
I can talk to you until Iโm blue in the face about how to invest your money over your lifetime. But hereโs the condensed version. Get a job, save until it hurts, and repeat for as long as you can. And in retirement, live within your means. In other words, be the caretaker of a lifetime of money for your family. And Iโd add, thereโs nothing wrong with making money S-L-O-W-L-Y.
Because the virtue in making money slowly is that youโve spent most of your life keeping to a certain lifestyle. You plan. You make lists for special trips of what needs to be done, and it doesnโt get done until you have the money to do it. In other words, you are thoughtful about your spending.
You take care of your savings like you would a garden. You keep it alive. You tend to its needs. You donโt let it die. Because the death of money is the saddest thing in the worldโyou realizeโAFTER it happens. Money is your responsibility. Sorry. It is your lifeblood that keeps food on your familyโs table, and, more than anything, provides you with freedom.
Money is not greed. Money is the summation of all your decisions throughout your lifetime. Hopefully, your children will sit around when youโre gone and say you made good ones. Unfortunately, that isnโt always the case. How do I know? Because they tell me.
In a low interest rate world, the average investors (not you, I hope) canโt handle earning only one percent on their money. They inevitably reach for yield in an effort to meet the needs of their overextended lifestyle. They want their kids to inherit money and want the lifestyle too. Then one of Your Survival Guyโs deadliest markets this century takes place, and Mr. and Mrs. Lifestyle sell at the worst time so they can survive on whatโs left. Sorry kids. We tried.
When you look at where the T-Bill rate is and understand it is GRAVITY, any returns above the risk-free rate (the T-Bill) are whatโs called excess return. Where do you think the moneyโs going to come from when excess returns, the low-hanging fruit, are picked off the trees? Stocks, real estate, you name the investment, are like trees. They donโt grow to the moon. They all have a half-life.
Money is freedom. Donโt you want to give as much of it as you can to your children and grandchildren? Donโt you want your good name to survive throughout time? Either way, they wonโt forget you. When you lose one single dollar, that dollar is dead. Remember, no one can afford to lose a dollar. Replace the word dollar with child, and youโll get what I mean. Itโs that serious and itโs exactly how I want you to think about it. Period.
Action Line: You need to build a plan to invest your money for a lifetime, I would love to talk with you.
Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.ย



