Modern Wisdom - #1055 - Morgan Housel - Mastering the Art of Spending Money
Episode Date: February 5, 2026Morgan Housel is a partner at The Collaborative Fund, an investor and an author. Why is spending money well a skill most people never learn? In a world obsessed with saving, why does saying “it’s... okay to spend” still feel taboo? What can high performers teach us about investing not just money, but time, energy, and attention wisely? Expect to learn why it’s important to talk about how to spend money well when learning about personal finance, why good financial ideas struggle to spread while bad ones travel effortlessly, what Morgan’s definition of success is, how much modern dissatisfaction comes from comparing ourselves to people we don’t actually want to be like, the real relationship between money and happiness with nuance, why it’s so hard to find people who have managed to be wealthy, successful, happy and peaceful and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get a Free Sample Pack of LMNT’s most popular flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Get up to $350 off the Pod 5 at https://eightsleep.com/modernwisdom Get 35% off your first subscription on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom New pricing since recording: Function is now just $365, plus get $25 off at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Valentine's Day is coming up and whether you want to more deeply connect with your partner or work out whether or not you should break up, I've got the fix for you. I have put together a list of 50 of the most viral and science-backed ways to connect with your partner more deeply and 25 questions that will help you work out whether or not you should break up. And they're all available right now at the Modern Wisdom Valentine's review. It is completely free. You can get it by going to chriswillex.com slash valentines. That's chriswillx.com slash valentines.
you are my favorite writer.
Thank you.
You have the most insights per word of anybody that's writing stuff at the moment.
Well, thanks.
That means a lot to me.
Thank you.
You could have chosen to write about anything.
Why choose to write about spending money?
Well, I'll take it back to the start of my career, which was like a lot of young men,
particularly in the mid-2000s.
The ultimate goal, before tech really existed, the ultimate goal was be an investment banker
around Wall Street. And it's hard to remember that era because now if you're a young person at
Stanford or whatever, your goal is like, go work at Google, go work at OpenAI. Back then,
it was all go work at Goldman Sachs. And so what my sole kind of life aspiration when I was 20
was to be an investment banker or a hedge fund manager. And I knew I loved investing. Even at that
age, I used to go to Barnes & Noble and read investing books. And I loved it to begin with. I was
fascinated with money. And then I haphazardly got a job.
as a writer because I graduated in 2008. The economy was a wreck and nobody was hiring. No banks
were hiring. And so the only finance job that I could find was as a writer for the Motley Fool.
Didn't want to be a writer, hated writing, was embarrassed that I had dreams to be a powerful
investment banker. Now I was a journalist. I was like, I hated that. But I actually like pretty
quickly fell in love with it. And what I loved about it was I loved being an outsider who was not
being influenced by the incentives of that career. And so if you are a hedge fund manager,
you have a lot of incentives and biases based around that. If you are a financial advisor,
there's a lot of just, you have to think a certain way to fit into that profession. And I felt
like as a writer, and I'm not a journalist. As a writer, I could just be on the outside looking
in. I feel like I was just up and the bleachers looking down and be like, let me try to figure out
what's going on down there. Oh, you said the play is on the pitch. Yes, and then tell a story behind it.
And to me, money, I think I got lucky because money, I think, has more fascinating social stories in it than almost any other field where how you spend money and how you save money and your ambitions are such a window into who you are.
And of course, there's a lot of other things in life that are more important than money, family and purpose and whatnot.
But money is a very clear window into who you are.
And so I feel like there's just an endless well of interesting stories to tell about it.
What can you tell about someone from the way that they spend money?
So much of it is about your ambitions and who you think about yourself.
I'm not anti-materialistic at all, and I really don't judge other people.
But when I see somebody driving a yellow Lamborghini, I'm like, there's a story there.
There's a story there.
And it's not a judging story, but that's a story of who you want to be and what you want to show off.
Now, some people have expensive cars because they love the craftsmanship and the engineering and whatnot.
They're truly doing it for.
Which is still a story.
It's still a story.
But whenever I see someone clearly peacocking, and there's a lot of it, you see it, there's a story in there.
I found this headline from 1929, which was the peak just before the Great Depression.
And it was such a good headline.
It was in the Washington Post.
It was the more you are snubbed while poor, the more you enjoy displaying being rich.
And I was like, there's, it's almost like you don't even need to read the article.
Like, that's it.
That's so astute and I think so true.
that for a lot of people, not everybody,
but for a lot of people,
the more you are showing off
or you just desire to show off,
a lot of it is a wound
that was inflicted upon you
and you're like, I'm going to get back.
And sometimes, too,
you're not even showing off for other people.
You're doing it to prove to yourself.
I am.
The signal to yourself that I did it.
I remember talking to Anthony Scaramucci about this.
And he said that he grew up, you know,
in one social class where the ultimate signal
that you made it
to yourself that you overcame where you became
was the Lamborghini.
That was it.
And so he said, he was like,
I don't want it for other people.
I want to do it to show myself
that that kid who grew up down there
made it up here.
So it's a signaling at a story either way.
And that's why it's not judging.
It's just,
but it's an interesting window into who you are.
Like retributive materialism.
It's what it's making me think of
that I am going to get back
at whatever that thing was from my past.
Yeah.
You see this across everything.
You see this across people who spend a lot of time beautifying themselves,
because they probably at one point in their life felt quite ugly.
Somebody who spends a lot of time accumulating power.
At one point they probably felt pretty powerless.
Somebody who tries to accumulate a lot of wealth,
while they felt like they maybe didn't have very much freedom
or they didn't have very much independence or they were very poor.
Somebody who makes themselves very powerful and very strong
were very big, well, at one point they probably felt very weak.
Like, it, it's not a wonderful lesson because in the calling out of it, it sort of derogates
the thing that most people are chasing, and everyone fucking hates that.
Yeah.
Because it devalues the goal that they haven't yet reached, or the one that they have reached.
They say, look at how fucking harder work to get to this place.
And you're telling me, this is part of just some childhood ancestral wound thing.
It's like, I get that.
But if you look around closely, the reliability of me.
able to pattern match what somebody becomes or is trying to become and what it is that they
fear or what they used to be is really high hit rate.
And the saying that a lot of people know, hurt people, hurt people.
There's a lot of cousins of that, of just like the way that we behave and act is a reflection
of insecurities, things that were done to us that we had in life or even positive experiences
that we've had in life.
I think a lot of people who grew up very wealthy, they have a very interesting.
financial psychology as well. They can, they understand, I think, very acutely what money cannot do for you.
So a lot of them, if you talk to them, would be like, yeah, we grew up very rich and we had all these
homes and all these cars, but, you know, pick whatever story you want. My parents didn't get a lot.
My parents got divorced. My dad didn't have any relationship with me. I was bullied at school.
Like, they're very acute, they're acutely aware that money can solve a lot of problems and
build an amazing life for you, of course. But I think when you're poor, it's easy to tell yourself,
that's the solution to all my problems,
that if only I had that much money,
then this hole I have in my soul would go away
and it would fill up and everything would be done.
And people who grew up rich know that that's not true.
Will a big house make you happy?
If you use it as a way to have better relationships with people.
If you have a big house so you can have 20 of your best buddies over every Friday night
and have a great time, yes.
If you have a big house because that's what you need for you and your specials,
house to have five kids and that's your meaning and purpose in life? Yes, absolutely. But I think
if you're using it as a way of just like a, you know, because that's what you should want kind of thing,
then it can be pretty miserable. Very interesting. Harvey Firestone, who created Firestone tires.
He was alive 120 years ago or some odd. He wrote a biography in the 1920s. And he pointed this out.
He said, every wealthy person that he knows, without exception, buys a gigantic house. And every single
one of them without exception, finds it to just be a tremendous burden.
And he was, and he was like, he was like, why do we do it? And he even said Henry Ford,
who at the time was like a cheap miser kind of, he was like, he was like, even Henry Ford has a
gigantic house that he hates. But he's like there, so he's like there has to be something in the
human soul that just associates large property with success. Big abode. Because, and I think a lot
of people who have a big house know this, like a big house is a tremendous amount of upkeep.
And a lot of people who live in those giant homes
will eventually basically seclude themselves
to a small little corner of that house
that feels homely.
I would love to see people who have homes
over 10,000 square feet or whatever.
I'd love to do one of those GPS tracking maps.
Yes.
How do they do with wolves?
Yeah, yeah.
And I'd want to see, oh, my God,
you know of the 10,000 square feet that your houses,
you use the same 1,500 square feet.
Right.
And you would be able to purchase that
in this location or however many of these or you, this is what you lived in.
You used the size of house that you lived in when you were 22.
Yes.
And you're still living in that same house.
There's just slightly bigger surrounding.
But even if you showed that person, that information or for myself, and you said, hey, you could
actually only live in a house that's 1,500 square feet.
No.
No, thanks.
Not interested.
So that's what Harvey Firestone got right.
He was like, it's a burden, but you still do it.
And you're still going to do it.
I have a friend whose parents live in a 20,000 square foot house.
house and he gave us a tour. And the tour was basically, yeah, down that hall, there's four bedrooms
that nobody ever uses. Down this hall, there's a room. It was going to be a gym, but we actually
put the gym downstairs. Nobody ever uses it. It was, he was give us a tour of places that are never used.
And just like I said, they basically secluded themselves to the kitchen, living room, bedroom,
and that was it. Behold my obsolescence. Look at how much surplus I have. But I think this is why
it's such a fascinating topic, because people have always done that and they will always do it.
An interesting point is even rich people, not all rich people buy fancy cars.
Now everyone's into cars.
Not all rich people.
Most rich people fly at a slightly nicer class.
I think that's one of the places.
Very few people regret choosing to fly business over flying economy if you're in the market for that kind of travel quality.
Yeah, this is what Sam Zell, who is a billionaire real estate guy.
He told David Senra this.
Sam Sal said,
Sam Zell said the only true material luxury is flying private.
So Sam's advice, it's ambitious advice.
He was like, get to private jet money.
That's the only thing that makes a difference in your life.
Scott Galloway said once you were able to own your own home,
the only next thing worth buying is being able to have a jet.
And obviously that's 0.0001% money.
Scott, the difference between, I mean,
for a lot of people being able to buy a house is out of fucking reach at the moment.
And then the jet thing, but at least to me, the sort of funny note, and that was like,
what about a yacht?
And he's like, yacht's stupid.
No, paying the ass.
Yeah.
I thought it was so funny.
How do you define financial success then, after all of this time thinking about it?
What does financial success come to me?
To me, it's independence to be who you want to be.
And who I want to be is not who you want to be.
Everyone is their own very individualistic definition of that.
it's waking up and saying, I can do whatever I want today
and having the independence and the freedom to do that.
And the distinction is there are billionaires
who have no control over their time,
no control over their schedule,
spend their entire day doing things that they don't want to do.
And there are people who make $50,000 a year
who are living their absolute best life
and totally control their life,
control where they live, where they work,
who they spend their time with,
doing the hobbies that they want to do.
And so to me, that's really what wealth is.
And I think a lot of people can get this wrong,
in their ambitions, that if your sole financial ambition is, I want the highest net worth,
and the way in which you're going to get that is to basically put on a performance of somebody
that you're not and wake up every morning and do things that you don't enjoy doing.
And that's not to say hard work. I think the vast majority of people get a big thrill and a lot
of pleasure at hard work. They like being productive doing the thing that they want to do.
It's working hard on things that you genuinely don't enjoy solely because you're attracted,
to a bigger bank account.
But then that's a very common thing.
So I think the definition of wealth is the ability, the pleasure of being who you want to be,
being independent, waking up every morning and saying, what I'm going to do today is the
thing that I want to do.
Wealth without independence is a unique form of poverty.
That's what it is for a lot of wealthy people.
