The Odyssey Plan: Design 3 Futures Before You Lock in Your Retirement
What if the goal of financial planning wasn’t to predict the future… but to design multiple futures you’d actually want to live? That’s the idea behind the Odyssey Plan, a framework from Stanford’s Life Design Lab (popularized in Designing Your Life). Instead of trying to find the one right answer for your future, you create three different versions of your life—and explore them side by side.
It’s simple. It’s powerful. And it aligns perfectly with how we think about planning at Boldin:
Confidence doesn’t come from guessing right. It comes from seeing your options clearly.
What Is the Odyssey Plan?
An Odyssey Plan asks you to map out three distinct versions of your life over the next 5–10 years:
- Your Current Path (if nothing major changes)
- An Alternative Path (if your current path disappeared)
- A Dream Path (if money, status, or expectations weren’t constraints)
This isn’t about fantasy. It’s about expanding your field of possibility.
Because most people don’t have a planning problem… they have an option awareness problem.
Why This Matters for Financial Planning
Traditional financial planning often assumes:
- A single career trajectory
- A fixed retirement age
- A linear accumulation path
But real life doesn’t work that way. Careers pivot. Health changes. Priorities evolve. Opportunities appear.
The Odyssey Plan helps you shift from:
- “Will my plan work?”
→ to - “Which life do I want my plan to support?”
That’s a fundamentally more powerful question.
The 3 Odyssey Paths (With Real Examples)
1. The Default Path: Stay the Course
This is your “keep going” scenario.
- You stay in your current career or trajectory
- You make incremental improvements
- You follow a familiar version of success
Example:
- Continue working until 65
- Increase savings rate
- Pay off the house
- Retire to a familiar lifestyle
This path often feels the safest… but it’s rarely the only viable one.
2. The Pivot Path: Reinvent Within Reality
This is the “what if this went away?” or “what risks am I willing to take” scenario.
- Your job disappears
- You change industries
- You redesign your lifestyle
Example:
- Leave corporate work at 52
- Start consulting or part-time work
- Downsize housing
- Shift spending toward flexibility
This path is often more realistic than people think, especially when you actually model it.
3. The Dream Path: If Constraints Didn’t Exist
When asked to imagine their “dream life,” most people often just upgrade their current one:
- A nicer house
- Earlier retirement
- More travel
But the real purpose of this path is different. It’s not about being realistic. It’s about being honest and expansive.
What would your life look like if you weren’t optimizing for:
- Income
- Status
- Expectations
- Or what others might think is “responsible?”
This is your chance to explore entirely different ways of living:
- Living abroad for part of each year instead of staying rooted in one place
- Selling it all and traipsing around in an RV or sailboat
- Designing a “portfolio life” with multiple identities—part-time work, creative projects, and meaningful contributions
- Devoting your life to a cause important to you
- Taking mini-retirements throughout your life instead of deferring everything to the end
- Simplifying radically—reducing expenses to buy back time and freedom
- Pursuing a long-postponed creative or personal path without needing it to monetize
- Building something that outlives you—mentoring, teaching, creating, or contributing in a deeper way
The goal isn’t to land on something perfect. It’s to break out of default assumptions. Because here’s what tends to happen: The life you actually want is often sitting just outside the version you’ve been allowing yourself to consider.
And when you bring this “dream” path into a real financial model, something surprising happens: Many of these ideas don’t require unlimited wealth. They require different tradeoffs.
- A different timeline.
- A different cost structure.
- A different definition of “enough.”
The Boldin Lens: Turn Possibilities Into Plans
The Odyssey Plan is powerful on its own.
But it becomes transformative when you connect it to real financial modeling.
Because ideas are inspiring—but numbers create clarity. With the right tools, you can:
- Compare all three futures side by side
- Understand tradeoffs (time, spending, work)
- Test “what if” scenarios in minutes
- See the impact of each decision on your long-term security
Instead of asking:
- How to Retire Early? A 30 Step Checklist for Gaining Financial Freedom“Can I afford to retire early?”
You can ask:
- “What would need to be true for this life to work?”
That’s a completely different mindset.
What People Discover (And It Changes Everything)
When people actually build Odyssey Plans and model them, a few things tend to happen:
1. The “Safe” Plan Isn’t Always the Best One
People often realize they’re over-optimizing for security… and under-optimizing for life.
2. The “Risky” Plan Isn’t as Risky as It Feels
With a few adjustments—spending, timing, part-time income, many dream paths become viable.
3. Flexibility Is More Valuable Than Perfection
The best plan isn’t a single path. It’s the ability to adapt with confidence.
How to Create Your Own Odyssey Plan
You don’t need a design degree. Just carve out an hour.
Step 1: Imagine 3 Versions of Your Life
Give each path a title and describe:
- What your days look like
- Where you live
- How you spend your time
- How money flows in and out
Step 2: Use Boldin to Outline Key Financial Assumptions
For each path, use the Boldin Planner to create a scenario and outline:
- Income
- Spending
- Big life events (moves, travel, career changes)
Step 3: Assess Viability, Compare Paths, and Make Adjustments
Now it’s time to pressure-test each path—and shape it into something that can actually work.
Review each scenario, make the necessary tradeoffs, and most importantly, compare them side by side. Focus on:
- How long your assets last
- What level of saving or income each path requires
- The tradeoffs between time, money, and flexibility
Step 4: Reflect (Not Just Optimize)
Ask yourself:
- Which life feels most energizing?
- Which feels most aligned with your values?
- What fears are shaping your “default” plan?
The Real Goal: Not One Answer—Better Questions
The Odyssey Plan doesn’t give you the answer. It gives you better questions:
- What do I actually want?
- What tradeoffs am I willing to make?
- What version of my life is worth funding?
And that’s where real confidence comes from—financially, and in life. And that’s where financial confidence – even just plain confidence – comes from.
Here are more questions, 21 to ask to help you decide if you are ready for retirement.
Final Thought
Most people build one financial plan and hope it works. But life isn’t one path. And your plan shouldn’t be either.
- Design three futures.
- Use the Boldin Planner to model them.
- Then choose—not from fear, but from clarity.



