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Still Hodling "Buy the Dip Stocks" for Now

Volatility makes it challenging to hodl buy the dip stocks.  When a very profitable stock dips 20, 30 or 50%, my instinct is to sell and kee...

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Writing Down Ideas

I used to have a very good memory; not photographic, but accurate and long term.  I also would remember numbers, especially those related to data and prices.  Recently, my memory skills have declined.  Sometimes, I forget where I put the something a few minutes ago.   Worst of all, I will forget a thought, concept or idea that I had.

I used to write items down on small pieces of paper.  Unfortunately, sometimes these would be misplaced or I would forget where I put them.  My solution is to write things down in a small notebook.  That way, I will remember the ideas and thoughts.  

Now, I just need to remember where I place my notebook and not lose it.

For more on Crossing Generations, check back every Thursday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor memory  advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Monday, June 29, 2026

Being More Greedy for Now


I've been selling off our small share holdings just as they become profitable, even though it is a small percentage.   This is consistent with my objective of simplifying our equity holdings.  However, lately, if I had held some of this small positions a bit longer, I would have had more gains.  For example, I sold SandDisk for 58.51 for a very small gain in September 2025, after it was spun off from Western Digital in March 2025 and carried a loss.   Today, SandDisk is about $2000, benefitting from memory shortage due to AI needs.

Of course, even if I had held it, I would have sold long ago, probably less than $100 since I have had previous stock pop over 100% only to pull back and go below my purchase price.  However, now I have a few more stocks that are approaching breakeven after being down many years including: KOPN, DFTX, OUST, CLOV, PSNL, and NWL.  While my strategy is to sell immediately when profitable, I'm temporarily going to be more greedy and hold for bigger profits.

Being greedy can backfire and lose the small gains that I have, but it seems the market is irrational enough that I can stay greedy at least until October 2026, just before the midterm elections.

For more on Strategies and Plans Ideas, check back every Monday for a new segment.

This is not financial advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Wendy's - A Lotto Buy on New WSB Meme Stock

Every so often, Wall Street Bets focus stock becomes a meme stock that members are enthusiastic about buying.  The most famous and biggest meme stock surge is GameStop in 2021.  Others have had much smaller advance, but still attracted buyers.

The latest meme stock is Wendy's (WEN), which is a well know fast food chain.  Wendy's is the most famous running jock on Wall Street Bets, working there officially or unofficially (NSFW) due to losing bets in the stock market.  However, this time the members are out to save Wendy's with a concerted effort to help the stock surge.  Additional factors that may help the surge are:  New management and about 35% short interest.

A number of WSB members are buying large amounts of WEN and gambling on a big win.  Not me.  I just consider this a lotto ticket, likely to lose but entertaining to buy some.   I bought 10 shares of WEN last Thursday.  It's more expensive than most scratch off tickets, but I can deduct the losses when I have a losing lotto stock pick.

For more on Strategies and Plans, check back every Monday for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock picking, nor stock investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Proposals to Save Social Security

Finally, Congress is working seriously on proposals to save Social Security.  Below are four of the proposals summarized.  


Proposal
Target Group
Key Mechanism
Projected Impact
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget Benefit Cap
High-income retirees
Cap annual benefits at $50,000 for individuals, $100,000 for couples
Could reduce Social Security spending by roughly $190 billion over the next decade and extend program stability
You Earn It, You Keep It Act (Gallego/Craig)
All Social Security recipients
Permanently eliminate federal taxes on benefits; expand payroll taxes to apply to all annual earnings over $250,000
Recipients keep full benefits; offsets cost via higher payroll taxes on high earners
Senior Citizens Tax Elimination Act (Tuberville/Sheehy/Massie)
All Social Security recipients
End what is described as an 'unjust double tax' on Social Security benefits
Reduces tax burden for seniors while maintaining benefit levels
Cassidy-Kaine $1.5T Investment Fund
All beneficiaries
Invest $1.5 trillion in stocks, bonds, and other assets for 75 years to pay back Treasury and offset long-term shortfall
Independent analyses suggest high risk; may fail to cover shortfall 64–83% of the time

Hopefully, Congress will work seriously to solve the issue soon.

For more on New Beginnings, check back every Sunday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor Social Security advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Entertainment from Stock Investing

Investing in the stock market used to be hard work and lots of worry for me.  I analyzed stocks, read reports and investment newsletters, and looked for value opportunities. I had to decide when to purchase and when to sell, which resulted in some anxiety when the stock when down after purchasing and rose after selling.  It was like having a stressful job.