This to me is one of the most fascinating things of meeting a lot of wealthy people.
If you associate wealth with material and you go, they have a big house, have a big car,
maybe I have a plane and you associate, oh, this person is very wealthy. And for a lot of them,
not all of them, but for a lot of them, if you get to know them, they spend the vast majority
of their day doing things that they don't want to do. And that to me, that still might be appealing
to some people. Or if you're not at that, you might say, look, I understand you say that,
but let me experience it for myself. Let me try to do that. That's always the appeal. So I get that.
But it's of the very wealthy people I've met, some of them have truly amazing lives. And I wouldn't
say jealous, but I look at them and be like, I want to be you. I think there's a greater number,
though, that if you get to know them, you're like, wow, that's not what I thought it would be.
Well, a lot of people have to do things that they don't want to do. And many people who work super
hard to jobs, got the kids, all the rest of the stuff, would say, well, you know, good. They should
do, I have to work hard and so should they. You go, yeah, but why do you think they made themselves
wealthy. What would you do if you were well if I was wealthy I wouldn't have to work the second
job? It's like if you are the sort of person who is driven to make yourself into the kind of wealth
that they have. Yes. You can't turn off the switch. You can't you're never going to meet a
billionaire except on the very few people who like accidentally got rich. You're never going to meet
a self-made billionaire who has a kind of personality who could say that's enough. Let me put it all
in muni bonds and go home. It's not it's not there. The reason that they are successful is because
they have the kind of personality where they cannot 24 hours a day, all they can think about
is their business. And even if I would say, I don't want that for myself. Of course, I want to
be financially successful and I enjoy the work that I do. I'm so grateful that those people exist.
Like the vast majority of the great technology and great medicine that we all enjoy in the world
came from people who were maniacally obsessed about their job, even if it came at the expense of
their health, their marriage, their relationship with their kids. They created something amazing
and that's why they got successful.
Human perpetual motion machines.
Yes.
They're just churning, sucking in problems
and spitting out solutions.
Yeah, I think we should be almost the most grateful
for people in society
who created amazing technology
and amazing things at the expense of their own happiness
that we all get to benefit from now.
Yeah, I mean, it should be a cautionary tale,
but from the outside, everybody looks at it
and thinks some version of,
that might be true for them,
but it won't be true for me.
Watch me dance through the minefield,
that has been laid by art and literature and movies and songs
and stories from my grandparents and the most famous investors from history,
watch me dance through that minefield and not kick any of the trip wires.
David Senra has profiled 400 of the most successful entrepreneurs.
He's done such a good job doing it.
And he says, of the 400 entrepreneurs he's profiled,
there's two whose lives that he thinks that he would actually,
want to live. Who were they? One is Ed Thorpe, who was a card counter in Vegas and then a hedge fund
manager and had just an amazing personal life on the side, just amazing family, incredible health.
I think he's still around. I think Ed Thorpe is 90 years old and genuinely looks 55.
Incredible life. But of the other, you know, 399 people that he's profiled, it's that person
created something amazing, built an incredible thing, an amazing amount of wealth, technology that we all
benefit from and we should worship that person or admire that person and I would never want to be
them. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And evade them as much as you can, at least in a role model.
You got this great line. Money serves you best when it stops being the thing you think about.
Yeah, I think a lot, the vast majority of successful entrepreneurs, with the exception of maybe
hedge fund managers, were not chasing the money. They were absolutely fascinated with the problem
that they were trying to solve, but they weren't doing it just to get rich. The money came.
It eventually came.
If you solve enough problems in a way that's helpful for people,
it'll eventually come to you.
But I think entrepreneurs who set out the goal is to become rich very seldomly do.
Oh, I actually took that line to mean something else.
Money serves you best when it stops being the thing you think about.
I took that to mean that your ultimate form of wealth
is when you no longer have to think about the cost of a thing.
You turn up at dinner and you don't mind putting your card down.
That's true, too.
Sure.
You can stop thinking about it.
So I was in Nashville a couple of months ago on tour.
And I was there with Luke, who's my tour manager.
And he was telling me this story about how his Mrs. gets mad at him
because it's 1am and he's still WhatsApping away.
He has the highest phone use of anybody.
Gen Z girls, TikTok addicts, like D-Gen.
He has the highest and it all work.
It's just work.
And he just loves it.
He used to be a club promoter, same industry as me.
And the guy's an animal.
He's so good at what he does.
and he is unrelenting, and he has a lot of fun doing it too.
So he's this kind of weird intersection of all the Venn diagrams.
And he made this really fucking wonderful point.
He said, I have a brain that likes to solve problems.
I'm just trying to give it good problems to solve.
Yeah, great.
And I was like, still, chills on my arms, thinking about it,
because lots of people have the kind of brains
that are just looking to obsess over something,
to try and fix, make this piece fit to that piece.
he is fortunate that he has managed to find business and kids and jiu-jitsu and wife and health stuff
and he's a bunch of interesting problems allow me to apply to that but if you don't have a
sufficiently interesting problem that's when people get obsessed with politics or porn or their
ex or whatever it might be and i think a really great solution to this maybe should you
do enough mindfulness to be able to relinquish your permanent obsession with problems perhaps
But a good interim strategy is just give yourself better problems to solve.
I mean, a cousin of what you just said is, you know, the fire movement, financial independence, retire early.
You had all these people who would try to live incredibly frugal lives with a high savings rate.
And then they would retire when they were 28 and had half a million bucks in the bank, whatever it would be.
So many of the people who actually did that, who retired when they were 28, were clinically depressed six months later.
Because they realized, like, what their actual purpose was in life that gave them meaning and whatnot was work.
and so many of those people who did retire
went back to work.
And so the idea that we all need meaningful problems
to solve and to go is really important.
And a lot of people get this wrong with retirement.
They spend all of their retirement planning
on how do I save enough money
and none of it on what am I going to do in retirement.
I mean, that's a big problem for people.
In other news, you've probably heard me talk about Element before
and that's because I am frankly dependent on it.
and it's how I've started my day every single morning.
This is the best tasting hydration drink on the market.
You might think, why do I need to be more hydrated?
Because proper hydration is not just about drinking enough water.
It's having sufficient electrolytes to allow your body to use those fluids.
Each grabbing your stick pack is a science-backed electrolyte ratio of sodium, potassium, and magnesium.
It's got no sugar, coloring, artificial ingredients, or any other junk.
This plays a critical role in reducing muscle cramps and fatigue
while optimizing brain health, regulating your appetite, and curbing cravings.
This orange flavor in a cold glass of water is a sweet, salty, orangey nectar,
and you will genuinely feel a difference when you take it versus when you don't,
which is why I keep going on about it.
Best of all, there's no questions asked refund policy with an unlimited duration.
Buy it, use it all, and if you don't like it for any reason,
they give you your money back and you don't even have to return the box.
That's how confident they are that you'll love it.
Plus, they offer free shipping in the US.
Right now, you can get a free sample pack of elements most popular flavors with your
first purchase by going to the link in the description below heading to drink l mn t.com
slash modern wisdom that's drinklmn t.com slash modern wisdom isn't there some data around
people who retired dying most more quickly as well I'm pretty sure that there was a study done
on people who decide that they're going to retire at 60 or 65 and there are many things that
contribute to how long you're going to live but one of them seems to be how early you stop working
Yeah.
And if you stop working earlier, you tend to die sooner.
And, I mean, continuing to serve your corporate overlord as a longevity strategy might be a little bit of a high-risk move for me to put forward.
But I think the lesson is, yes, meaning, purpose, reason to get up, structure, collegial, sharing with other people, problems to solve, keeping the mind active.
It's a big suite of things that come from work that is more than just the paycheck.
The only formula that I put in the book,
it's the simplest that I could do,
is a formula for a pretty good life
is independence plus purpose.
And I think it's hard to have a good,
meaningful life without both of those things.
The independence to be who you are
and do what you want,
and the purpose, the wisdom to solve interesting problems,
hard problems, as you said.
I think that's important.
I think you need both of those to have a good life.
And I guess you need the independence
so that you can choose the problems
problems and purpose will be different for everybody.
For me, it's my kids right now.
That'll change when they're on their own.
For some people, it's work, some people it's religion, whatever it might be,
that independence to be who you are and to chase something that is bigger than yourself,
work on a problem that is bigger than yourself.
Talk to me about the relativity of wealth, the comparison and anchors.
I think you have to choose your words carefully when you say this because you can really offend
a lot of people.
but the average ordinary median middle class American today,
earning $60,000, whatever the median income is,
lives a life that would be indistinguishable from magic
to somebody 100 years ago.
I mean, that's true.
Just the access to the simplest things that you and I never think about,
Advil, sunscreen, let alone phones and the Internet and whatnot,
would have seemed like magic to people.
It is also true, and this is the important part,
It's also true that nobody wakes up thinking about how magical Advil is and how grateful we should be to live in a world that has Advil and penicillin.
Nobody, the speed at which a luxury becomes a necessity is two seconds.
And you can easily imagine a world in which our grandkids live in a world that if we could get a glimpse of it, had a time machine,
and could see how they're living in the world 2150, be like, I can't, you guys must be wake up so happy.
We've cured cancer.
We've done all these things.
We're a multi-planetary species, whatever it might be.
And they won't appreciate any of it because it'll just become a normal thing.
And so that's always the case that luxury becomes necessity very, very quickly.
It's always been the case that there's no definition of wealth.
There's no objective definition of wealth.
The only definition that makes sense to people is relative to other people.
And so it doesn't matter how much money that I have.
All that matters is that I have more than you.
That's always been the case.
it is a hundred times more potent now because of social media.
So what he just said was true 100 years ago,
it was true a thousand years ago.
You judge yourself relative to other people.
But your comparison group now that you're comparing yourself to
is a curated algorithmic highlighted real
of the top 1% of moments of the top 1% of people's lives.
Globally.
Yes, globally.
And so it's created this idea.
Look, as an iron rule of math,
half the population has to be below the median.
That's just how it works.
Half the population has to be below average.
And when everybody, though, is being almost force-fed the top 1% of moments of the top 1% of people's lives, you create the situation where a lot of people are living good lives by any historical standard.
But we've created a world where I think most people expect what is effectively a top 1% outcome.
And you see this a lot with college students where a lot of people think that the, look, the baseline norm of what they want in life is a bachelor's degree from a flagship university.
a corporate job that pays low six figures to begin with, great health insurance, great retirement,
a 3,000 square foot house with two SUVs. That's become their baseline norm of like, that's the,
that's just what I expect. Anything short of that is a failure. And on one hand, I want to live in a
world that has rising expectations. That's what progress is. I want to live in a world where my
grandkids live in a world where cancer is cured and they don't even think about it. That's the dream.
Rising expectations are, is progress. That's what it is.
But you also also have to expect and understand that in that world, that growth individually and as a whole society is never going to feel like you think it would be because it just becomes the norm that you're expected.
Yeah.
The median income is 83,000.
For a household, individually, it's lower because there's more than one worker per household.
Oh, it's a household?
There's one and a half or whatever workers per household.
Oh, that's interesting.
You're right.
The median U.S. household income.
household income. Yeah. So individually it's probably 60 or something. Whatever, maybe 50.
Oh, interesting. Yeah.
I think the sort of relativity thing is completely true. There is no such thing as objective wealth.
There is only subjective wealth compared to the people around you. But there's another comparison, and it's you yesterday.
Yeah.
So not only do you need to be more than the people around you, but let's say you even manage to do that, right?
which is by design, you're the outlier in that group.
So however big the group is, which is now 8 billion people,
but local friend group, neighborhood, whatever it might be,
I've done it.
I'm in the top 10% or 1% of people that I compare myself to.
Okay, and how's your trajectory doing up against you?
Yeah.
