.
I'm in my office and I do
whatever I feel like doing.
So I have a lot more freedom and
flexibility.
Maybe she takes her work more
seriously than I do.
I just have fun doing it, and I
only deal with people that I
wanna deal with.
yeah, it's still work, but it's
a different kind of work if you
pick up what I'm trying to say.
Prefer my kind of work much
more.
Yasmin Nguyen: Yeah.
speaking of work, you were in
the banking and financial
services world for quite a while
and I'm curious, based on your
experience, what role should
advisors be playing in guiding
their clients through these
types of transitions?
Mike Drak: Well, this is one of
my pet peeves right now after
having gone through and
experienced what I did.
I think it's very important for
an advisor to step up to the
plate and use a more holistic
approach with respect to
retirement planning.
So when we talk retirement
planning, it's not just numbers,
about lifestyle design, it's
about preparing your customers.
For the non-financial challenges
they're gonna be facing and
helping them come up with an
appropriate lifestyle plan that
will work for them the rest of
the years they're gonna enjoy in
the future.
that takes time, but they're the
ones in the best position to do
it right.
it is so important because we
know one in three retirees are
gonna suffer from retirement
shock, and it doesn't have to
happen.
they need someone to educate
them and help prepare them and
to hold their hand as they
transition through, because a
lot of people will struggle with
it and it can be very difficult.
Right now, the pushback is, I
know some of the advisors say,
why should I do it?
I'm not gonna make any more
money doing it.
And I'm saying listen, if you're
a trusted advisor.
have an obligation to help your
clients because it's gonna be a
tough patch for some of them to
get through.
And yeah, if you wanna be the
trusted advisor, you gotta step
off the plate and help'em,
right?
And it doesn't take a lot of
time to do it, but just give'em
the information and have these
discussions and when you have a
quarterly meeting, okay.
a little bit about the money and
the returns and things like
that, but then let's get into,
okay, what are your plans for
the future?
What do you see yourself doing?
What sources of new purpose are
you gonna have?
Are you gonna get healthy again?
Do you need to get healthy
again?
What's your plan for doing that
and having these meaningful
conversations and the advisors
that are doing it are having a
lot of fun with it.
Because, instead of just talking
about money, which gets boring
really fast, we're talking about
life and what's your vision for
your future?
And that's where it gets
interesting.
I just love doing it with
people.
Yasmin Nguyen: That's such a
powerful perspective, Mike, and
I imagine when advisors take
that extra step to have those
deeper conversations, it changes
everything, not just the client,
but the advisor too.
do you think that's what really
builds trust and long-term
relationships?
Mike Drak: sure.
Because you're showing to your
clients, you care about them,
you care about their futures,
right?
And it allows you to
differentiate yourself from
other advisors that just want to
talk about money.
a trusted advisor is your go-to
person, right?
I got an issue, I'm scared about
this.
we talk about it?
And you're looking for their
expertise and you're looking to
use them as a sounding board to
say, Hey.
I'm thinking of doing this, what
do you think?
And I want your input.
that's why it's important that
they get that input.
So the smart advisors are
starting to go there, but it's
slow because it's hard to get
the banks to buy in.
I.
Because they're looking at the
money side, right?
And they're looking at, what
kind of return they can earn.
And they're saying, do we really
need to provide that?
Because it's going to eat up
some hours with an advisor,
right?
And some advisors don't wanna do
it, or they're uncomfortable
with doing it.
and so that's what we have to
deal with right now.
And then I noticed like the
industry in itself, if you look
at it,'cause of the
demographics, With the advisors.
You got a lot of older advisors
and they're saying, my book's
big enough.
I don't need to do this, and I
don't feel like doing it.
And then, we're looking at,
okay, we can't change down, but
we can get to the younger
advisors that are going to be
taking their place and say,
okay.
This is the thing that you got
to start thinking about and
providing to your clients and
they'll buy.
I'm sure it'll buy into it'cause
it only makes sense, but that
change is gonna take some time.