Recently, I have changed our investment strategy to focus on creating a monthly "retirement paycheck" through dividend and interest payments.  This has reduced the pressure on me for choosing the best stocks for capital gains and deciding when to buy and sell.  Whether I make a right or wrong decision (either the stock choice or when to buy and sell), it has little effect on the monthly "retirement paycheck" we receive.

Now I consider buying and selling stock for capital gains like entertainment.  I set aside a small amount of funds that can be used for this purpose. If I make gains, great.   I end up with losses, that's OK too.  Best of all,  I can buy and hold comfortably and have fun watching the stock going up, hopefully.

For more on New Beginnings, check back every Sunday for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock picking nor stock investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Comfortable Hodling SAAS Stocks

I bought beat down SAAS software starting in February 2026.  These stocks have been on roller coaster ride since then.  Some dropping further and rebounding.  Some just dropping further.  Then most of them rebounded.   Unfortunately, all have fallen again, and some even to new 52 week lows.  It's ugly right now.

In the past, I would be itching to sell as soon as a position became profitable, and sometimes just at breakeven.  My attitude is different nowadays.   First, I am no longer dependent on stock gains to fund our retirement.  Second, I believe this stocks have good businesses, despite the concern that AI will eliminate a lot of current customers.  Third, I believe that these stocks will recover as results from using AI show that the cost isn't worth the actual benefit.

I have significantly reduced the impact of a loss, and therefore, minimized the risk for retirement income, due to creating sustainable income via interest and dividends.  This has allowed me to maintain conviction that the SAAS dip investment is good investment decision.   Thus, I hodl.

As usual, YMMV.  

For more on  Reflections and Musings, check back every Saturday for a new segment.

This is not financial, retirement, nor investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Friday, June 26, 2026

Social Security and Me

I started taking Social Security payments at 64.   At 68 and 3 months, I have withdrawn my own contributions, just the principal, no interest.   At 73, I will have withdrawn the entire contributions by my employer and me, again only principal and no interest.    When I'm 74, my benefits will be cut 22% if nothing is done by Congress to address the shortfall.

Net, I am glad that I didn't wait until 70 to start taking Social Security.  Also, I hope live past 73 so that will be able to withdraw an amount greater than was taking out for taxes. According to actuarial tables, I'm expected to make it to 82-84, but with the caveat YMMV. 😎

For more on Reaping the Rewards, check back every Friday  for a new segment.

This is not financial advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Thursday, June 25, 2026

These are Scary Times for the Stock Market


I have been in the stock market since 1980.    TBH, I have always feared a crash like 1929 that started the Great Recession.  That fear has kept me from  being fully invested. 

I have been through several bear markets and short term crashes, each time fearing it would become 1929 again:  1987, 2002, 2008, 2020 and recently 2022.   With each decline/crash, I had great anxiety caused by losing significant invested funds.

Right now, I still think there is reason for caution, as shown by the Buffet Indicator, the Case-Shiller Index the AI bubble stocks.  However, I'm not as anxious as much as before, due to investments in "safer" fixed income options, such as CDs, Treasuries, and Municipal bond funds.  I expect these to help me ride out any significant crash or bear market, until it recovers.   In addition, I have some cash set aside to put in the market if it falls.  I haven't had this cash cushion in previous declines.

Of course, how I weather the next decline is theoretical since the strategy hasn't been tested in a downturn yet.   As Yogi Berra said, "In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.  In practice, there is."  

We shall see.

For more on Crossing Generations, check back every Thursday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Test of My New Investing Strategy

Today, Micron (MU) reports earning after the market closes.  Possibility, there will be a lot of volatility after earning and guidance is reported, either up or down.  I'm going to just hodl and not worry about it with my new investing strategy, which creates a monthly retirement "paycheck" independent of market volatility.

Thus, I am hodling my shares of MU, without gritting my teeth.  Which ever way the stock moves after hours and tomorrow, won't affect my retirement "paycheck" this month.  In addition, I have conviction that memory chips will continue to be limited in supply, which means MU profits will be improving since the price of chips is going up.

Instead of checking on MU every minute of today, I power washed our deck, "touched some grass," and checked on MU during my breaks.

Update: Although MU closed down slightly, it was up about 16% AH due to outstanding earnings.  Woohoo!