Because you now have to run on a treadmill
that's not only faster than all of the other people running on treadmills next to you,
but the treadmill can only get faster on yours,
irrespective of what they do.
At the same time.
And that trajectory piece, I know you're a massive fan of Jimmy Carr.
He's a great friend.
And the guy fucking rules, dude.
The best.
So smart.
He's great.
And he has this idea.
Trajectory is more important than position.
If you were the 100th best downhill skier in the world, but last year you were 150,
you are in a subjectively better position than the second best downhill skier in the world,
who last year was number one.
Yeah.
Oh, that's absolutely true.
I think for a lot of people, what they really like with money is not even being rich.
It's the process of becoming rich.
The change in the trajectory is way more exciting.
The philosopher Andrew Tate once said, having things isn't fun, getting things is fun.
Sure.
It's an accurate insight.
And I think it was Nas maybe who said, people don't like you when you have something.
They like you when you're pursuing something.
Have you read the book, The Evolution of Desire by David Bus?
Of course.
Fantastic book.
One of the things he pointed out, the example that he gave, I thought was so fascinating, is what tends to be attractive are not people who have a lot of resources.
It's people who have the potential to acquire future resources.
So the example that he gave is a med school student might be more attractive to a mate than a doctor.
Than a doctor.
It's the trajectory that they're on.
Why is it that the starving guitarist living on his friend's couch can kind of get all of the goals?
why why like you know i'm sure the rock star could too as long as he's on the right trajectory but
if the rock stars facing down he's kind of like bitcoin at one dollar you were talking about some of
the early episodes that we'd done and it when you get to be at the start of somebody's journey
you know we spoke for the first time before 2019 does that sound right yeah 2019 maybe maybe even
2018 yeah before you'd written psychology money before i don't even know if you were blogging on
i was a blogger yeah but were you still at motley fool no i was a collaborative fund i hadn't
in a book yet. You were a very
nascent podcaster yourself, right?
Correct. Yeah, it was a blobby baby
toddler thing. But yeah,
talk to me about that, that trajectory
piece. What are your,
have you got any examples, any stories
that speak to that
I must be better not only than the people around
me, but also than me yesterday?
I think it's, you know,
it was weird for me. I had been a full-time
professional writer for 15 years before
I wrote a book. And I was very
comfortable in my position of where I was as a blogger, as an online writer. It felt like I had a great
life, loved what I did, made enough money for my family to be totally happy and have some sense
of independence. And then I wrote a book 15 years into it that I never expected to do anything
and the publisher didn't expect to do anything, but massively increased the trajectory of my
career. And it felt great. It felt amazing for, I want to say a year. And then it became,
this is just where I'm at now.
I think what the reason
happiness is a fleeting emotion,
which it is, most people are never happy for more
than a short period of time.
It's a great emotion, but it's always fleeting.
It's because what makes you happy is surprise.
It's experiencing something that you genuinely did not expect.
And so when I had this bump in my career,
there was a period of surprise.
I never expected this to happen.
And then after a period of time, it was like,
okay, now I'm used to this trajectory,
and this is where we're at.
So I think even when you're on a higher trajectory,
you can get used to it.
The gradient continues to get steeper.
The problem is, is the gradient gets steeper,
there are fewer and fewer degrees
that you can make it go more vertically.
But even if you're on this,
like, even if you're still,
so there's a hedge fund called Renaissance Technologies.
It's the most successful hedge funds ever existed.
No way.
I've never even heard of it.
So it's a, it's not open to outside investors.
It's pretty much only employees get to invest in it.
And it is in a universe of its own.
It's average annual returns,
going back like 30 years, are 66%.
Just did a complete, which if you don't know anything about finance, that is like Michael Jordan times 50.
It's a different universe.
And but look, when you've earned 66% every year for 30 years, and if you earn it next year,
like you got richer, but you're like, yeah, that's just what this does.
That's just where I'm at.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's what I expect.
And I imagine like when Taylor Swift makes a billion dollars on tour, just like, yeah, that's just what I do.
And anything short of that is a failure.
Anything short of that is a failure.
Right, right.
I think that's always the case with anything that you do.
Great line in a John Bellion song.
He says, if the higher I climb is the further I fall,
then why love anything at all?
He's talking about emotional connection,
opening up your heart, and then potentially being broken.
But the same thing is absolutely true
when it comes to status and striving and money and success
and accolade.
Your last album got a Grammy nomination.
Well, this year, it better get a nomination or win.
Or you better get two.
Yeah.
Or else you're going backward.
It's not very good.
The one career profession, I think, is really interesting.
is president of the United States because you are the most powerful man in the world with
anything at your fingertips. And by the beauty of democracy, it's a short-term job.
And after being the most powerful man in the world, one day you wake up and you're just
some guy named George Bush. And there's very few careers that are like that, where you are
absolutely tippity top for a moment, but it's going to end. And yes, you can book deals and
speaking deals and have a good fortune, but you know there's going to come a specific day where nobody
cares about you. Well, I mean, imagine the first book that you write being a global international
bestseller at a rate that's here too unknown of in the entire industry and then having to write
a second one and a third one and a third one. Yeah, no, it's an interesting thing for me. And yeah,
it's been... But you're in oddly, oddly good company with regards to that. James Cleaer did the same
thing. If you discount models, Mark Manson did the same thing. Yep.
there is a you're in a sort of contemporary club of people who kind of did the same of peaking in high school
with regards to their writing career and that's not to say that it can't be beaten but the ability to be able to beat it is so
it's so difficult because your own and importantly everybody else's expectations shift correct
not just higher they go stratospheric yeah which says a lot about the importance of expectations yeah yeah yeah
It's everything.
And I think a lot of the reason that me, my first book did well,
nobody expected anything from it.
Nobody expected.
Readers didn't expect anything.
The publisher, I didn't expect.
It was all upside right there.
And everything that came after that was like,
if this is anything short of absolute life-changing in every sentence,
I'm going to consider it a failure.
A quick aside, I've been using eight sleep for years,
and I genuinely can't imagine life without it.
Having a mattress that actively cools and heats,
each side of the bed is a total game changer.
and the newest model, the Pod 5, takes things to the next level.
It now includes a temperature-regulating duvet that works with the smart mattress cover
to deliver full-body climate control, maintaining your ideal temperature from every angle all night long.
The new base also includes a built-in speaker so you can fall asleep to ambient sound rainfall
or Dr. Andrew Huberman, whatever helps you switch off.
And with upgraded biometric sensors, it now runs nightly health checks, identifying disrupted breathing,
abnormal heartbeats or sudden changes in your HRV.
It now cools, heats, elevates and monitors your sleep better than ever, which is why 8Sleep
has been clinically proven to give you up to one hour more of quality sleep every night.
And if you're still on the fence, they have a 30-day sleep trial.
So you can buy it and sleep on it for 29 nights.
And if you don't like it, they'll just give you your money back, plus they ship internationally.
Right now, you can get up to $350 off the pod five by going to the link in the description below.
I heading to 8Sleep.com slash Modern Wisdom using the code Modern Wisdom at checkout.
That's E-I-G-H-T-Sleep.com slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom at checkout.
How much of modern dissatisfaction do you think comes from comparing ourselves to people that we don't actually want to be like?
I think that that marries what we were talking about before, which is a lot of the richest, most powerful people on the planet are secretly or even kind of publicly miserable.
Don't want to be?
Yeah.
I think what's more important.
You remember the show, the show MTV Cribs?
Of course.
You have that generation?
I know you're young. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That was, that was most people's view into how the other half lives. This is before social media and whatnot, and that was it. But it didn't really inflate your aspirations because you know that's not a peer. It's Jay-Z, it's Shaq. Of course he has a bigger house than I do. What social media did is it showed you people who ostensibly should be peers, or at least that's the idea. They've got an Instagram login as well. They use the same platform that you do. That's just a normal. That's not a celebrity. It's not Shaq. It's just a guy who looks like me, but he's obviously living a much better life.
than I do. So it created this idea that like that's where I should be. And I think that's,
that's the poison of what it is. It gives the impression that people who, A, are showing you a tiny
little fraction of their life. It gives you the impression that that's what you should be doing
right now at this moment, too. What is, what, what have you come to learn about the relationship
between money and status? You bring up our friend Jimmy Carr, who I admire so, I think he's so
brilliant. I have such a fondness for comedians. You've got to speak to him?
We've DMed a couple times, but I love the guy.
He's so great.
And I think what's great about comedians and is that if you have a favorite comedian, you don't know and you don't care how much money they make.
I saw Louis C.K. live a couple weeks ago.
And this is part of who he is.
He stumbles out on stage.
He's wearing like a shirt that's way too big for him and his dirty jeans kind of.
And people love them.
They love every second of it.
Because what you love them for is their comedy.
obviously you don't you don't it's a rare situation where I'm like the what I value you for has
nothing to do whatsoever with your financial success and so you guys like the relationship between
money and and power if you're talking about like a businessman or an entrepreneur you might measure
their success based off their net worth if you're talking about if your favorite athlete
had a had a gambling addiction and lost all their money but they're still just so much fun to watch
on the court you wouldn't care that much and there's a lot of athletes who did fit that that bill
and and comedians who might fit that
bill. If this is not the case, but if my favorite comedian, if I found out, like, he hasn't
figured out how to monetize it yet and the guy's actually broke and lives in a tiny apartment,
I don't care. I'm going to watch every special because I value them for something more than money.
And that's true for your best friends. I wrote about this in the book. One of my best friends,
I've known him for 20 years. The best guy, I know, I have so much fun hanging out with this guy.
And I've known him forever. And of our peer group, he makes by far the least amount of money,
by far the least amount of money. And it really bothers him. And he talks,
about how inferior he feels and whatnot. And I told him one day, I was like, if you are a funny joke
teller and a good friend, you're fun to hang out with, I love our conversations, you're working
hard to support your family, you're a good dad, you're a good husband, you're a good citizen.
If you do those things, you've earned 90% of the points that I am willing to give anybody.
If you also happen to be rich and successful, I might bump you up to like a 9.2.
But let's not pretend that, like, what I enjoy about you and like about you is that his issue, though,
is not your warmth and respect to him. His issue is his perspective of himself. Right.
It's how he feels about him, not how he feels, you feel about him. I think, and in some ways,
this is unavoidable. So I'm not saying this is even a bad thing. It's just a real thing.
But we want to think that what people admire us for is our wealth. And 90% of the time,
if you run through the people who are most meaningful to you in your life, they don't value you for
your wealth. And the thing that they might value for has nothing to do with money. My kids don't
care in the slightest whether my income went up last year or what our net worth is. They care that I
listen to them and that I play football with them in the driveway and that I read books to them and that I'm
a good friend. I have another friend, the same friend who gave me the tour of his very large
house that was mostly not used, who said, sometimes I have days where I wish my dad was just a normal
guy who drove a Subaru. That the money was at.
actually getting away. It was getting in the way. He inherited the money? Yes. The money was getting
in the way of his ability to just be a normal good dad. And when you have that much money, it was the
center of everything that they did in life was like, how do we use our money for philanthropy and the
lifestyle that we live? And he's like, sometimes I just want my dad to just go out and play baseball
with me, to be a normal guy. Isn't that strange that people who are struggling for money
are obsessed with money
and people who have lots of money
are obsessed with money.
Both groups at both ends of the barbell
are much of what they're spending their time
thinking about is their wealth.
I think it's true for a lot of things in life.
If you've known someone who's dealt with infertility,
they will do anything to have a kid.
They would chop off their arms,
do anything to have a baby.
If you know people who have newborns,
they would do anything to sleep tonight.
They would chop off their arms
for this kid to show.
shut up and let me sleep. It's always the case
that like the extent of which you value
something, if you want something and you
can't have it, you value it more than anything.
