Month: August 2025

Why I’m Happier with Fewer Choices (a.k.a. When Life Picks for Me)

Why I'm Happier When Life Picks for Me

We all love having choices. Cow’s milk or oat? Streaming or cable? Stay in or go out? We want to be the deciders. Masters of our destiny. Queens of our calendars.

But what I didn’t know I didn’t know was that sometimes – sometimes – having fewer choices can actually bring more joy. Not to mention fewer headaches.

Control Was My GPS

I used to think my worth in this world came from how much I got to choose. I believed that being large-and-in-charge was the ultimate badge of success. I mean, I was the kid who circled all the toys I wanted for Christmas in the JC Penney catalog. I needed options. I needed control. I needed to know if there was a low-fat version, just in case.

When Life Picks for You

Then came the parent-teacher conference that quietly dismantled all that.

The family was from a country where arranged marriages are the norm. The father was funny and loud and made everyone laugh – even his two school-aged sons, which is no small feat. The mom was quiet, gentle, reserved. They were opposites in many ways. But they looked at each other like newlyweds in a Hallmark movie. You know, the part after the big misunderstanding.

The mom was talking about making decisions and brought up her marriage with a smile. I must have looked confused, because she looked at me and said, “Eh. What do you know? It just worked out.” She shrugged, like she was talking about a soup recipe she tried once. “Everyone I know from home is still married and happy.”

Wait, what?

This felt like the opposite of everything I’d grown up believing about relationships, independence, and the woman-power way. You choose your own mate. You pick your path. You make sure you are compatible, and if not, you move on.

And yet here they were, with their content smiles and well-adjusted children, reminding me that maybe not every decision has to be made after exhaustive research and a Venn Diagram. My Type-A teacher personality took quite a hit.

Simplicity Underrated

Honestly, I used to roll my eyes at people who said things like, “Too many options can be overwhelming.” I thought they were just indecisive. Weak. The kind of people who stare at a Cheesecake Factory menu for 45 minutes and then order boring Fettuccine Alfredo.

But now I see beauty in simplicity.

I downsized my closet, and I wear the same few outfits on repeat. Fewer choices, less stress.

When our kids were growing up, we gave them fewer toy options, and guess what? They played longer. They played outside a lot. (What a blessing that smartphones and streaming weren’t much of an issue yet.)

I stopped spending 30 minutes scrolling for the perfect show and started rewatching old sitcoms. My blood pressure dropped 10 points.

The Grocery Store Test

And don’t even get me started on grocery stores. I live in a town with a mega-market called Woodman’s, where there are more than 80 choices of olives. Eighty! I have stood in that olive aisle longer than I care to admit. Then there’s Aldi, which offers a tidy selection of two or three. They don’t even pretend to give you options – they just hand you a cart that requires a quarter and say, “Trust us.”

Researchers once set up a jam-tasting station with 24 flavors. People flocked to it, sampled them, and walked away. But when they offered just six, people actually bought the jam. Because apparently, too many alternatives can send us into a fruit-flavored spiral of indecision. (I feel this deeply in the frozen pizza aisles.)

The Myth of “More Is Better”

Somewhere along the way, we started believing that more equals better. More options, more features, more control. Even refrigerators now come with touchscreens that stream TV, cameras that text you photos of your leftovers, voice assistants that add milk to your shopping list, mood lighting for your lettuce, and even built‑in Keurig coffee makers. At this point, fridges will soon offer AI life coaching when I reach for the ice cream instead of the kale.

It’s not just appliances. It’s everything. Moisturizers that promise hydration, illumination, and inner peace. Smartphones that do everything but clean the bathtub.

And what about toothpaste? There is whitening, tartar control, sensitive, fluoride, charcoal, and sparkles. I just want my teeth clean, and I don’t want to have a 10-minute inner debate as I make a choice.

I used to get caught in the trap. Compare. Overthink. Hesitate. But I’m learning that having less to pick from, like Aldi’s modest olive aisle or my pared-down closet, actually makes room for contentment.

Because more doesn’t always mean better. Sometimes it just means tired.

Good Enough Might Be Perfect

Maybe there’s something to be said for letting life narrow the field a bit.

I used to think if I wasn’t in control, I would lose. Now I think, maybe I’m gaining peace. Space. Sanity.

Having fewer selections lets me see more clearly the good things right in front of me: the husband who still makes me laugh, the grown children who still enjoy hanging out with me, and the bliss of knowing my favorite outfit is already in the closet – and already stretchy.

I’m deeply content in my marriage – not because I had a thousand suitors and picked the best one, but because, as I wrote in my Serendipity article, the right person often shows up in the most unexpected ways. Sometimes life chooses for us. And if we’re lucky, it chooses well.

I still like having options. But I’m learning that not everything has to be a multiple-choice test. Sometimes the answer is just: this. Right here. This life. This moment. And knowing it’s already enough.

Author’s Note:

If you enjoyed this story, you might also like my article Serendipity, where I explore how unexpected moments and people shape our lives in the most beautiful ways. And if you’re a fan of laughter, heart, and honest conversations, check out my teacher bestie’s and my podcast We Didn’t Know, where we unpack the things we didn’t know we didn’t know – until life taught us anyway.

Let’s Talk About It:

  • What’s one area of your life where you’ve actually felt happier with fewer choices? (Closet? TV shows? Toothpaste? Grandkids’ toy bins?)
  • Have you ever had a decision made for you that ended up being the best thing that could’ve happened? (A job you didn’t get? A move you didn’t plan? A spouse you almost didn’t notice?)
  • Do you feel like our culture pushes “more is better”? Where do you feel that pressure most: shopping, parenting, aging, relationships?
  • What’s one thing you could simplify this week, not because you have to, but because you want to breathe a little easier? (Be honest: is it your sock drawer or your email inbox?)

