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When I was a kid, I grew up on a dead-end lane, Baker Lane, but it wasnโ€™t as bad as it sounds. The street hockey games were epic. I remember playing with the bigger kids when theyโ€™d have games at one end of the Lane or with my friends at the other end in front of my house. Itโ€™d get heated at times, especially when the bigger kids would get into wrestling fights after a play rolling around in a neighborโ€™s front yard. A little scary to see when youโ€™re little.

Why am I writing this to you? Well, I read an article yesterday about how millennials are taking the task of investing into their own hands, and it got me thinking about the fourth grade. One memory I have was when I was standing in front of the class at the chalkboard and didnโ€™t know the answer and the teacher kept pushing me to figure it out, my mind blanking out and how embarrassed I was. It was terrible. But Iโ€™m pretty sure I forgot about it as soon as I got outside to play street hockey after school.

The thing about investing at different stages in your life is how you handle the big hits. When youโ€™re in your 20โ€™s, youโ€™re the equivalent of a grade school investor, just like standing, embarrassed at the chalkboard in fourth grade, you donโ€™t have that much to lose. You donโ€™t know what itโ€™s like to really be in a tough spot in the markets. Think about someone you know in their twenties today, or who just graduated from college. Chances are they only know a rising stock market. They havenโ€™t invested in the three brutal bear markets this century.

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Action Line: Markets donโ€™t just go up. Sometimes you have to experience the big hits to realize investing real dollars, or the equivalent of a lifetime of savings, isnโ€™t a game.

Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.ย