For more on The Practice of Personal Finance, check back every  Wednesday for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock picking, nor stock investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Social Security Projected Insolvency by 2032

Recently, the Social Security trustees reported the program is expected to be insolvent by 2032 , resulting in a 22% reduction in payments for Social Security recipients.   Ouch.  Congress needs to address this issue, which they've avoided even though its been known for many years.

I'm already disappointed that up to 85% of Social Security payments may be taxable (based on 1993 legislation) since we already paid income taxes before it was deducted from my paycheck.  For reference, Social Security payments were not taxable until 1983 legislation made up to 50% taxable. 

Now, I need to plan for a potential 22% cut on my Social Security payments, if Congress doesn't act.  There are number of proposals being proposed by Congressional members.  Ranging from removing the cap on income for the FICA tax to capping benefits for higher income recipients.  I prefer removing or significantly increase the income cap for the FICA tax.   I feel capping the benefits based on income is punitive for recipients who have paid into Social Security, which is effectively what a tax on Social Security benefits already does.

For reference, I don't think there is an easy or simple solution.  Unfortunately, I feel the eventual solution will have a negative impact and reduce my Social Security payments.  Another uncertainty and issue to worry about as retiree.  My backup plan will be to withdraw needed fund from IRA accounts, since I will be required to do RMDs when I turn 73.

For more on The Practice of Personal Finance, check back every Wednesday for a new segment.

This is not financial, social security nor legislation advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

TIL about Cunningham's Law


Cunningham's Law states "the best way to get the right answer on the internet is not to ask a question; it's to post the wrong answer."   The reason is that people on the internet prefer to correct wrong answers that to answer a question.   LOL

I already have seen Cunningham's Law effect when I have discussion with people that have opposing views.  Rather than listening, they spend 100% of their comments correcting my incorrect POV.

The Super Saver Corollary to Cunningham's Law is that the responses still need to be sorted and evaluated since not every answer is right, and some answers will definitely be wrong.  This is especially true on Social Media like LinkedIn and Reddit where 100% of poster believe they are above average in intelligence.

Still, IMHO, it is important to remember Cunningham's Law and the Super Saver Corollary when interacting with most people.

For more on Ideas You Can Use, check back every Tuesday  for a new segment.

This is not financial nor seeking answers advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Monday, June 22, 2026

Still Not Buying SpaceX

I'm still on the sidelines watching SPCX.  I'm waiting for it to fall below its initial IPO price of $135, which is below its opening price of $150 on June 12, 2026, the first day of trading.  At $135, all retail owners will be underwater, which may create a selling dynamic driving the price down further.

On the other hand, adding SPCX to the indices is expected to drive prices up, due to buying pressure. On June 29, 2026, SPCX will be added to the MSCI and Russell indices.  In early July 2026, SPCX will be added to the Nasdaq 100 index.  SPCX won't be added to the S&P500 until after a 1 year waiting period and achieving 4 quarters of GAAP profitability.  

The valuation of SPCX doesn't make sense to me.  It seems people are betting on Muskman to deliver extraordinary valuation like Telsa.   For reference, Telsa has a market cap greater than the next 35 car companies, despite being seventh in profitability.  Huh??  I guess that's the Muskman premium.

In 2025, SPCX lost $4.9 billion, yet valuation is about $2 trillion.  IMHO, the Muskman premium isn't worth that much.  I think I will wait until SPCX is under $10 before think about buying.  Today, SPCX closed at $157.73, down $30.40 or 14.74%.  

However, FWIW, I've often been wrong about tech/internet stock early valuation including many of the current top market cap stocks.

Disclosure:  I currently own Tesla stock (TSLA) despite being overvalued by traditional metrics.

For more on Strategies and Plans, check back every Monday  for a new segment.

This is not financial nor investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Doing Kids Favorite Activities

My original parenting strategy was to influence my kids to like what I was interested in.  I put them in sports when they were younger.  I had them work with me on DIY projects.  I had them do daily tasks and errands with me. I took them to video game arcades.

The results?   Nothing since they had no interest.   No interest in most sports.   No interest in learning how to fix things, even though they asked me to fix many things.   Definitely, no interest in daily tasks and errands.  High interest in video game arcades, which they would do with me.  The kids did like there own personal gaming machines.

Recently, I decide to try some of my 13 year old son's interests.   He loves F1 racing.  I watched a documentary on F1 racing with him.   It seemed much more interesting than only watching cars going around a track.  There were interviews with the principals and the drivers.  Then I watched a Grand Prix race with him.  It was more interesting knowing who the drivers were. 