Yasmin Nguyen: Absolutely.
And as we look at change, we're
not only looking at the change
in advisors, but also the
demographics of the clients.
the younger generations are more
astute and they make decisions
based on relationships and
stewardships and all of these
other considerations beyond just
the services.
Mike Drak: That's right.
And it's gonna go there because
it has to, but it is just, it is
taken a little bit longer than
I'd like to see.
Yasmin Nguyen: Yeah, you're
making an impact doing it with
both, your speaking, but Al and
also your books as well.
it seems to chronicle your own
personal journey and taking us
along the ride there.
And I'm curious, what's next for
you?
What's the next book?
What's the next journey beyond
your, iron Man?
A challenge?
Mike Drak: Well, there's two big
dreams I have.
the first dream is I'm going to
probably partner up with my wife
after Ironman, I'm going to, I
wanna be a role model for
advisors and I'm going to
provide retirement guidance for
her clients.
And so she'll talk about the
money side of her partner and
all that, and.
I'll come in time of need to
say, okay, I'm gonna talk about
planning, non-traditional
retirement planning, and here's
my books.
The your homework is to read the
books, and then we'll sit down
and we'll have these meaningful,
deep conversations about what
your plans are and what I think
you need to focus on, and we'll
work together to create this
lifestyle plan.
it, it takes time.
'cause I wanna get to these
people before they jump into
retirement.
I, and the planning process
really is probably gonna take a
couple years.
And what I'm really excited
about is dealing with people.
I dub late bloomers, the ones
that reach financial
independence maybe in their
fifties.
Instead of saying, oh, I just
wanna retire.
I wanna use it as stepping stone
to something better.
I want to go do something I,
I've always dreamed about and
whatever that is, and let's
figure out how we can get there
and prep them and help'em.
then one day they'll come to me
and say, guess what?
Tomorrow I'm making a jump.
gonna become whatever.
And that's the exciting part.
You know, people are starting
these home-based businesses and
whatnot.
They have these dreams and
they're saying, I wanna get
outta this corporate job'cause
I'm burned out, but I'm not
gonna stop.
I'm gonna do this.
It's a sound plan and I'm gonna
continue on for as long as I
want.
think to me, that makes perfect
sense.
Yasmin Nguyen: Did you ever have
a moment where you found
something new that totally
surprised you?
I.
Mike Drak: yeah, it's so
important.
so you're coming up with new
ideas and it is so exciting to
see that.
and that's why I love dealing
with these late bloomers because
really believe that everyone has
a purpose and they've had it all
their lives and they have
certain skills.
That maybe they never had a
chance to develop and certain
interests and certain passions.
And what we wanna do is get'em
back on that path and see where
it takes them.
And that's the exciting stuff.
And you see these people
becoming, like me, maybe a
writer I never wrote before.
I had no idea.
But then I started experimenting
with and I went, wow, this is
neat.
then the funniest thing is I had
this terrible fear of public
speaking.
I had it for all my life and I
never thought I would be able to
do it.
And then after writing a book, I
said, I gotta learn how to
public speak so I can go out and
talk about the book And I went
and I conquered that fear.
I couldn't believe it.
It would've been one of my
biggest regrets, that be
unresolved.
I actually went to Toastmasters,
and I can't tell you how many
times I went there and sat in
the parking lot and bailed on
the meeting, and one time I
said, you know what?
This is the last chance I gotta
go in there and I gotta conquer
this fear.
I'll never forget I walked in
the meeting and, I guess they
know you're new and you're
scared.
And so they come up and they try
to talk you down a little bit
and get a little calm.
I'll never forget, I told the
lady, I said, do me a favor, and
she goes, yeah, sure what?
And I said, can you go lock the
door?
Because at some point I'm gonna,
I'm gonna make a break.
I'm gonna try to get outta here.
and she went over and locked the
door and it was hard.
It was so hard.
You have no idea.
got through the night and I went
back the next night and got
through it again, and then I
went back the next week and got
through it again and it got a
little bit easier, but it was
hard work.