When you have it, the value
diminishes. And if it's taken away
from you, then the perceived value goes
up tremendously again. Such playground
mentality, this sort of
scarcity equals value
for everything.
How could it be any other way though? Of course
that's always what it is. That scarcity
equals value. Because dopamine is a hell of a drug.
That's it. That's a lot
it. And in a competitive world where we're all competing for attention, we're competing for jobs,
we're competing for spouses, we're always competing. Again, it doesn't matter how much I have.
It just matters that I have more than you. The happiest people I know are the most content,
not necessarily the richest, healthiest, or most successful. Is it possible to train contentment?
Pretty difficult, I think. I think there are a lot of things in behavioral finance that it's just
who you are and that who you are was forged at conception. And there's not a lot you can do about it.
Daniel Kahneman was a psychologist, won the Nobel Prize in Economics.
It was basically the godfather of behavioral finance, came up with the vast majority of the theories that we all talk about that dictate how we think about money and success.
And we asked him one time, like, has all of this research that he had done over the previous 70 years, has it made him better at making decisions?
And like, no, without hesitation.
No, no, no.
And so you're like, if somebody like him, it hasn't necessarily helped him.
So I think for a lot of this, the flaw that people make is seem like I can learn about the psychology of wealth and money and investing and then change myself and change my behavior.
And I think a lot of it, a lot of the evidence is, no, you can't.
I think the best you can do is become more aware of who you are and accept it and build a financial plan and build goals that are around that.
I'll give you example of this.
Jeff Bezos was talking about when he started Amazon in 1994, I think it was.
And he used that, this is now famous, the regret minimization framework.
And he said, if I started Amazon and it failed, I would not regret that.
But if I didn't start it, I would regret for the rest of my life.
And I remember hearing that, I'd be like, that's awesome.
I love that.
And that is so not me.
If I put everything I had into a startup and raised money for my parents and worked 150 hours a week for five years and it failed, I would be beside myself.
And that's, but I'm so glad that he and other people exist.
Which is exactly why he's a billionaire and you're not.
It's not exactly.
And never will be.
And it's not, and so the idea that like you have to figure it out what kind of person you are.
And so back to like, I should not train myself to be like, how can I train myself to have the entrepreneur's mentality?
I don't. It's okay. It's not that big a deal. I should just create a life that maximizes who I am than try to be someone who I'm not.
What are the important things to learn about who you are in this context?
I think so much of it is having goals that don't leave the roof of your own house, kind of just being very selfish in a positive.
way. A lot of bad financial decisions happen when you are chasing a goal or doing something that is
very right for another person but wrong for you. And it's the easiest trap to fall into because you're
like, Chris did that and it worked for him. And he's really happy with it. So I should do it too.
And it's one thing if you're chasing ideas that didn't work out for other people, then like the writing
was already on the wall. But if I try to do something that not only was successful, but that you love,
then it's like, well, I should love this too.
without the acknowledgement that everybody is very,
is so incredibly different.
There are a lot of things that I do with my money
that other people,
maybe you would look at and be like,
it doesn't make any sense to me.
I don't understand why you're doing that.
And 90% of the time my answer would be like,
yeah, I understand it wouldn't work for you.
You probably do things that would drive me crazy too.
And that's fine.
And people understand that very vividly
if we're talking about our taste in food or music.
Like everyone's different.
Like you like Italian food.
I like me.
It doesn't matter.
Nobody's right.
It's all subjective.
But when it comes to how you should manage your money
and the lifestyle that you should live,
it really bothers people.
I think part of it is because there's obviously no right answers
in how to do this.
This is all very uncertain.
How to build wealth is uncertain.
How to manage it, how to spend it.
It's all uncertain.
And so when you see somebody doing it differently than you are,
you take it as not like, oh, maybe that's a different way to do it.
You take it as a threat to the decisions that you lay.
This is everything.
This isn't just wealth.
This is why I think the rent version.
versus buy argument, it gets so heated.
Because if you've, like, because honestly, it's not, it's not obviously clear, which is better
rent and via.
Like, anybody can make the argument either way.
But if you've, if you have a giant mortgage and you put your life savings into your
house and somebody tells you renting was better, you're like, that's a threat.
That's a threat to my identity.
And I'm going to respond viciously now.
What's that line of yours where you say, most debating on the internet are just people with
differing perspectives being unable to understand the other?
talking over each other.
Yeah, people just speaking.
Whether it's how you invest your money,
when people are like, no, Bitcoin, no, index funds.
They're just, there are different people talking over each other.
I'm a Bitcoin guy trying to tell you an index fund guy, how to be a Bitcoin guy.
And the truth might be, like Bitcoin is the absolute right way that you should invest.
And index funds are the exact way that I should invest.
And that's where a lot of people get, like most debates about this.
There's people with different time horizons, different risk tolerances,
different cultures, different family goals, and not understanding that it's a
okay for people to have different views. Spending money to show people how much money you have is a fast way
to go broke and an expensive way to gain respect. It's the fastest way to have less money. Spending money
to show people how much money you have is the fastest way to have less money. And so this is why I think
one of the most valuable financial assets is not needing to impress strangers. It's the most
valuable financial asset that you can have on your balance sheet is to say, I want to use money as a tool
to give myself and my family a better life. I do not want to use it as a yardstick of social status.
by and large because we massively
overestimate almost always
how much other people are paying attention to us.
I've seen some fascinating studies
I thought they were so well designed
of a study where some researchers
took a woman and they put her in an objectively hideous
ugly sweater, like a comically ugly sweater
and sent her into a party.
And she mingled about with a sense of humiliation
and she came back out and they said
how many people in the party noticed your sweater?
And she's like, everybody.
Like everybody's staring at me and laughing.
And they go into the party and they start asking people,
did you notice a woman in the ugly sweater?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Nobody's thinking about you as much as you are.
And I think, so the idea, it's so easy to tell yourself,
if I had this house, car, clothes, whatever it might be,
that other people will notice and elevate my status
and pay attention to me and look at me and say,
wow, look at Chris, he's such a cool guy.
And the reality is most people aren't thinking about you
because they're too busy thinking about themselves.
They're inside their own head.
Have you seen the Dartmouth scar experiment?
No.
Similar to that.
So study participants were brought in,
and they were going to sit down and have an interview.
As they were putting makeup on them, prosthetic makeup on,
they make up the scar across their face.
A huge big smile as if you'd been to sort of gang violence,
it's massive scar across their face.
And then as they're about to head in,
they said, oh, just one moment before you go in,
we're going to touch it up and just refine the scar a little bit more.
And the participants weren't allowed to see themselves before they went in.
They removed the scar.
They put them in.
They said, have the interview come back, tell us, do you think the person noticed the scar?
Do you think that the interview went well or badly because of their impressions of this?
They couldn't stop staring at it.
I'm absolutely certain that they were judging me because of it.
This is horrible.
This is so bad.
Please, look in the mirror, the scar wasn't even there.
Wasn't even there.
Right.
I think a lot of times, it's really interesting if you meet someone the first time.
and the conversation goes great.
And sometimes a couple hours later,
they'll email you and say,
God, I'm so sorry that I said X, Y, and Z.
After I thought about it,
that probably offended you.
And 99% of the time, like,
I didn't think about it whatsoever.
So the idea that most people,
they don't have the bandwidth to think about you
because they're busy worrying about themselves.
And so in that situation,
there were probably people in that room
who did have scars,
did have birth marks,
did have ugly sweaters,
They're worrying about themselves
and not thinking about other people.
What's that word for staircase regret?
Les Spirit de Scalié.
Can you with that?
No.
Okay, so Le Spirit de Scalié,
Staircase Witt is a French term used in English
for the predicament of thinking
of the perfect reply too late.
Oh, all the time.
As you're going down,
Le Spirit de Scalié,
and someone said,
we'll know when AI has fully reached human intelligence,
when it regrets not saying the thing
it meant to say on its way out of the chat.
See, this is why I like blogs more than books.
Me too.
I would always do that.
I would write a blog post.
And a week later, I'd be like, God, in that second paragraph, you know what sentence I should
I should use this sentence.
Well, that's the next blog.
No, I'll just go update it.
I'll just go update the blog.
Where's a book when it's printed?
It's done.
That's it.
That's the issue with email, right?
If you're pumping this stuff out, you don't get back to go back into someone's.
Can't go back into, think it, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
A quick aside, you've probably heard experts like Dr. Ronda Patrick talk about the benefits of
Omega-3s.
They reduce, hello, omega-3s.
There they are. They reduce brain function. No, they don't. They support brain function.
Maybe I should take more. They support brain function, reduce inflammation, improve heart health,
and are backed by hundreds of studies. But here's the thing. All omega-3s are not made the same.
Most brands cut corners. They use cheap fish oil, skip purity testing, throw in fillers, and call it a day.
But with Momentus, you know you're getting the highest quality omega-3s on the market. They're NSF certified
for sport and they're tested for heavy metals and purity. So you can rest easy, knowing anything that you take,
from Momentus is unparalleled when it comes to rigorous third-party testing. What you read on the
label is what's in the product and absolutely nothing else. Most of all, Momentus offers a 30-day money-back
guarantee so you can buy it and try it for 29 days. If you don't love it, they'll just give you
your money back. Plus, they ship internationally. Right now, you can get 35% off your first
subscription and that 30-day money-back guarantee by going to the link in the description below or
heading to livemomomomomomomom slash modern wisdom and using the code modern wisdom at checkout. That's
L-I-V-E-M-O-M-O-U-S dot com slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom.
A checkout.
When you look at the happiest people that you've met,
what did they have in common that money alone doesn't explain?
I think they were very internally benchmark-focused.
Their benchmark for how well their life was doing was like health, marriage, kids' job.
It was a very, it didn't leave the confines of their roof.
And you can flip that around and say some of the,
the least happy people you met are a purely external benchmark. How beautiful am I? How many
followers do I have? How many other people do I think are looking at me is a very external benchmark
focused. That's almost always the case. The internal versus the external benchmark is everything
with in terms of contentment and money. And contentment's important because the emotion that
people want to chase with money is happiness. I want to be happy because this is earlier. Happiness is
always fleeting. You experience happiness and it's awesome. But no one's happy for more
than usually a couple minutes at a time.
I use the example of happiness as like humor.
Like if I tell you the best joke in the world,
or if we listen to Jimmy Carr, let's say,
and it's the funniest joke, you laugh for 30 seconds.
You don't laugh for 30 years.
This is not how humor works.
And if I told you the joke every day over and over again,
you're like, stop.
It's lost all value at this point.
And I think so happiness is that way.
It's great emotion, it's fleeting.
Contentment, though, is permanent.
Isn't it interesting that music is different?
You can listen to your favorite song a thousand times
and still love it on 1001,
but the same is not true with jokes.
Movies.
Derek Thompson of the Atlanta,
it used to be at the Atlantic Road about this,
that if you watch a movie 100 times,
you want to blow your brains out.
It's just you hate it.
But you listen to a song a thousand times,
they can get better over time.
It's a different part of your brain that's processing it.
But I think that it tends to be the case.
But being content, just waking up and be like,
I got everything I want,
and I can live in the moment and just appreciate what I have.
And yeah,
there's a lot of people who have a lot more than me, but I don't focus on that. I got everything that I need right here. It's a unique mindset.
There's two elements that I thought about a lot last year to do with happiness. One is that happiness can only arise when uncertainty isn't present. Like if you're highly uncertain, and maybe you're uncertain about how the football game's going to go, and that's kind of exciting. But when we're talking about life, ambiguity, is my job going to be around in three weeks?
weeks time or is my partner going to stay with me or is my dog going to die or is my kid going to
come home uncertainty is just cancerous to happiness and the second one is from navarre which is
happiness can only arise when you don't want things to be different yeah like if things are uncertain
are ambiguous are ambivalent and you want the world to be different that is those two things and
they cross over a lot they're often intersected uh
it becomes very difficult to be happy.