While I'm still not interested in attending an F1 race (and neither is he, yet), he now has an Apple TV account and can watch all the Grand Prix races live, and in replay mode.  I've been watching mostly the replays with him.  It's been fun and now I'm interested in F1 racing.  The best part is we're spending time together and having fun.

My new strategy is to be involved with my kids' favorite activities regularly.

For more on Strategies and Plans, check back every Tuesday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor parenting advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Being Prepared for the Next Recession or Bear Market

"No one rings a bell at the top of the market." ~ Wall Street Adage

In the past, I was constant worrier about a market crash destroying my retirement savings. 

I'm not calling a top, but I'm prepared for one.   Currently, I'm not buying an new equity positions, nor adding to any existing equity positions.   Over the past few months, I've been increasing our fixed income positions thought bond and bond funds, building a monthly, though variable, paycheck.

I don't know if have regular investment income via dividends and interest is a good solution yet, since the strategy has been tested with a significant down turn yet.   However, it has done well with high volatility and a short term correction.   Whether it works with a bear market?  We shall find out.

For more on New Beginnings, check back every Sunday for a new segment.

This is not financial advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2017 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Saturday, June 20, 2026

DIY Projects Almost Always Take Longer than Expected

I procrastinate on DIY projects since they inevitably take more time or materials that I expected on planned to use.   In the past, I needed to find and buy new materials or tools.   Lately though, I now have enough material or tools in house and just more time is required.

Recently, I replaced the handle on our sliding glass patio door.   My spouse was particularly unhappy with corrosion/oxidation of the outside metal handle.   It doesn't bother me, and if it did, I would just paint it, which I offered to do.   Instead, we decided to install a new handle which was a different design.  However, the new handle didn't cover the previous area complete, which required that I paint.   In addition, I needed to drill the attachment holes slight larger.

Luckily, I had the paint the the drill bit to make the adjustment.  It took a twice to three the times and effort, but I didn't need to make a trip to the store. 

For more on Reflections and Musings, check back every Saturday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor DIY advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Friday, June 19, 2026

Using the Good Stuff Right Away

When I was younger, I used to "save" my best purchases to use sparingly so that they would last a long time.  I also did that with my kids when bought them new toys.  I realize now that was a bad strategy.  I've now switch to using the best stuff, as soon as I purchase it.   

Here are my reasons:
  • Things get worse when not being used.  
  • I forget about things being saved and don't use them for years.
  • Kids out grow things quickly.
  • As I get older, I have lots of things saved, but not used much.
My philosophy now is to use the good stuff as much and as fast possible.  That goes for clothing, tools, food, special items and amenities.   Enjoy all my stuff, before it goes bad or I get too old to enjoy using them.  My first move is to regularly wear all the special t-shirts from the vacation spots we visited, the city wide events I organized, and the gifts from my kids and spouse.

For more on Reaping the Rewards,  check back every Sunday for a new segment.

This is not financial advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Inflation and Interest Rates Like the 70s-80s Again?

Inflation and interest rates in the late 70s and early 80s grew rapidly.  I remember gas prices doubling, interest rates rising, and gold and silver hitting new highs.  Inflation reached 13%.  Mortgage rates reached as high as 17% in my area.   When mortgage rates dropped, I felt lucky to get a mortgage at 12% in the early 80s.  I was also able to get a 5 year CD at 14%.  The 20 year treasury bond yielded 15%.

The stock market suffered also.  The Dow hit 1000 in 1972, fell 50% and didn't reach 1000 again until 1982.

Will the 70s - 80s happen again?  Right now, it looks probable but not certain.  To reduce market risk, I'm keeping a large proportion of our investments in short term money market funds.  I'm holding back on buying additional stocks and bonds to wait for the direction of interest rates.

For more on Crossing Generations, check back every  Thursday  for a new segment.

This is not financial nor investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Annuities - Good or Bad?

Here's an balanced article on annuities from MSN.com   which does a good job of covering the pros and cons of annuities.  Basically, annuities guarantee certainty in payouts, and usually at a higher cost.

For reference, I am biased against having an annuity.   I feel the loss of control and costs aren't worth the guaranteed payments provided.  Therefore, we currently do no have any annuities.  However, an annuity can be good option for some people.

For more on The Practice of Personal Finance, check back every  Wednesday  Sunday for a new segment.

