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The Prosperity Podcast

The Prosperity Podcast

By: Kim D. H. Butler and Spencer Shaw
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The Prosperity Podcast is where money meets freedom — without Wall Street's limitations or typical financial advice. Hosted by Kim Butler, founder of Prosperity Thinkers, and Spencer Shaw, this podcast delivers straightforward financial strategies to help you build certainty, cash flow, and long-term prosperity.Prosperity Thinkers 2025 Economics Personal Development Personal Finance Personal Success
Episodes
  • Retire at 65? Think Again.
    Jun 9 2026
    Executive Summary

    In part two of the Prosperity Podcast's retirement series, Kim Butler and Spencer Shaw move beyond the numbers and into the human dimension of stopping work. Kim opens with a deceptively simple question: what does a full day of doing nothing actually feel like? Her answer, drawn from personal experience, sets the philosophical tone for everything that follows. We were put on this earth to serve, she argues, and when we stop serving, we stop progressing. Progress, she notes, quoting a late 1800s thinker, is the law of God.

    The conversation then turns to the practical mechanics of the retirement decision, starting with Social Security. Kim's guidance is direct: delay as long as possible, ideally to 72. The reason is mathematical. The crossover point, the age at which you collect more in total by waiting, falls between 14 and 18 years after the date you begin taking benefits. For most people who expect to live into their 80s and beyond, the math favors waiting. She also introduces Dr. Katy Votava as the go-to expert on Medicare, with a firm warning: decisions around Medicare enrollment carry deadlines that are irreversible. Missing the window means permanently losing the opportunity.

    The episode closes with one of its sharpest claims: the retirement age of 65 was proposed in 1930. Adjusted for today's life expectancy, it would be 87. Kim walks through the arithmetic. If a person earns from 27 to 87, that is 50 years of income on 10 to 15 percent savings. If they then live to 121, that is 40 years of spending with no new income. The numbers do not work. Dan Sullivan, at age 82, is cited as the counterexample: still producing some of his most impactful work, with a stated goal of reaching 156, simply because he thinks about the future differently.

    Links & Resources Mentioned
    • For resources and additional information of this episode go toEmpower Your Finances With Our Prosperity Podcast

    • Empowering Parents, Nurturing Futures - Prosperity Parents

    • Kim D. H. Butler

    Keywords

    retirement age 87, Social Security delay strategy, when to take Social Security, Medicare enrollment deadlines, Katy Votava Medicare, longevity retirement planning, prosperity thinkers, financial freedom, Dan Sullivan longevity, age 121 actuarial tables, retirement math, working longer benefits, retirement and purpose, financial education, service and retirement, prosperity economics, retirement planning 2026, work in retirement, agency and responsibility, progress is the law of God

    Episode Highlights
    • [00:00:00 - 00:01:08] Spencer frames part two and Kim makes the case that doing nothing feels yucky, not freeing.
    • [00:01:08 - 00:04:10] Kim on drawing a hard line against wallowing and the quote: 'Progress is the law of God.'
    • [00:04:10 - 00:07:53] Kim introduces the concept of agency from Dan Sullivan and explains why serving others improves your own state.
    • [00:07:53 - 00:09:29] Social Security: Kim's firm recommendation to delay as long as possible, ideally to 72.
    • [00:09:29 - 00:10:42] Kim explains the 14-to-18-year crossover point and why income taxes on Social Security should not drive the decision.
    • [00:10:42 - 00:12:31] Kim introduces Dr. Katy Votava for Medicare guidance and warns about irreversible enrollment deadlines.
    • [00:12:31 - 00:13:41] Actuarial tables updated: life insurance illustrations now go to age 121, up from 100.
    • [00:13:41 - 00:14:56] Kim makes the case for working until the mid-80s. The retirement age of 65 from 1930 would be 87 today.
    • [00:14:56 - 00:16:06] The math: 50 years earning, 40 years spending, 10-15% savings. 'Just not mathematically possible.'
    • [00:16:06 - 00:19:30] Dan Sullivan at 82, goal age 156, and why that mindset produces better outcomes regardless of outcome.
    • [00:19:30 - 00:20:46] Spencer previews part three on portfolio allocations and issues the CTA for Medicare help.
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    21 mins
  • Rethinking Retirement: Why the Numbers Don't Add Up
    Jun 2 2026
    Executive Summary

    This episode opens a multi-part series on one of the most emotionally loaded words in personal finance: retirement. Kim Butler and Spencer Shaw start at the foundation, examining what the word actually means, why Kim resists it, and what the math really says about the most common retirement savings targets.

    Kim establishes the core problem: expenses triple over 30 years, not because prices rise arbitrarily, but because the dollar is worth less. Inflation at 3% compounding over three decades transforms today's lifestyle into a figure three times larger. Add longevity into the equation and the challenge grows steeper. Life insurance companies are already pricing policies to age 121, and Kim projects that listeners in their 30s and 40s may reach 120, 130, even 140. The episode also covers the efficient debt framework, where Kim explains why a mortgage at 8% or below is a good loan and why cash outside the home is almost always more valuable than home equity.

    The episode tackles the 4% rule directly. Once accepted as a reliable withdrawal guideline, it has been quietly revised downward to 3.5%, 3%, and in some conversations 2.5%, while pundits on the other end are telling people they can safely take 5.5%. Todd Langford's analysis of a $2 million portfolio showed it running out in as few as 14 to 15 years, leaving a 65-year-old potentially without income at 80. Kim and Spencer also address the emotional and psychological dimensions of stopping work entirely, making the case that retirement is not just a financial risk. For many people, it may be a health risk too.