So in as much as money is able to reduce uncertainty
and allow you to want things to be different less,
I think that creates a nice foundation
because that's kind of like a price that everybody has to pay.
If you've got high uncertainty
and you want lots of things to be different,
to whatever extent money is able to reduce those things,
I think that's a good reason to gain more of it.
Just using it as a tool for optionality to say, look, if we were to experience the second
Great Depression, I'm going to be okay. And my kids are going to be okay. If I want to change
careers, I can do that. If I want to move, I can do that. If I want to work less, I can do that.
Having the mere option to do it, even if you're not exercising that option, is tremendous for people
of just waking up this morning and being like, my life's in my control.
35 to 40 percent of adults in the U.S. say they couldn't cover a $400 emergency without borrowing or selling
something.
Shocking, right?
And look, here's the thing.
If you had said that statistic to someone 100 years ago and it wasn't $400, just $40,
would ever be adjusted for inflation, people would be like, yeah, that's how life works.
Life is fragile and brutal.
And the idea that you have unemployment and you need to and drastically reduce your lifestyle,
that would be the norm for people.
I think we're fortunate to live in an era where there's an expectation that ordinary people
are going to have some sense of some sense.
semblance of protection and safety.
Because other people do.
In their life, right?
Yeah.
What's your favorite historical example of the difference between being rich and having wealth?
Because there is a difference between these two things.
To me, the most interesting family of all the mega-rich families that existed, of all the robber baron families, the mega-rich, the mega-rich, the Carnegie's, the Rockefellers, and the J.P. Morgan's did, did,
pretty good job managing their money. They lived good lives themselves. They left it to beneficial causes.
Not perfect, but they did a pretty good job. The Vanderbilt, I think, by far, did the worst.
And it's such a fascinating example to dig into the Vanderbilt family of, you know, when Cornelius Vanderbilt died, adjusted for inflation,
depending on metrics used, he had something like three to five hundred billion dollars, adjusted for inflation.
And within several generations, three generations, not that long of a period, there's virtually
nothing left. And not a tremendous amount went to charity either. Vanderbilt University was kind of
their big project, which didn't even cost that much money to fund it. But most of it was spent on
three generations of Vanderbilt heirs who were just in a generational pissing contest to see who
could spend it the fastest. And if you dig into their biographies, there have been several
biographies written about them. It is, it's telling and it's kind of sad. Because true to the
David Senra idea of like super successful people who you would know.
never want to be, that's the sense that you get reading the biography of the Vanderbilt
errors. The money told them who they could be. It told them where they could live, who they could
marry, who they could socialize with, how they had to dress. They had no independence over their
life at all. And a lot of them, it was almost like they were characters in a movie. Like the
movie was called the Vanderbilt family. And they were just reading from a script on who they could be.
They had no independence on who they could be. And a lot of them were just miserable for it. And
this is now a well-known thing. But one of the first Van derbyald
Vanderbilt heirs who didn't get a trust fund when there was like no money left over.
It was Anderson Cooper.
And he's talked about this about how he's kind of the first Vanderbilt heir in 150 years who was allowed to be himself.
Had to figure out who he was, create his own identity, make his own money, be his own person.
And it was almost like he was the first person who was like relieved of the burden of the money controlling who they were.
Well, he inherited the genetics of somebody that was able to make $350 billion,
but didn't have to deal with the gravity of managing it.
Or just dictating who it was.
He also had another element, which is that his last name's not Vanderbilt.
His mother was Gloria Vanderbilt, and his father was a guy named Wyatt Cooper.
And so he didn't have the name recognition of it that would follow him around for the rest of his life
and changed people's opinion of him.
Where did they spend the money on?
The Vanderbilt's?
Yeah.
Most of it, a lot of it was mansions.
and parties and yachts and just the most ostentatious lifestyle that you can imagine.
A lot of it was, you know, some of the mansions that they made,
this goes back to the point of what people actually want is like a smaller house.
And so some of the mansions that they made were so unbelievably huge
that they didn't want to spend any time in them.
They were so big and so unhomely that what they wanted to spend was the smaller apartment
that they had in New York that felt much more like home to them.
versus the other house, the gigantic mansion that they had, was a trophy.
It was to show other people that you had, but nobody needs a house with 70 master bedrooms kind of thing.
It was just to show people what you had.
And I think there's another element here, which is when you don't make the money yourself, when it was inherited from somebody else,
then the symbolism of what you've overcome doesn't exist.
It's not there.
If you made it yourself, then the gigantic mansion is a symbol to yourself of what you've done and what you've built,
once you overcame in life, and you take tremendous pride and gratitude in that.
You had herded it from someone else.
You had none of that.
Do you know Eddie Hearn, boxing promoter?
Sounds familiar.
British boxing promoter, big name in that world.
And his dad created the organization that he now runs, and he was asked,
what do you regret about childhood or what do you wish it changed?
And he says, no, it was.
I really loved my life, love my life, loved my dad.
But I never got to do it first.
Yeah, yeah.
I never got to do it first.
And if your parents are unbelievably successful, you know there's no chance statistically that you'll ever exceed them.
Well, I mean, if you're someone to become a writer, what's the likelihood that you can outstrip the psychology of money?
You, the guy who wrote it can't outstrip the psychology of money.
Right.
And imagine if one of Elon Musk's children.
is an entrepreneur and creates a business that's worth a billion dollars.
That's cute.
Right?
Imagine if they become self-made billionaires, one billionaires, and your dad is worth $700 million.
Oh, that's so cool.
Yeah, I mean, even if, what, I've never even thought of that, but what a horrible bind that
you'd be.
And I know that he's got a slightly strange relationship with some of the kids.
Even if you would say, I don't want any of the inheritance, I don't want to even take the name,
I'm going to change all of the things.
And then you go and independently, you become a millionaire or a billionaire.
How many people are going to go, yeah, well, I mean, you were Elon Musk's kid.
I don't even talk to him.
We haven't even looked.
I don't even, I'm not even on the way.
Yeah, but you were Elon Musk's.
Well, look at that something where you can't necessarily use your parents, you know, status, someone like Brony James.
Is that?
LeBron James son.
Oh.
Who now plays for the Lakers.
He's a, made the NBA.
Unbelievably good himself.
but he's always going to be LeBron's son, right?
You know, it's interesting, though,
Steph Curry's got a higher percentage shoot than his dad.
Is that right?
Yeah.
So what you see is typically a regression to the mean in the world of basketball.
Seth Stevens-Dividowitz did a wonderful book on basketball,
the mathematics of basketball, basically.
For every inch that you are over six foot,
your likelihood of getting into the NBA doubles.
So it's twice as much, twice as much, twice.
And it doesn't stop to six-seven to six-seven,
to 6-8 to 6-9, it just keeps going.
But the regression to the mean usually happens.
If you have this outlier freak of an athlete,
typically the sun goes a bit closer to whatever the median is,
except for with more skill-based players,
and that is typically free-throw shooters.
Because not only have you got some of that genetic material
that's percolating through you,
but you've also got all of the expertise,
all of the tactic and all of the training.
And Steph Curry is the canonical example of this,
that his dad was really, really great at what he did.
And Steph Curry is better.
So there's some cool, you know, it's okay, well, what are the,
what are the kind of inheritances that I can take from my parents?
My dad left school with no qualifications at 16, non, zero qualifications at 16.
And I'm the first person in my family to have gone to university.
But I was able to learn stuff from him.
that I didn't need to use in an academic setting.
Get a fucking master's in international marketing, I can't remember.
None of that really mattered.
Yeah, no, that's interesting.
I think there's a lot of people who are very talented in their own right,
but will always be in the shadow of their parents.
Colin Hanks is a very talented actor, unbelievably talented.
Tom Hanks?
Exactly.
You knew it with, I could tell you don't even know who Colin Hanks is,
but you know he's Tom Hanks' son.
And he's unbelievably talented.
If you just put him in his own right, he'd be an A-LIS actor.
but I think he'll always be known as Tom Higgs-son.
There's an interesting explanation about why the children of wealthy families perform so well in school,
and it's not the additional tutoring or the after-school clubs or the going to a higher-rated local comprehensive.
It's not to do with any of that, even if you control for all of those things.
It seems to be the fact that those are the kinds of kids who are driven to do
unreasonable things in a desperate attempt to escape the gravity of their parents' accomplishments.
Yeah. Yeah. And that's why you see more drug use among the kids of wealthy parents,
again, not because maybe, because they can afford it, they're got either having these sort of
swanky parties at 16 and they're bringing their friends around and one of them's got ecstasy or
whatever it is. But how much of it is just trying to escape the fucking expectations of their
parents? Yes. And how unpopular of an opinion is this to talk about, oh, sorry, these poor,
upper class kids that are out in, you know, fucking Long Island, off on the tails of the fish,
just parting it up in the Hamptons.
Like, hey, I mean, these kids are driven to do unreasonable thing.
To get into a varsity league university, to do the things that are needed, unless you're
unbelievably naturally talented, to do the things that are required in order to become a billionaire.
Like, if you've read Walter Isaacson's book about Musk, it's evident that he is just on a
an intergenerational, generational, generational run to disprove all of the shit that happened to him as a kid.
Yeah, yeah. And I think, there's a different flavor of this. I met, I did some work for a family
many years ago that they were, they're multi, multi-billionaires. And it was the grandfather who made all the
money. And I was working with the grandchildren. We're mostly like probably 18 to 25 years old,
let's say. And I was there to teach them about some money stuff. And one of the things they said,
because the other element here
was all of these kids were very good looking.
The guys and the girls are extremely good looking
and they all have access to unlimited money
and live unbelievable lives.
One of them had a helipad in his backyard kind of thing,
just unbelievable quintessential billionaire children.
And one of the things they brought up
was how hard it is to date.
And they said two things.
One is it's almost impossible to find someone
who can just look past the money
and actually like me for being me.
The other thing is that if the relationship
progresses long enough, basically the family's lawyer pulls the boyfriend and girlfriend aside and says,
if this relationship gets to a proposal, you'll be met with the most ironclad pre-nup that has ever
existed in the world. And after that meeting, so many of the boyfriend and girlfriends are like,
I don't know. I don't know if this is what I want to do. And so you have these very good looking
19-year-olds with unlimited money, and they're almost undatable. It's like, and so that's like a tiny
violin thing. But the social pressure, I've called it social debt. There's a social debt that can
hang over having a lot of money. That's very difficult to contextualize when you don't have a lot of
money. What are the worst ways to spend money then? If someone wanted to guarantee dissatisfaction with
their wealth, what would you tell them to adopt? I think you would anchor all of your expectations
and all of your goals to the chasing the admiration of people who are not important in your life.
I desperately want my wife and kids to admire me and love me and pay attention to me.
After that, it drops off precipitously.
And I think if you're the kind of person, and social media has really put a spotlight on a lot of these people who are just desperate for the attention and the engagement of total strangers.
And their life's purpose, like they're the only thing that matters to them in their life is the engagement of strangers.
And it's a very unhealthy way to go about things.
I think is always going to leave you empty.
So I think that's the biggest.
I want to be very ambitious financially and career-wise to benefit a very small number of people in my life, fewer than 10 people, a family, a couple friends kind of thing.
And after that, I couldn't give two shits about what happens from there.
I think that's the goal of happiness and everything around it, the opposite of that, of trying to impress people who aren't paying attention, is the source of the vast majority of financial misery.
Okay. Ultimately, you do end up needing to spend money.
and if people get to the place that they want to,
which is some kind of wealth escape velocity
where they can have more than they need,
you're going to end up spending it on some stuff
that isn't the necessities.
So what's the opposite?
What are the best places for people to spend money?
