A two letter word can destroy this title. A two letter word can destroy the concept, can destroy lives, destroy everything that matters to anyone. I've just had this epiphany, I've always been fascinated OF money of the concept, of the ability, how to, when why what where, it has always fascinating to me. The money its self is not fascinating. If you are fascinated BY money, then you are forever in its shadow. On the other hand, if you are fascinated OF money you are fascinated by the concept of the "thing" we call money. This fascination is coming to fruition for me as we develop new currency, new concepts of "things." Bitcoin created many a monster in its wake, that is fascinating to me, it also degraded federally controlled monetary systems, that too is fascinating to me. It is and always should be the concept of worth that is fascinating not the "worth" its self. A dollar is a pretty printed piece of paper, gold is an element, a Bitcoin, well what is an effin Bitcoin? If you can't answer that question with out an aspect of shock and awe, you are probably on the wrong side of fascination. Our world is constantly developing ways to distinguish "worth;" ideally we will always have a constant curiosity as to the next best thing. Rember Tulips?!
Recently, I had an experience that reshaped my understanding of the psychology of money. I took over a property management job where part of my payment came in physical cash, money previously directed to someone else for this task. Most tenants paid digitally or by check, but one unit always paid in cash. Having that "management" fee/ maintenance fee tangible, in my hand, ignited a unique perspective. It wasn’t about the amount, but the form in which it arrived. Sure, I could take a full-time job earning in excess of $10K a month. However, that wouldn’t necessarily change my life as it would only take more of my time, the one resource I can't regenerate. Surprisingly, the extra $1K in cash monthly had a more significant impact, not because it was a windfall, but because it made me more mindful of my earnings. The physicality of cash and the process of earning it manually introduced a sense of value and respect for my work that was somewhat abstract before. This p...
Comments
Post a Comment