This is not financial, investment, nor annuity advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Our Kids Have Found Their Own Path

Many years ago, I once commented to someone that my kids aren't like me.  I was hoping they would follow the same path that I did since I feel I have been relatively successful.   Other than working hard on education, they chose their own path, which has turned out well.

As background, I was a four year varsity letterman and starting fullback in football.  I was the starting fullback on the state runner-up team my junior year, and on the state championship team my senior year. I was also one of four valedictorians.

Both kids did well in school and continue to do well.  Outside of education, they followed their own path and I'm glad they did.     

My daughter did horseback riding, soccer and flute when she was younger.   Flute stuck and she achieved mastery and excellence in flute.   Me... I'm completely inept and tone deaf when it comes to music.  Good thing my spouse had music skills and could help guide my daughter.  Playing the flute as become a great anchor for my daughter in college.  

My son, who is younger, tried all the sports: soccer, T-ball, flag football, golf and tennis.  He was not a star in any of these, but tennis stuck.  He works hard at tennis and plays with heart, which is all that I ask.  Also, whatever he achieves, I've counseled him that the number one test is that he enjoys playing.  I think tennis will be a great anchor for my son in high school and, maybe, college.

My kids have done well.   I am glad they found their own path and I am proud of them.

For more on Ideas You Can Use, check back every Tuesday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor education advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Monday, June 15, 2026

Working Through Lunch was Not a Good Choice

Before I retired, I constantly worked though lunch, often skipping having anything to eat.  I thought I would be more focused and productive by continuing to work.  Now that I'm retired, and eating regularly with several snack, I realize that skipping lunch was a bad choice.

Here's why it was a bad choice:
  • I was less healthy.   Being hungry, eating more junk food at meals, and drinking much more coffed.
  • I was more stressed.  I should have taken time for lunch, and perhaps a couple breaks in the morning and afternoon.
  • In hindsight, I wasn't more productive.  I just spent more time doing the work and stretching it out.
  • I extended skipping meals to skipping dinner at times.   Again, not a good choice.
  • Even though I was skipping meals, I gained weight. Hmmmm.

Now, I make sure I have breakfast everyday.   I split lunch time up in the 2-3 segments, usually a large salad without dressing, a vegetarian burger, and sometimes a soup.   Dinner is a little more random, but I always eat healthy, another salad and/or a bean dish.   I avoid fried foods, and high fat foods.  Also, 80-90% of our meals are home made.   We rarely eat out nor have frozen meals.

 Looking back, I should have eaten regular meals while working.   I expect I would have had a healthier lifestyle and been more productive.

For more on Strategies and Plans, check back every Monday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor health advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Sunday, June 14, 2026

End of Cardiac Rehab

Last month, I completed my cardiac rehab sessions.  This is my third time in cardiac rehab.  I pushed it a bit harder this time to confirm that the procedure was successful.  I achieved the same of METS that showed an anomaly on the treadmill stress test without any issue. 

In addition, I spent the last two weeks adding weight training to my exercise routine.  

After the last two times, I didn't continue my exercises after rehab.   I didn't do any weight training the first two times.

Over the past 13 years, I thought managing my diet was the most important factor.    I guess I was wrong.  This time, I plan to continue doing the aerobic exercise and do the additional weight training.   Hopefully, that will decrease my propensity for blockages in the future.

We shall see.

For more on New Beginnings, check back every  Sunday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor health advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Dick Tracy and the Jetsons

"It's difficult to make predictions, especially about the future." ~ Yogi Berra

When I was a kid, I watched Dick Tracy and The Jetsons cartoons.  The tech was amazing to me at the time.  Dick Tracy had a watch phone.   The Jetson had flying cars.

Well, the watch phone became reality, while the flying car (looking at you Muskman) is not a reality yet.  Cool that these things have happened in my lifetime.

Oh, and Lost in Space, which aired in 1967, took place in 1997.   Still waiting for that to happen.

For more on Reflections and Musings, check back every Saturday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor future advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Friday, June 12, 2026

SpaceX or ScamX?

Let's just say, I didn't buy any of the SpaceX IPO shares.  I didn't buy any SpaceX in the open market today.  I have no interest in buying SpaceX in the near future.  The valuation doesn't make sense to me and is way to high.   

However, I'm not going to bet against Muskman, who has been doing masterclass in financial  engineering and corporate finance to maximum valuations for his companies.  I'm going to watch from the sidelines for now.