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Helping Adult Children Financially – Creative Ways to Help

Helping Adult Children Financially – Creative Ways to Help

In this blog series, we’ve covered many ways to help adult children financially, including education, childcare, housing, and retirement. In this final post of the series, we’ll cover some other areas that can also be used to help:

  • Investment Accounts
  • Life Insurance and Annuities
  • Real Estate
  • Starting a Business

Investment Accounts

Consider the old proverb, “If you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. If you teach a man to fish, you feed him for a lifetime.” This can be applied to parents who don’t want to simply hand over money to their adult children. Instead, they teach their offspring how to invest wisely, empowering them to increase their wealth over the long term.

Here are some classic investment pointers parents can pass along.

Think Long Term

Sometimes, it’s difficult for young people to envision far-off future events like retirement. Yet, it’s critical to set aside funds today for a better tomorrow.

Start Early

The sooner one starts accumulating funds, the longer time they have to grow, which increases the chances of reaching future financial goals.

Create a Financial Plan

The best approach to reaching future financial security is creating a plan that defines goals and lays out the steps to reach them. Since few people have the knowledge or experience to craft a comprehensive financial plan, retaining the services of a qualified financial planner will increase the probability of success.

Manage Risk

Even with a financial plan, no one can be 100% certain that financial goals will be achieved, so reducing risk is essential. For example, financial diversification is a time-tested risk reduction strategy which involves spreading financial assets across various savings and investment vehicles with the assumption that when one is down, another will be up, thereby reducing overall risk of loss.

Factor in Tax Impacts

Rookie investors must learn how to assess the effect of taxes on their savings and investment returns. Consulting a tax expert will be worth the expense because tax calculations are complicated and mistakes can be costly.

Parents may “seed” their child’s investment account with a financial contribution. From this starting place, the novice investor has more options. However, even without such a contribution, passing along the knowledge from a lifetime of money-related successes and failures can provide invaluable guidance.

Life Insurance and Annuities

A traditional way parents help their child financially is to purchase life insurance or an annuity. (Grandparents can do this for grandchildren, also.) This can be done whether the child has reached adulthood or not.

Life Insurance

For life insurance, there are two common approaches.

First, the child is the policy’s designated beneficiary, thereby receiving a death benefit when the insured (parent or grandparent) dies. Payouts from life insurance policies are generally tax-free, so some parents see this as an efficient way to pass wealth down to their children.

Second, a life insurance policy can be opened with the child as the insured. Most gifted life insurance is whole life because such a policy has the advantage of providing both a death benefit and a way to accumulate money.

Annuities

Annuities are contracts that guarantee a lifelong income flow in exchange for payments made into the contract. A deferred annuity makes the most sense when a parent buys an annuity for a child (or a grandparent for a grandchild) because payments to the annuitant (child or grandchild) start at a specified age.

Life insurance and annuities can be great ways to help adult and minor children financially. However, both come with high fees, are often inflexible contractually, and are only as safe as the companies that offer them. Buyers must be aware of all the pluses and minuses before committing to either of these financial products.

Real Estate

Gifting real estate to an adult child is another way to provide financial assistance. A classic example is when mom and dad downsize and then either gift the family home to the adult child or sell it to them at a deep discount.

  • In the gifting scenario, the adult child recipient pays no taxes on the gift until the property is sold. However, the parents will probably need to file a gift tax reporting form with the IRS.
  • If the parents sell real estate to their adult child at a discount, the parents can take a tax write-off on the difference between the assessed value and the sale price.

There are other options, like adding an adult child to the deed, but whatever the approach, it is essential to retain a real estate attorney to help craft the deal. This will prevent unforeseen legal or tax effects that could turn a well-intentioned act of generosity into a massive headache.

Starting a Business

Parents may be thrilled that their adult child has the vision and drive to start a business. On the other hand, they may have a big decision to make when their daughter or son asks for financial help in getting the new venture off the ground.

Parents need to answer some essential questions at this point:

  • Is this something to get involved in? What will be the consequences of helping? Is the venture something you believe in, apart from the love you feel for their adult child? If you don’t help financially, will that cause hard feelings? These are emotional decisions that need to be sorted out first.
  • What are practical considerations? Parents should request a business plan and be prepared to ask hard questions. If the plan (or lack thereof) raises concerns, you owe it to yourselves and your adult child to have a frank discussion about any deficiencies.
  • Can we afford this? Even if you have confidence that the venture has potential, is the money there? Think carefully about your own financial health before taking a flyer on the new business.

Given this and other steps in setting up a new business, parents should insist on involving an attorney experienced in these matters. No matter what the form of financial support, having legally binding documentation will provide clarification for all parties and (hopefully) reduce the prospect of conflicts as things progress.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

In what ways have you helped your children financially? What do you not feel comfortable helping with?

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Tamra Judge’s Brown Mesh Long Sleeve Dress

Tamra Judge’s Brown Mesh Long Sleeve Dress / Real Housewives of Orange County Season 19 Episode 4 Fashion

Tamra Judge shows up fashionably late to Heather Dubrow’s birthday party on tonight’s episode of #RHOC in a beautiful brown mesh long sleeve maxi dress. She doesn’t skip a beat with her striking style with this dress that is sure to steal the spotlight. So if you love to start the party when you walk in, then steal her style in a dress that is sure to mesh well with others.

Best In Blonde,

Amanda


Tamra Judge's Brown Mesh Long Sleeve Dress

Style Stealers

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Originally posted at: Tamra Judge’s Brown Mesh Long Sleeve Dress

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