I'm fortunate to have a very good pension, way more than enough for a "real Mustachian" to retire on forever, but I like to travel a lot, so I want a little more than just rock bottom Mustachian income. I retired last May with $827k in my 401k. Around October, I took a withdrawal ($22k) to supplement my pension for the next year and to buy a van I'm converting to a camper. My initial plan, back a couple years ago, was to stay 60/40 in the market for life, but I changed that plan after reading a lot of Michael Kitces's stuff, in particular about a "rising equity glide path" approach to retirement money. More or less, it says you go super low equity exposure in the early years of retirement, then after a few years, you gradually ramp up equity exposure to your desire AA. This helps to mitigate the risk of a negative sequence of returns. This was especially enticing to me because I was retiring after an historical 11-year bull run -- so I was super wary of a monster correction coinciding with my retirement. I gotta say, I'm quite happy with the way things turned out. I certainly didn't, nor couldn't, have foreseen the Black Swan event that is this global pandemic, but I'm still sitting on $812k, and goddamn that feels good.