    Links & Resources Mentioned
    • For resources and additional information of this episode go toEmpower Your Finances With Our Prosperity Podcast

    • Empowering Parents, Nurturing Futures - Prosperity Parents

    • Kim D. H. Butler

    Keywords

    retirement planning, 4% rule, retirement savings, financial freedom, longevity risk, inflation and retirement, dollar worth less, whole life insurance, prosperity economics, prosperity thinkers, retirement math, efficient debt, home equity vs cash, time value of money, retirement withdrawal rate, financial education, 4% withdrawal rule problems, cash flow in retirement, how much to retire, living longer retirement planning

    Episode Highlights
    • [00:00:00 - 00:01:50] Kim defines retirement as "taken out of service" and explains why the word conflicts with human purpose.
    • [00:01:50 - 00:02:55] Spencer frames what people are actually doing: moving to Mexico, selling the house, working until 90.
    • [00:03:18 - 00:05:13] Kim details why expenses triple: inflation at 3%, compounding lifestyle costs, and the example of her father in his mid-80s.
    • [00:05:13 - 00:06:17] Spencer pushes back: is it rising expenses, or a dollar worth less? Kim confirms it is the dollar.
    • [00:06:17 - 00:07:17] Kim explains efficient debt: why a mortgage at 8% or below is a good loan and why home equity is not the same as cash.
    • [00:07:17 - 00:09:17] Kim walks through a real client scenario: $400K liquid vs. paying off the mortgage, and why cash wins.
    • [00:09:17 - 00:11:25] Spencer presents three retirement target tiers: $800K, $1.46M, $2.67M and asks Kim to weigh in.
    • [00:10:20 - 00:12:00] Kim addresses the Dave Ramsey $2.5M endorsement and Todd Langford's math showing it running out in 14-15 years.
    • [00:11:25 - 00:14:59] Kim explains the 4% withdrawal rule, its quiet downward revisions, and why linear math fails in a time-based system.
    • [00:15:00 - 00:17:07] Kim and Spencer address the human cost: purpose, physical health, and the psychological and physiological identity tied to work.

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    18 mins
  • Hidden Assets
    May 26 2026
    Episode Summary

    In this episode of the Prosperity podcast, hosts Spencer Shaw and Kim Butler explore the concept of "hidden assets" and challenge traditional thinking around wealth, cash storage, retirement, and financial flexibility.

    The conversation dives into how families and entrepreneurs often overlook valuable assets already within their lives and businesses — including intellectual property, relationships, mindset, systems, life insurance cash value, and even forgotten items sitting in garages or attics. Kim explains why cash is critical in uncertain markets and how properly structured whole life insurance policies can serve as opportunity funds that continue compounding while being borrowed against.

    The episode also examines how wealthy individuals and institutions think differently about liquidity, leverage, and long-term financial positioning. From discussing Berkshire Hathaway's cash reserves to unpacking the dangers of simplistic "YouTube finance" advice, the hosts encourage listeners to rethink what truly creates prosperity and financial resilience.

    Ultimately, the episode is about seeing opportunities where others see limitations — and recognizing that mindset itself may be the greatest hidden asset of all.

    Links & Resources
    • For resources and additional information of this episode go toEmpower Your Finances With Our Prosperity Podcast

    • Empowering Parents, Nurturing Futures - Prosperity Parents

    • Kim D. H. Butler

    Keywords

    Hidden assets, cash flow, whole life insurance, infinite banking, emergency fund, opportunity fund, intellectual property, prosperity mindset, financial freedom, wealth building, cash value life insurance, entrepreneurship, mindset, asset protection, financial education, leverage, passive income, financial strategy, cash reserves, wealth preservation

    Episode Highlights
    • 00:00–01:18 – Spencer introduces the idea of "hidden assets" through his son's junk removal business and explains how systems, reviews, and processes become valuable assets.

    • 01:18–02:21 – Kim explains why mindset is one of the most valuable and portable assets a person can develop.

    • 02:21–03:21 – The conversation explores intellectual property as a legitimate business asset capable of generating cash flow.

    • 03:21–04:26 – Kim discusses how personal relationships and networks become problem-solving assets during difficult moments.

    • 04:26–05:50 – The hosts examine emotional resilience, mindset, and inner stability as invisible forms of wealth.

    • 05:53–07:01 – Spencer shares the story of a discarded copper washing tub discovered to be worth over $1,000.

    • 07:01–08:32 – Kim explains how life insurance policies themselves can become hidden financial assets.

    • 08:32–09:45 – The discussion explores reverse mortgages and how life insurance can preserve generational flexibility.

    • 09:45–10:29 – Kim breaks down how annuities can convert assets into predictable income streams later in life.

    • 10:29–11:24 – The hosts discuss transforming overlooked assets into recurring cash flow opportunities.

    • 11:38–12:10 – Spencer emphasizes how opportunity expands when people train themselves to think differently about assets and wealth.

    • 00:00–03:34 – Kim explains why families need both emergency funds and opportunity funds.

    • 03:54–04:38 – Berkshire Hathaway's large cash position is used as an example of strategic liquidity management.

    • 05:14–08:03 – Kim explains how borrowing against cash value allows money to continue compounding uninterrupted.

    • 11:17–13:44 – The hosts address misconceptions around life insurance loans, approval processes, and liquidity.

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    13 mins
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