I think where a lot of people go astray with this,
I'll definitely get to what works,
but where they go astray is don't spend money on things,
spend money on experiences.
I think a lot of things are awesome
and a lot of experiences can leave you pretty empty,
particularly in the social media world
I think of a lot of people
I would venture to say most people
pick their next vacation
based off of what's going to make
the best picture on social media
Oh, that's interesting
And I've talked about this before
You know what my personal example of this is
This is very subjective
People can disagree with this, Bali
Okay
You ever been to Bali?
I have twice.
I came off a moped once.
Do you like it?
Yeah, I do actually
Okay, so we might differ in this
I think Bali is
super overrated, not your bag?
Completely overrated.
We went there, it's not bad
but I've been to so many other
tropical places that were 10 times better.
But if you go to Bali and you post a picture on Instagram or TikTok, if you go into Bali,
you think at least people are going to be like, wow, you went to Bali.
That's so cool.
It's so exotic.
And so I think there's quite a bit of that of like the experience thing is a different.
What are the other than holidays and what are some other experiences that you think
people get the spend money on experiences, not things being inverted due to?
The reason I think travel can be beneficial for a lot of people is sometimes it's not even the destination of where you're going or how beautiful the destination is, is that you need to travel to kind of give yourself permission to detach from the rest of your life.
And so if flying to Maui is the only chance that you can have totally uninterrupted time with your spouse or your kids, you just can't do it at home.
You're too distracted at home. Your kids are too distracted at home. You have to fly out of Maui in order to sit there and spend hours with each other.
in each other's presence and company, like that's the value of it.
I think that that tends to be true.
And that's definitely been the case for me, that I have to go somewhere else to totally detach.
And if you have some sort of staycation at home, or even just a weekend at home,
we're all, everyone in my family is all kind of just lost in their own world, their own
priorities, their own email or friends or whatnot.
They're not lost in it.
And you have to detach from that in order to spend quality time.
To me, that's the biggest value of spending money on travel.
vacations. We'll get back to talking in just one second, but first, if you have been feeling a bit
sluggish, your testosterone levels might be the problem. They play a huge role in your energy,
your focus and your performance. But most people have no idea where there's are or what to do
if something's off, which is why I partnered with function, because I wanted a smarter and more
comprehensive way to actually understand what's happening inside of my body. Twice a year,
they run lab tests that monitor over 100 biomarkers. They've got a team of expert physicians
that analyze the data and give you actionable advice to improve your health and life.
man and seeing your testosterone levels and tons of other biomarkers charted over the course of a year
with actionable insights to actually improve them gives you a clear path to making your life better.
Getting a blood work drawn and analyzed like this would usually cost thousands, but with function,
it's just $499.
And right now, you can get $100 off, bringing it down to $399 bucks.
Get the exact same blood panels that I get and save that $100 by going to the link in the description
below or heading to functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom.
That's functionhealth.com.
slash modern wisdom. You know what it makes me think about how cool it would be to just have a cabin in
the woods that's within 90 minutes of your house. That is all of the benefit of not at home,
not in work mode, not even in typical family mode. It's got all of our stuff there. And I don't
I guess this is why people like caravanning in the UK. I don't think it quite exists in the same way
here in America.
But a caravan park where what you're doing is you're extricating yourself from the usual
day-to-day monotony and you're putting yourself into this new thing, this different thing.
Yeah.
I guess the problem is that if you go there enough, that just becomes...
It's not new anymore.
Yeah.
Fuck it. Fuck the caravan.
I think the idea that you just hit on, which is what really gives, what has a potential
to make you happy.
We said before, a lot of happiness is surprise is trying new things.
and a lot of it is everyone has their thing
that they might spend money on cars, food, clothes.
Everyone's got a different thing.
Everybody has a thing, but it's always different.
And it's not always obvious what your thing might be.
And so I think you have to experiment
with a lot of different kinds of spending
to actually figure out what's going to be right for you.
So little experiments of like,
try eating out a fancier restaurant than you normally would.
It might not do it for you.
Wine is not my thing.
I have so many friends who are like,
because I'm not a wine guy.
And they're like, all right, you haven't tried the right wine.
And they're like, this is going to change your life, Morgan.
They hand me a glass.
And I'm like, it all tastes the same to me.
I'm so I just don't have it.
I'm a fellow Stein as well.
Right.
But there's other people that's like wine gives them so much happiness and purpose.
And they love the collection, the tasting.
Everyone's got to find their thing.
One of the things for me with reading is that I think a lot of the reason that people don't like reading,
they obviously just haven't figured out the kind of book that's going to work for them.
And it's not always obvious what you will enjoy.
And so for the longest time, I was like, fiction doesn't work for me.
But I've heard from so many people that are like, fiction changed my life.
These stories changed my life.
And I always try and I couldn't figure it out.
And I finally found like a genre of fiction that would work for me.
But I had to experiment so many different times.
It's like historical fiction.
It has a potential.
Science fiction just makes, I don't understand why anyone would enjoy it.
But historical fiction, this could be true.
I'm like, I can sit there and read this all day long.
I love that kind of stuff.
What is some of your favorite fiction books?
You know, some of those, there's one that was a historical fiction of the history of New York City,
starting back before it had been populated when it was truly just a forest inhabited by beavers and whatnot.
And then it tracked a series of families, a Dutch family that originally colonized that,
and then through the generations ending up with 9-11.
No way.
And tracked it.
It's like a thousand-page book.
What's it called?
Can I, can you get it?
Yeah, I get it. Dude, that sounds fucking awesome.
Amazing.
Because when I think historical fiction, what I think is fall of the Roman Empire or Game of Thrones but without the Dragons.
And something that brings, what's that man in the high tower?
That was kind of similar, right?
If the Germans won.
Alternative history, but it's moderately modern history.
Because it has a unique name.
No, it doesn't have a unique name.
The book's name is New York.
And who's it by?
Guy's name is Edward Rutherford.
Okay.
I imagine there's lots of books.
He's written, he also wrote one on the history of London, and that has a unique name.
Same thing.
Yes.
All made up.
This is such a cool.
And the history of China.
This is such a cool way to do.
All that you do is take some interesting place and then make a fake story about.
And here's kind of how he does it is let's start with a family and then track generations of that family over 500 years.
The Vanderbiltz.
Right.
Right, and so it's fascinating.
And he gets very deep into the culture of what New York was at different periods of time.
That rules.
Very different 200 years ago than it would have been today.
So that I could wrap my head around.
The best fiction for me is when I'm reading it, and I forget that it's fiction.
Oh, yeah.
It's just a slightly more exciting biography or retelling of something that could have been.
The other trash fiction that I love is like John Grisham, because it easily could be true.
And that's another where I'm reading it.
I have to remind myself that he made all this up.
I got into a spiral last year.
because I was pretty tired,
and I was trying to look after my health
and do a bunch of other stuff.
So I got pinged on whatever the Amazon Kindle algorithm is
with Frieda McFadden.
Yeah.
She did The Housemaid, and then the Housemaid's Revenge,
and then the teacher and the trapdoor
and the something of everything.
And then I did The Silent Patient by Andrew Michaeladies,
Alex Michaeladies,
and I just got sucked into this vortex of chick fiction
and I fucking loved it
and I thought it was so...
There's a reason it's so popular.
Yeah.
It's so good.
Yeah.
They're so easy to read.
Wasn't there a thing that, I think many years ago,
they made a version of the Harry Potter books
that had adult covers on them?
Correct.
Because adult doesn't want to hold a book
that has a cartoon cover on it.
So they made it just a...
And I think you could do that
with some of those rom-com books
or like those...
I was proudly reading The House Made by Freedom McFadden.
I was brandishing it to be...
I was reading the...
Have you read it? It's really lovely. I wonder what the twist's going to be.
I mean, so many of those are just, they're just amazing storytellers, and they just keep you
up. So I'm sure if, if Frieda McFadden wrote a John Grisham novel about, you know,
or like a crime novel or a legal thriller, like it'd be amazing.
Wouldn't that be cool? Wouldn't it be cool to go to, you know, some of the biggest authors
in different genres of fiction and get them to try and maybe work together.
You do one of mine, so you do a kind of domestic thriller thing.
about a powerful woman.
And I'll do one of yours, which is about an unsolved murder,
and then we'll get Jack Karin,
and someone can do one of his about a Navy seal
that's been trapped behind enemy lines.
And it would be so cool to see what other people's interpretation would be.
But the thing that you learn with, going back to dopamine,
that you learn when you read something like Freedom McFaddenbook,
is so much of it is pacing
and just keeping the uncertainty and the suspense going.
and the surprise and there's what's it going to be, what's it going to be.
And then after I'd read enough of these,
it's almost a little bit like learning to read them.
It's like learning to dance.
It doesn't take much learning to read.
But you become more excited when you know what's going to happen,
but you don't know how it's going to happen.
How it's going to happen?
I know that there's going to be something and it's going to get me and I'm going to go,
ah.
I think if you did that, I don't know if it would go both ways.
I think if you had J.K. Rowling, if you told her to write a nonfiction,
Like, hey, J.K. Rowling, write a thousand-word article about what's going on in Gaza, whatever it might be. It'd be amazing. But I think if you asked Michael Lewis or Malcolm Gladwell to write a fiction, it'd be much harder to make that work.
The street goes in one direct. Because the storytelling is more compelling than the other way around. All of you guys, you, George Mack, who's knee-deep in his current bucket, but high agency, all of you, especially yours, is kind of the canonical example of this. You're desperately trying to.
to sneak nonfiction ideas under the guise of fiction.
Yeah, you're just trying to tell stories.
Desmond.
Story, story, story, stories.
So much of that in finance is important,
because 99% of financial media is,
is, A, a lecture and be incredibly boring if it's formulaic.
And that's the vast majority of personal finance books.
It's a lecture, you're doing it wrong, you idiot,
and here's a really boring formula
that looks like an algebra equation of how you can fix it.
And nobody wants to read that.
It's not interesting at all.
Your line of personal finance is more personal than it is finance.
And, okay, how am I going to interject into this very psychological,
biased-driven, predisposed, patterned response with these statistics?
Shapiro's famous line, which you kind of reworked in the book,
of facts don't care about your feelings, that could not be more wrong.
Like feelings really don't care about your facts.
Yeah.
They don't give a single shit.
And that means that if you can, they should do, what Ben is sort of putting forward is
in the perfectly rational worlds that we should want to live in, it shouldn't be the case
that the way that you feel about something would impact your opinion of it, et cetera.
But the bottom line is, it does.
It does.
And it always will do.
Yes.
So, yeah, I think so much about what my bias is when I'm trying to,
tell somebody something.
I think about this with the live show that I do.
Back on tour, Australian, New Zealand and Bali coming up soon.
I'm building out the new live show,
and I've got my first work in progress show here in Austin on Monday.
I'm like, fuck.
Like, I've got all of these ideas.
I've got three years since I wrote that first show, self-discovery,
and I've not got the new one, mostly wise.
Okay, what am I going to talk about?
What am I interested in?
And I've just got a quarter of a million words that I've written on the newsletter.
All of it, all of it is just,
kind of thinly veiled
autobiographical journaling
but it's personal
and then made into the third person
so I'm like
I can't I can't do this
so I'm scouring the internet going
ooh Salvador Dali I think he brings
my idea to life
but when it comes to trying to compel somebody
to think a thing
peppering them
with statistics
and rhetoric
just straight up doesn't work
as opposed to you going
well, look, the Vanderbilt's managed to go from basically the richest people on the planet
to zero in the space of three generations.
And they did this.
Yeah, exactly.
It's true for almost anything in life that the best story wins.
Not the best idea, not the right idea.
It's just the person who can tell a good story that gets people nodding along.
That's who wins.
That's true in politics.
It's true in business.
It's true in everything.
