Grounding retirement planning in the principle that economic security is inseparable from human dignity and cannot be mortgaged for status.
Zera Yacob declared that human dignity is universal and inalienable—a core teaching that applies radically to money in your pre-retirement years. Economic dignity means having enough; it means not being forced by financial precarity into compromised choices or dependence that diminishes your autonomy. In your 50s and 60s, this concept challenges you: Are you building a retirement that honors your dignity, or one that merely extends years of proving yourself through earning and accumulation? Yacob's framework suggests that adequate resources for a modest, secure life is a dignity issue, not a luxury or personal failure. This shifts the question from "How much is enough to be impressive?" to "What is enough to live freely?" This philosophical reorientation can free you from competitive wealth-building and toward intentional sufficiency.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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