But I avoided, one of my biggest
regrets I would ever have is, my
fear of public speaking And
people all have these fears and
we're saying, okay, let's deal
with it.
Let's get it behind us and let's
move on to new things.
And these are people that are
growers, they have a grower's
that don't wanna stop.
They wanna keep learning new
things, they wanna keep
experimenting with new things
and come up with new ideas.
And, those are the people I love
dealing with.
Yasmin Nguyen: Mike, that's so
inspirational.
as, you're literally modeling
the.
Retirement rebel, and you're
doing it through your growth
mindset.
That's one of the things we
explore is the growth versus
fixed mindset and the growth is
where it opens up all these
possibilities.
thank you for sharing that with
us.
for our listeners, who wanna
learn more, who wanna become a
retirement rebel, who wanna
access your resources and books,
where can they find you?
Mike Drak: Okay, the good news
is that you can go to booming
encore.com and you can download,
two of my books.
You can download Retirement
Heaven or Hell, which is my
favorite book.
And there's also another book,
longevity Lifestyle by Design
that will teach you about
retirement shock and how you can
avoid it.
And also tell you about how to
start working on your future
retirement lifestyle design, the
one that you want to retire into
and keep growing and doing all
kinds of, great things.
So those books are there, the
reason I gave'em for, I've
decided to give'em away for free
is I just wanna help people.
don't want'em to go through what
I went through.
I want'em to have great.
Lifes, and so that's why they're
there.
place you can find me is on
LinkedIn, so you can, I'm always
coming up with posts on
different, subjects relating to
retirement and longevity.
And then if you wanna really
have fun, can follow my inst
Instagram account, follow My
Retirement, or let's call it
Ironman Journey.
So you can find me at retirement
Rebel.
And, yeah, it's, that's gonna be
very interesting because I don't
know how it's gonna turn out,
but I'm gonna give it a real
good shot and worst case, I'm
gonna get my health back
anyways.
But, I'm gonna learn a lot.
I'm gonna talk about it, and
also share some retirement
thoughts as I go through it.
But yeah, it's gonna be
interesting.
Yasmin Nguyen: Excellent.
We'll include all those in the
show notes so people can easily
find you.
as we wrap up with our
conversation I love that you're
not just offering tools, but
encouraging people to check in
with themselves regularly.
It's so easy to drift off
course.
Do you recommend any kind of
process or rhythm to help people
stay aligned over time?
I.
Mike Drak: No, that's a very
important point because what I
recommend in the book is doing
an annual review and looking at
all these longevity drivers.
sure that you're not, you
forgetting about some of'em, or
to make sure you're putting
enough emphasis on certain areas
if they're lacking, because like
you say, they feed off each
other, they balance each other
out, and you need them all
working together and it's easy
to lose sight of it.
So you want, you wanna keep
checking that you wanna keep
working on them and you wanna be
focused on that future self.
say, here's what I wanna be in
10 years, what I wanna look like
and here's what I wanna be
doing.
keep going out, keep going.
It's like a rolling budget.
Keep going out, keep changing
things, but have a goal to work
towards.
Right.
Yasmin Nguyen: Yeah.
Wow.
That's such a great reminder,
Mike, to keep checking in with
yourself and evolving with
intention.
I just wanna say your passion is
contagious, and I know so many
people who are going to benefit
from your work.
Thank you so much for everything
that you're doing.
Mike Drak: it's been a lot of
fun.
It's a pleasure.
I like talking to people that
get it and I love the work
you're doing and between us,
we're gonna help a lot of people
Yasmin Nguyen: Yeah.
Mike Drak: What it's all about
at the end of the day.
just having a lot of fun doing
it too.
Yasmin Nguyen: Thank you so
much, Mike.
What a joy to have you, and
we've learned so much and so
appreciate you being a part of
this conversation with.
Mike Drak: My pleasure.
Yasmin Nguyen: Thank you for
taking the time to join us
today.
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