I remember I had this friend, it was probably 10 or 15 years ago, who was like he hated Apple.
And the reason is he was like, Samsung.
and Microsoft make better for their technically better.
And they have every feature that Apple does.
And it drove him crazy.
He was like, I don't understand why anyone would own an Apple phone.
The Samsung is just objectively better.
And that was interesting.
I'm like, yeah, but Apple's just telling the better.
It's just a cooler phone.
It just tells a better story of who it is.
That's the Ben Shapiro philosophy up against what actually happened.
Feelings don't care about your facts.
Yeah, feelings don't care about your processor speed.
Yeah, people, it was just a better story.
But you see that everywhere of just the person who can tell.
tell the best story. This is why a lot of, the example I like to use is Bill Bryson,
fantastic author, one of the greatest authors of our times, written some amazing books.
And my understanding is that if you are an academic historian, you know, if you're a Harvard
historian, by and large, you don't like Bill Bryson because you consider him a pop historian
is what they would call him. And to me, pop historian just means you're a good writer.
It just means you can communicate things better than the academics who are writing in the
most dense, forbose language that nobody wants to read. And so if you can,
I think there's a lot of room in the world for people to take really good ideas from academics who have no communication ability and just explain them a little bit better.
You can move mountains doing that.
Both of us?
What do you think?
Both of us?
My career is me poorly reinterpreting the ideas of smarter people who are smaller in platform and need somewhere to come and speak it.
That's exactly what it is.
It's like, hey, I had a conversation with a guy who is an evolutionary pediatrician.
So he looks at child rearing through an evolutionary lens,
and this is both from a developmental standpoint and a medical standpoint.
This works fascinating.
He's done lots of work that's been tangential to reducing anaphylaxis from peanut allergies
by realizing the amount, the sort of dose that these kids would be exposed to,
and then you do this titrated exposure over time.
You can get rid of it and you can do the same thing with dairy.
Then he's talking about how one in six American adults have occipital flattening,
the occipital lobe at the back of the head because kids are laid on a mat for so long
while their skulls are still forming like an ice cube in a tray freezing in the freezer.
You've ice cubed your kid's head.
But a kid on the ground is a meal and that you look at what happens with hunter-gatherer tribes in their whole.
Anyway, 50 things like that.
I had to explain
it was so cute
he had to get
maybe his daughter-in-law
he's like in his 70s
to get his daughter-in-law
to come and explain to him
how the webcam works
and I'm like getting him
to sort of rejating
then I got him to sit down
and this guy is a fucking legend
he's so good
he's a great communicator
he's full of vim and vigor
it's great
I was like
you rule
and you're significantly
more talented than me
but nobody knows who you are
immersively
from a thousand and a bit
repetitions of doing this thing
sitting down with people like you
I'm like I now
now have this weird kind of slingshot that I can strap you into and go boom yeah and just send your yeah
shamelessly repurposing the ideas of people who are way smarter but just need a platform yeah and then
allowing them to come on and shine and go dude it's a great thing to do I mean this is what the internet
and social media has done so well is it's just turned a lot of things into a pure meritocracy
like I don't I don't know nobody gives a shit where you went to school when I was just like if you can tell a
story, you go straight to the top.
And it's getting more like that now as well.
Yeah.
Right.
Now, that can be gamified, of course, on social media in a way that can be kind of nasty.
You can...
When people learn that the right way to get attention on X is to do this and say that and
rage bait and whatnot, you can gamify that.
But still, it is 100,000 times more meritocratic than it was 20 years ago.
Yeah.
And the internet, I think social media is more egalitarian, americocratic now than it was even
three or five years ago.
How so?
The biggest YouTube channels don't have the most plays.
the biggest TikTok accounts don't have the highest shares,
the biggest Instagram accounts, don't get the most reach.
It's if you do, my friend Zach, who I lived with and I toured with around North America this year, last year,
he realized that chat GPT shits itself if you try and get it to spell the word strawberry out loud
in terms of counting the number of ours.
Yes, yeah, people, yeah.
And he did half a million likes.
I think it had 15 million plays in a week.
from him just having a conversation with chat chipped tea trying to get his spill straw
trying desperately trying he's arguing with it and getting infuriated with it um my point is he's got
a couple of hundred thousand followers on instagram which is lots but it's not an absurd amount the video
was just good yeah the the platforms are getting more and more egalitarian which means that you don't
you you you can compete with anybody that you want if you put the right sort of thing out with a
base rate of launch velocity you you can you can absolutely crush it on the
the point of we kind of don't necessarily know what it is that we want. You heard the story about
Jenny Jerome, Winston Churchill's mother. Yeah, Churchill's mom, yeah. Yeah, so she dined with
Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli and his rival, William Gladstone, on consecutive nights. She was a bit of
a sort of Hollywood socialite. And when asked about her impressions of the two men, she said,
when I left the dining room after sitting next to Gladstone, I thought he was the cleverest man in
England, but when I sat next to Disraeli, I left feeling like I was the cleverest woman.
That's good. Yeah.
And I think a lot of the time people believe that they want to be charismatic, but...
You want to make the other person feel good about themselves.
Bingo.
Some people are interesting and some people make us feel interesting.
I was telling someone earlier today about someone who we both know, a mutual friend, who
when I met this person, I came away and I was like, I think he really likes me.
Like, he really seems interested in me.
And then I had this moment.
I'm like, I think actually he does that to everybody.
I think he has that effect on every single person that he needs.
That's a great point from Matthew Hussey around dating that people go on a first date with someone and feel this incredible spark and think that it's something special between them and the person without realizing that that person is just sparky.
Yeah.
They just have this effect.
To anybody.
On everybody, yeah.
But the reason that I love that story about Jenny Jerome is a lot of people believe that they want to be more charismatic because they want to walk into a room and for that all.
to be electric and everyone's sort of turn and gas,
and be so impressed.
But when I reflected on the sort of friends
that I liked spending the most time around,
they weren't the ones that had this magnetic aura
that was super impressive and dominant or formidable or whatever.
Made you feel good about yourself.
People that I wanted to hang around with
because they made me feel good about it.
They made me feel interesting.
And it's a great thing,
what we're talking about earlier,
of like, no one's thinking about you as much as you are.
And so no one's paying that much attention
to your aura.
or your charisma, or if anything, they might find it gross and egotistical.
But if that person makes you feel good about yourself,
it makes you feel good about the person who you are inside of your own head.
People love that.
Politicians figured that out a long time ago.
How so?
Of making other people feel good about themselves.
When you meet someone, it's less about look how powerful I am
and more about liking themselves and making you feel good about yourself.
There's always been the trick.
Wasn't that a descriptor of the people that had met Clinton
He made me feel like I was the only person in the room.
That's exactly it. Yeah.
Yeah, I was trying to think of who the other one right that.
I think it was Howard Dean, someone said.
Who the fuck's that?
Or John Edwards.
Who the fuck's that?
They both ran for presidency in the early 2000s.
John Edwards had a huge flame out, but they were very talented.
Of everyone they met, they'd be like, he really likes me.
Magnetic.
He remembered me kind of thing.
That's always been a skill.
That's also a really good way.
If you want to hurt someone, if you really, really want to hurt someone,
when you shake the hand, just look right through them.
Yeah. I'll tell you, I won't tell you who they are because they're still writing. But I had a writing role model 10 or 15 years ago.
Okay.
person I looked up to more than anybody, and I wanted to emulate this person.
And not only the writing, but career-wise, I was like, I want to be this person.
And I saw them at a conference.
And I never met him, never exchanged a word with them.
And I came up and I said, oh, I'm Morgan Howells.
It's nice to meet you.
And he went, who?
I'm a writer for the Motley Fool.
And he basically swatted me away and kept walking.
Look through you.
And I will never forget that.
It made me feel so small.
And the fact that I looked up to him so much at that time.
And honestly, it was a no-nothing event.
I'm not going to pretend it was that big a deal, but I'll never forget it.
People will never forget how they made you feel good or bad in that moment.
Well, you're right to say that the expectation as well, talking about expectations, talking about wealth, your expectation of meeting this person who you've idolized for a very long time.
You had, because if you'd just been some bloke who didn't know who that other bloke was, you said, oh, I'm Morgan.
And he seemed a little bit rude.
Whereas you had the clouds are going to part and the angelic music's going to come down.
In his mind, I was just a little rat getting in his way that he needed to brush aside.
In my mind, he's a hero.
He's a goat.
The key to understanding most online debates is that a lot of people take joy in being angry.
It's their preferred mindset because it makes them feel morally superior to the other side.
It's intoxicating.
That is such money.
That is so good.
And I think it's the idea that like every judgment is a confession.
When you judge other people, when you judge other people, you're actually confessing something about yourself.
And a lot of people enjoy being angry because it gives them an intoxicating sense of moral superiority.
Because what you're saying is if I say, Chris, you are immoral.
You're doing things wrong.
You're a terrible person.
What I'm actually saying is I'm doing it better.
Implicitly.
I'm doing it better.
And I feel good about myself.
I've elevated myself by pushing you down.
And that's why a lot of this happens.
It's not that people, like, people enjoy being angry.
They want to be angry because it makes them feel good about themselves.
And if you see it through that lens, why is everyone so pissed off?
Why is social media so negative?
Because it feels great.
It can feel great to hate other people, especially on social media where you don't need to do it to their face.
You don't need to physically attack the person.
You just write this and I feel great about myself.
Yeah, implicit in that my morality stands on the shoulders of your morality that I've just pushed down a peg.
The only way that I can really measure what my morality is is if I identify people who are below me.
Correct.
And that's why it feels great to identify people below me and constantly be looking for them and reminding them that they're below me.
There's an idea from evolutionary psychology about female intracultural competition.
It's called the bless her heart effect.
What it explains is a type of gossip that is more prevalent among women than it is among men and it's venting.
venting is
couching
the critique of a potential rival
under the guise
of concern
so Morgan
I just I need to tell you about Elizabeth
I'm just so worried about her because she's sleeping with
all of these guys and I'm just
so worried that she's going to get hurt
I'm just here to look out for you
what have you taught you've said that Elizabeth sleeping with all of these guys
that you would never
me I would never so implicit in the
derogation of her
you've disrupted her trajectory
and implicitly raised up your own
you've managed to get
if Elizabeth comes and says Christina
why did you why did you tell Morgan this thing
and I go see how Morgan's good
because it's a girl's name as well
Christina why do you say
Elizabeth I'm so sorry I'm just
I'm really worried about you ask
was I was I was I gossiping
or was I worried about her
yeah and yeah the bless her heart effect
I mean there's there's another version of this
joke that goes around
that girls like telling other girls that they should cut their hair short.
I had the research.
Because they know guys by and large don't like that.
But if you tell your girlfriend to do it, you've just demoted her and promoted yourself.
Dr. Danielle Silikowski.
Oh, that's a real or a joke.
Dr. Daniel Silikowski is the woman who did the study on this.
Okay.
And women who are higher in what's called intracultural competition, which was the dynamic I was literally just talking about.
Yeah.
Women who rate higher on that advised women that they saw as potential sexual rivals to cut off more hat.
Yeah.
It's so fascinating.
Bro, there is an entire world.
Everything's a competition.
But there is an entire world.
This is why, when it comes to finance, it must be really fascinating.
And I know that there is a huge world of this, like financial advice for women.
Yeah.
And I don't know what the split is of people who read your books.
But it's the same fuel source and a similar outcome that both men and women are looking for when it comes to finance.
But their motivations for getting there have to be very different.
And the way that they think about money,
I would imagine that there is a big sex difference.
Steve Stewart Williams,
who wrote The Fantastic, The Apo, Understood the Universe.
His new book is A Billion Years of Sex Differences.
I can't wait.
Yes, I see this.
He's going to be so cancelled
and it's going to be so fucking brilliant.