For more on Reaping the Rewards, check back every Friday for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock picking, nor investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Inspirational Movies for Me

Here's my list of recently watched movies that I found inspirational:
  • Remarkably Bright Creatures - About aging, finding connections, and making peace with the past and narrated by an aquarium octopus.  Great plot twist.
  • Hacksaw Ridge - About Medal of Honor winner medic Desmond Doss at Okinawa, who was a conscientious objector that refused to carry arms in the battlefield and save the lives of over 100 men.
  • Miracle - About the underdog US Olympic hockey team road to the Gold medal in 1980 at Lake Placid, which included defeating the USSR 4 time Olympic Gold medal team.
  • You Gotta Believe - Underdog team makes it to the Little League World Series to honor their coach who has terminal cancer.
These films moved me and brought tears to my eye.  I tend to root for the underdog, which I have experienced being many times.

Disclosure:  I received no compensation for posting about these movies.

For more on Reaping the Rewards, check back every Friday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor movie entertainment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Saved by TACO Thursday

President Trump cancelled the Iran strikes scheduled for this evening.  The markets reacted by reversing on going up significantly.   

At this point, I am no longer buying the dip in anticipation of a TACO.   I'm just hodling what I have already.   Some are up and some are still down from my buying the dip  in February 2026.  Most of the stocks are SAAS software stocks that are down 50-70% from their highs. 

Although each succeeding TACO has less impact, I expect President Trump to continue TACOing up until the midterm election.  It may be hopium to hodl and we shall see.

For more on Crossing Generations, check back every Thursday for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock picking, nor investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Aspire to Be a Hundred Millionaire or Billionaire

"A nickel ain't worth a dime anymore." ~ Yogi Berra

A million ain't what it used to be either.

When I was growing up, becoming a millionaire was considered an aspirational financial goal.  Very few people had a million dollars  and my parents bought a new house for $28,000.  A million dollars seemed very unattainable.  In 1965, there were 100,000 millionaires in the US.  I thought becoming a millionaire was a stretch goal.

Today, a million dollars seems much more achievable. In 2020, the there are over 18 million millionaires in the US.   That house I grew up in is valued at $421,000 on Zillow.   Many families have dual incomes, leading to over a million dollars salary over their lifetime.

 $100 million would have been a better aspirational financial goal.   In 2020, there were about 80,000 households with over $100 million, which is close to the number of millionaires in 1965.  $100 million would have been a appropriate inflation adjusted goal.

Maybe ambitious kids today should set $1 Billion as a stretch goal to achieve in their future.

For more on Crossing Generations, check back every Thursday for a new segment.

This is not financial advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

I'm Awful at Stock Picking

I initially thought I could beat the market by buying specific stocks.  I did this for many years, and had some big wins, but I also had big losses.  Recently, I did an evaluation of my stock investments in the last 10 years.   The good news is that I had a gain overall.  The bad news is that I would have had higher gains from  owning an S&P index fund or ETF.   In addition, I would free up the time that I spend evaluating, buying and selling stocks.

Based on this learning, here the actions I'm taking:
  • Scale out of owning most individual stocks.   I am avoiding starting new positions.  I will add to some existing positions that are negative, but plan to scale out later when the entire position is positive.   I am holding long term losses in a separate account to remind myself of my previous poor choices.
  • Going forward for stocks, invest in total market index funds and etfs, specifically the S&P, total market and growth stock index funds.  This is much easier to manage since stock risk is eliminated.
  • For kids' accounts, dollar cost average (DCA) into their investment accounts and hodl.
I expect this to reduce my anxiety when the market declines and help me be agnostic to short term volatility, which seems to be frequent nowadays.

This approach has been helpful so far this year, but there hasn't been a major correction or bear market yet.  That will be the true test on my new investment strategy.

For more on The Practice of Personal Finance, check back every Wednesday for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock picking, nor stock investment  advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Tuesday, June 09, 2026

Just Hodl

Currently, there is lots of volatility in the stock market.  Earnings beats, earnings miss, disappointing forward guidance, ceasefire ending, ceasefire extended, President Trump TACO, ceasefire broken, stocks go up, then down, then up again.   What's an investor to do?

The approach I used to follow was to react to the volatility.   Sometimes it was sell; other times it was buy the dip.   Usually, this resulted in a whipsaw effect, sharply up, sharply down and a roller coaster. When the stock went up quickly,  I would sell with small gains of 5-15% and watch the stock go up much further.  When it went down, I would hold hoping to get back to even to sell and exit the position.  I would sell the one's that went above breakeven, but, unfortunately, there were ones that took forever, or never, to recover.

