Life is too short to keep waiting for someday.
The regret we want to prevent
We have seen too many people do everything they were told to do.
They worked hard. They saved faithfully. They invested. They delayed. They kept waiting for the day when they would finally feel comfortable enough to enjoy what they had built.
Then life changed. A spouse died. Health declined. Children and grandchildren grew older. The trip became harder. The opportunity disappeared.
We never want a client to look back and say, “We could have taken the trip. We could have retired sooner. We could have spent more time with our family. We just never realized it was possible.”
His wife, Marcee, grew up with a different experience. Her family talked less about money, celebrated often, lived more in the moment, and made room for fun even when every detail was not perfectly planned.
After more than two decades of marriage, Brian & Marcee came to appreciate the wisdom in both approaches.
A meaningful life requires prudence. It also requires presence. You need a plan for the future, but not one so restrictive that the present keeps passing you by. That balance became the idea behind Sweet Life Financial Planning: Live for Today. Plan for Tomorrow.
They have become so good at accumulating that they struggle to turn savings into a life they can enjoy.
They know how to earn, save, and invest, but spending can feel irresponsible even when the plan clearly supports it.
That is why our work often begins where traditional investment advice ends. Accumulating wealth is only the first half of the journey. The second half is learning how to use it thoughtfully, tax-efficiently, and without fear.
We are not trying to help you die with the biggest portfolio.
We want to help you use your money to create more time, richer experiences, stronger relationships, greater generosity, and fewer regrets.
That may mean retiring sooner. Traveling more. Hiring someone to do the work you no longer want to do. Helping your family while you are alive to see the impact. Giving to a cause you care about. Or simply feeling free to enjoy an ordinary Tuesday without wondering whether you are doing something wrong.
The answer is different for everyone. The purpose is the same: to make sure your money serves your life, rather than your life being spent serving your money.