My new strategy now is hodl through the volatility, since I'm no longer depending exclusively on stock gains for our retirement income.   Hodling has significantly reduced my anxiety of owning stocks, since capital gains are no longer the main source of retirement income.  Thus, I am more comfortable hodling though the corrections that inevitably happen.   Of course, the real test will be if I hodl through a bear market, which has not happened since I started this investment strategy.

For more on Ideas You Can Use, check back every  Tuesday for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock investment nor investment strategy advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Monday, June 08, 2026

The Sky is Falling or Buy the Dip

Last week, especially Friday, June 5, 2026 was dismal for the stock market.  Memory and space stocks took a big hit.  The S&P 500 was down over 2%.  Looks pretty ugly.

I used to agonize over whether to keep my investments or sell them before they go lower, since my metric was how much assets grew to support our retirement.  Last year, I changed our metric to how much monthly income our investments generate, hopefully independent of volatility.  This dip will help me understand how this new strategy is working.

For now, I'm going to hodl what I own and refrain from buying the dip at the current levels.  If the dip goes another 10%, I may reconsider buying into some existing positions.

For more on Strategies and Plans , check back every Mondayfor a new segment.

This is not financial, stock buying nor investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Sunday, June 07, 2026

Need to Do Weight Exercises

When I was younger, I wasn't a fan of weight training.   I was the starting fullback for a State Championship football team, and I didn't do weights.  In college, I didn't do weight training even though I played even though I was the starting fullback in football again. When I played, weight training was not a requirement for athletes.  Thus, I avoided it.  Like many of my teammates, I built strength through practice and drills.

Fast forward to now.  I've been in rehab for a procedure earlier this year.  Most of the exercises have been cardio, treadmills and bikes.  Near completion, I started to do some weight exercises.  I did ok, but I realized I am much weaker than I expected.  

Needless to say, I need to be doing more weight exercises and weight training now that I'm older.  I will start working weights into my schedule in the future.

For more on New Beginnings, check back every  Sunday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor health advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Saturday, June 06, 2026

Niagara Falls Vacation - Five Stars

One of our best vacations was Niagara Falls on the Canadian side.   We stayed in a hotel with a huge picture window overlooking the horseshoe falls.   The hotel was also a short inclined railway and short walk to the falls.   We did the main touristy activities:  boat ride to the falls and a walk in the tunnels behind the falls.  Best of all, we saw a full rainbow over the falls.

It was the fourth time to the falls for the parents, the second time for our oldest, and the first for the youngest.  We probably won't be going back soon since our last visit was in 2024.   When we do, we will likely stay at the same hotel again for the wonderful views.

For more on Reflections and Musings, check back every Saturday  for a new segment.

This is not financial nor vacation advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Friday, June 05, 2026

Looks Like the S&P Gain Streak May be Ended

Unless a miracle occurs, it appears the S&P's nine weeks of consecutive gains will be over.

Possible Miracles:
  • Strait of Hormuz unconditionally opens.
  • Iran War ceasefire extend for 60 more days.
  • Iran War ends.
  • President Trump TACO, which didn't occur this week.
Still it will only be one down week, if the decline continues for the rest of day. Yeah, we're at levels not seen since...(checks charts) two weeks ago.

Still, some folks are panicking.  Losses are happening.  Selling is happening.   Others think it is the beginning of the end.  Volatility is scary.

I'm still hodling at this time.   I'll find out in a few weeks if this was the right choice.

For more on Reaping the Rewards, check back every  Friday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor stock investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Hodling Hopium Stocks for 1000% Gain

There has been a lot of volatility this week for SAAS, Space and Meme stocks.  Today, I'm discussing my plans for my hopium stocks.

I'm hodling my hopium stocks:  Blackberry (BB), Nokia (NOK) and Sellas Life Sciences (SLS).  I'm targeting for a 1000% or 10X gain.  Currently, I'm up 100-200% on shares and up 300-4000% on call options.

No way (or less than .01% probability), these three stocks will reach a 10X gain when I sell.  This is obviously irrational. However, no rational investor would have expected the market to be at all time highs with inflation and the Iran war.  Yet, here we are

For now, I'll be hodling.

For more on Reaping the Rewards, check back every Friday for a new segment.

This is not financial nor stock investing advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Thursday, June 04, 2026

Meme Stock Gambling Like It's 2021

In 2021, there were a number of meme stocks that enabled investors/gamblers to receive big gains on certain stocks:  GME, BB, SKT, SFIX, PACB, PLUG and others.  I made money on a number of them and held too long on others and rode them down.

The new memes in 2026 are memory stocks (MU, SNDK, STX), space related stocks (RKLB, ASTS, LUNR, SPCE) and some old meme stocks (BB, NOK).  PSA: SPCE is not SpaceX.  SPCE is Virgin Atlantic.

Meme stock options can make some folks millionaires.  It will make others bag holders or long term investors.  The key to buying meme stocks is to sell before the inevitable decline, or rug pull.  Of course, it works until it doesn't.😎

For more on  Crossing Generations, check back every  Thursday for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock buying, nor stock picking advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Wednesday, June 03, 2026

Buying Options is Mostly Gambling for Me

Options give the put buyer the right to sell a stock at specific price or call buyer the right to buy a stock at a specific price.   

While buying a put is "insurance" for shares that are owned if there is a decline, buying naked put option or call options is often gambling on the price of the stock, especially if they are short term options, i.e. less that a month from expiration.

I admit I like to buy call and put options, but generally for longer term around 6-11 months from expiration.  I often buy options that expire in January of the next year.  For me, options are mostly gambling on the price change.  2021 was a great year in options for me.   2024 was poor year, with mostly losses.   2025 was a mixed year.  Some options had up to 7000% gains and others expired worthless. 

2026 started out poorly since all my January 2026 options expired worthless.  Since 2025 had some bad option purchases, I decided to be less aggressive in 2026 and purchase much fewer options that were also lower in price.  Right now my January 2027 expiration options on BB and SLS are returning XX% and XX% respectively.  My SNDL and EVGO call and SPY put January expiration options are breakeven at this point.

All these options are just lotto tickets that I can deduct for taxes if they become worthless. I'm going to hodl these to Valhalla or zero.  Hopefully, it's Valhalla.   If it's zero, unlike lotto ticket, I can write off the losses on my tax return.

For more on The Practice of Personal Finance, check back every Wednesday for a new segment.

This is not financial, option, nor investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Tuesday, June 02, 2026

Need a TACO

My "buy the dip stocks" rocketed yesterday.  Today, they gave it all the gains back by 10:30AM this morning.

Here's a list of my "buy the dip stocks:" MSFT, NOW, TSLA, CRM, TEAM, HUBS, ADBE, ACN, NFLX, UNH

I've disciplined myself to hodl and I will again this time.   However, I'm hoping/expecting a President Trump TACO since it's Tuesday. 😎

Disclosure:  I still own MSFT, NOW, TSLA, CRM, TEAM, HUBS, ADBE, ACN, NFLX, UNH

For more on Ideas You Can Use, check back every  Tuesday for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock picking, nor investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Diamond Handing Memory Stocks

I bought MU and STX on May 11, 2026. The stock crashed on May 11, 2026 and then rebounded before crashing again on May 19, 2026.  The price dipped way below my purchase price.   However, I decided to hodl.   By May 29. 2026 they recovered an reach new highs.

Lucky me.  I will continue to hodl for a while.  It works every time, 60% of the time.😎

For more on Ideas You Can Use , check back every  Tuesday  for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock picking nor stock investment advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC

Monday, June 01, 2026

Vibe Investing is Working Great

Measures such as price/earnings, dividend payout,  and other technical factors don't seem to matter as much as before for stock market values.   Vibes seem to be the new controlling factor. 

IMHO, there seems to be multiple vibe vectors that affect movements in stock prices:
  • Bull vs. Bear
  • Positive vs. Negative
  • In the Market vs. On the Sidelines
  • Optimistic vs. Pessimistic
  • Reasonable Risk vs. Unsafe Risk
  • Trump Pump vs. Trump Dump
When the vibes move more to the left, the stock price tends to rise.  The more to the left, the faster it rises.  When vibes move to right, the stock price tends to fall.

My assessment of vibes is that they are solidly in the left.   My vibes are slightly more to center, and I have gone full retard on equities since I'm hedging with bonds and bond funds.  However, I'm still hodling what I have.

Who needs to study and evaluate the technical data.  Lately, vibe investing works all the time, about 60% of the time.😎  LOL.

For more on Strategy and Plans, check back every Monday  for a new segment.

This is not financial, stock investment, nor investing advice. Please consult a professional advisor.

Copyright © 2026 Achievement Catalyst, LLC