And there have to be some really interesting sex differences.
Like, what is it that are driving women to accumulate wealth
and what are their fears?
And what about men?
Because we certainly know that women spend moments,
money on beautification and men spend more on cars and watches. Men spend more on formidableity.
Women spend more on making themselves look younger. Okay, so what does that say about the
motivations and the dynamics? If you start to lose being number 100 in the world and then dropping
down to 150, how does that feel to a man and how does that feel to a woman? So, you know, when you're
talking about there is no one size fits all, even from the same culture, same family, same background,
same industry, well, those two individual people, if you just pick man versus woman.
Yes, you get a totally different outcome.
Universe is a part.
I'm willing to bet, too. I don't have this data.
I'm willing to bet if you were to sort through the most reckless Robin Hood accounts of people
who just blew themselves up.
You know, they had a six-figure account balance and bet it all on this thing and lost everything.
I'm willing to bet good money, 98% of them would be men.
Of course.
It's just the mindset of it.
But I also think to that point, on the getting rich versus staying rich spectrum,
I think it tends to be the case that men are better at getting rich
because they are willing to take unbelievable risks
and women are better at staying rich
because they have a more developed prefrontal cortex
who can better size up the wrist.
I wonder if this is a really wonderful pro-marriage argument.
You need both.
Yes, yes, yes.
You need the man to have got you off the launch pad
and then you need the woman to keep you out in orbit.
Yeah, I think that's...
What a cool.
There's a lot of things like.
I forget where I read this recently or heard this recently
that young men in particular really need guard.
Scott Galloways who wrote this,
young men really need guard rails,
by and large, from women who can put the guardrails around them,
left to their own devices.
They're going to make terrible decisions.
Very bad.
I'm sure I've been,
my wife and I've been together for 20 years,
and I'm sure a lot of my financial philosophies in my own house
are based on the idea that, like, this is just me.
I have a family to take care of.
So I'm not going to take risks.
I otherwise might if I was on my own.
And otherwise would make perfect sense to me
if I was on my own.
But now I have the family guardrails around me to temper that down and be like, no, this ain't
for me.
Don't use leverage.
Don't use leverage.
Not today.
Right.
Right.
Let's not use more.
And certainly I did a lot of crazier things when I was much younger and not married,
not partnered because they seem like good.
I think the vast majority of young men in particular, when they are first exposed to investing,
have a pure gambling mindset.
And the idea of like, buy a diversified portfolio and hold it for 50 years, you're like,
That's nobody's knee-jerk reaction of what you should do.
Everybody's knee-jerk reaction is like, what's the fastest way that I can get rich?
I wonder if that is going to become more prevalent with polymarket and calci.
Oh, it's the worst.
There is so much financial history across cultures, across countries, across generations,
that if you give people the tools to light themselves on fire financially,
they will douse themselves in kerosene and light the match.
They will take it full and ruin their lives doing it.
Yeah.
And they'll do it.
And so, look, I'm a free markets guy.
I'm a free, I'm an individual responsibility guy.
But giving 17-year-old boys the power to bet their meager life savings that they need for tuition or whatever it might be to bet on the spread of tonight's game.
I don't think we're going to look at that fondly.
And every statistic, it hasn't been around for that long.
And every statistic, if you talk to like therapists of just like the explosion of young men coming to them and being like,
I'm broke. I lost everything. I spent all of my time. What on? Sports betting. Sports betting.
Or stock market. Wow.
Robbenhood kind of things. And so it used to be whether it was legally or the barriers to entry to stock trading 20 years ago were pretty high. You know, you were paying per trade. There was a per trade fee that was like a speed bump that I actually think was a good thing. Like there's not a lot of times in life where lower costs gives worse consumer outcomes. I think stock trading was one of them. It was just enough speed bump.
for you to be like, do I want to be doing this?
Is this the right trade to make?
Now you can sit there on Robin Hood all day and just buy sale, buy sale, buy sale, buy sale.
And everything we know about investing is like, that's the behavior that's going to lead to regret.
What are some of the biggest well-meaning mistakes that parents make when money enters the picture
and it's related to their kids?
I think a lot of wealthier parents, not super wealthy, but just parents of some low level of means,
have an idea, very understandable idea of like, I want to use my money to give my kids a better life, but I don't want them to be spoiled.
And the way that they go about that with very well-meaning intentions is being like, look, we have money to help this child, but they need to go do it themselves.
They need to go earn themselves and, you know, and suffer on their own and whatnot.
And inadvertently, what often happens is the parent thinks that they are teaching the kid hard work and dedication and,
integrity. And the message that the kid actually hears is humiliation, that the parents could be
helping them, but they not, because I'm not worthy of their help. And it's very, and in the mind of the
adult, in the mind of the parent, that doesn't make a lot of sense. In the mind of a 14-year-old,
that's all you can hear, is I'm not worthy of their help. And a lot, and it goes astray.
I've told this story before about a good friend of mine whose grandfather was very wealthy and didn't
want his kids and grandkids to be spoiled. And so when they went skiing, his grandfather would say,
if you want me to buy you a lift ticket,
you first have to hike up the hill.
And if you do that and ski down,
then I'll buy you a lift ticket.
Show me that you are capable of hard work.
And so my friend tells a story.
He says,
the lesson that the grandfather wanted to teach us
was hard work.
But the lessons that we actually learned
was Grandpa's an asshole.
That was the lesson that they actually heard from it,
was humiliation from it.
And I think there's a lot of versions of that.
Another version of it is,
it's extremely difficult for anyone
to demote their lifestyle,
to be at one level
and then have to tick down,
even a small amount.
People can absolutely lose their minds.
Downsized car, downsized the house.
And so if you are a parent
of any kind of means or wealth,
you have to be very careful
picking your lifestyle,
knowing that that will become
the baseline barest of expectations
for your child when they are adults.
If you're in the 20,000 square foot house,
that's the baseline.
Yeah.
That's not a mansion.
To you, the parent,
it's a mansion because you grew,
up in something smaller. To your kid, that is normal now. And you think about this, what if that
child wants to be a kindergarten teacher, but they can't? They know that they can't live that
lifestyle because they got accustomed to something else. So now they have to try to become a lawyer or a
doctor or an entrepreneur if they don't want to do it. I wonder if this explains another element
on top of the psychological and relational and all the rest of it, why divorce is so painful? Because
if you're splitting the finances or even not.
Everything's half, right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's half as much to go around,
which means you don't get the same house
and put it in half.
You get two houses that are less than half a shit.
Yeah.
Like, because you've got all of these additional costs
that you need to pay now
and you've got to go between the two
and maybe you shared a car,
but now you've got to have two cars
and that means that both cars are less than half is good.
Right.
I think a very core human feeling,
that feels incredible when you have it
and as devastating when you don't
is generational improvement
is to say that I'm living
a better life than my parents.
And as parents, it feels so good
when you look at your children
and say they lived a better life
than we did.
That is a core thing.
And if you don't have it,
it's difficult to have a good life.
If you say, my parents raised me up here
and now as an adult, I'm down here.
Even if down here is still a great life,
it's very difficult to wrap your head around.
Have you looked at intergenerational competition theory?
IGCT, the entire body of work around exactly what you're talking about.
Really, really interesting. You'd love it.
Makes a lot of sense. And that's the curse of being a very successful, wealthy parent.
You feel so good as a parent. I worked my ass off, made a lot of money. Now I can give my kids a great life.
Every cell in your body tells you to do that, and it's a wonderful thing. And if in the process of doing that,
you inflated your kids' expectations to a level that they will never be able to exceed themselves
through their own hard work and dedication, it's actually a curse.
Wow. Yeah. I think the,
other interesting thing is this comes into conflict with two or three other dynamics in the modern
world. So you have intergenerational competition theory. And it's not where were my parents
at the age that I'm at? It's where do I think my parents were at the age that I'm at? So if you're
unable to see the difficulty of them taking the bus to work or whatever it might be, there's
just this assumption that a lot of the costs and a lot of the price, they didn't really pay it all that
much, but they were able to buy a house for what, like two years wages or something like that.
Yeah.
So it's not only that, not where were my parents, but where do I think my parents were when
they were at my age?
And also, where do I think that all of my peers are now, given that everybody is putting
the best of themselves online and that your entire competition network is globalized and
available 24-7 and has the highest status, wealthiest people on the planet rising to the top by
design because they're the ones that have got the outlier effect. It is no fucking surprise to me
that people feel like they can't afford to have a family, that they can't afford to buy a house.
What's your, give me, you must have looked at this, sort of the financial state of Gen Z and
of sort of modernity. What are some lesser known or unpopular insights into the wealth of
Gen Z and previous generations? Well, look, by and large, there has been way to,
growth, real wage growth adjusted for inflation over the last several generations. On average,
that's true. On a whole, that's true. The areas in which it is absolutely not true, that is just
dramatically more expensive today than it was in any previous generation as housing. And that's the
most important thing to people. In terms of like box checking into adulthood, buying a house is
near the top to where if you can feel that you can do it, you feel like you're really making
progress. I'm an adult. I own my own house. I'm doing it. And if you can't do it,
it, you feel like you're just kind of stuck down in some lower level that you'll never get
out of. And so when people talk about the price of housing, they talk about it like it's a spreadsheet
problem. Like it's just, oh, we got to get down mortgage. It's a social problem. And I think almost
every social problem today that we have in any country, in America or any other country that has
expensive housing is downstream of housing affordability. If you can't afford your house, you're less
likely to get married, you're less likely to have kids. You're more likely to abuse drugs. You're more
likely to have poor mental health, it all stems down from lack of housing. And even something
like drug addiction that you wouldn't think would be that attached to housing. When housing is
very expensive, almost by definition, the bottom sliver of society becomes homeless because
housing expensive because there's not enough of it. Almost definitionally people who become
homes. What do a lot of so many people do when they become homeless to gain a little bit of hope
in their life? Fragrugs. Heroin. And so I think it seems crazy, but you can, there's so many of those
where you think housing affordability is a housing problem,
and it is just a social problem all the way down.
We had a family friend, and she was in her late 20s, happily married.
Both of them have good jobs, want to be parents,
but can't afford a house where we live
and are delaying, delaying, delaying, trying to have kids
until they can afford a house,
which in many cities, including the city I live in,
seems like good luck waiting kind of thing.
And so it's a huge, it's the biggest social problem,
I think, that we have in America.
What is the relative, do you know the data on how actual wages, median, wages, median house price?
Is it because house prices have gone up an awful lot and wages haven't gone up in line with it?
Is it because of interest rates?
What is it?
The thing that so, I think, should be agate, should make you angry about the housing issue,
is that it's the easiest issue to identify why it's a problem.
And it's the easiest thing to fix.
We don't build enough houses.
That's it.
easiest supply and demand thing. We were probably five million houses short in America that we
should have built than we didn't. Why didn't we build them? We have plenty of construction
workers. We have plenty of capital. There's plenty of demand. Almost all the way down, it's a zoning
issue. Whereas in most cities in America, where people want homes to be, it's illegal to build them.
You can't get it properly zoned or it takes too long for most developers to put up with it.
Okay.
And so it's purely, it's a choice.
It's a choice to be in the situation that could end tomorrow.
Hang on.
If people understood the problem enough.
Hang on.
So we have the money to build the houses?
Of course.
And the people to be able to.
The demand to do it.
The people to be able to build them.
Right.
And the materials to be able to make them.
Of course.
And the people to live in them.
Yes.
And the demand for them.
Right.
But because of...
Talk to a real estate developer in Los Angeles who owns a
plot of land than wants to build 100 homes on it. And it'll tell you it'll take you if you're
lucky and good and spend a fortune, it'll take you three to five years to get it permitted.
And by the time, you'll probably just give up and move somewhere else.
This is fucking insane. I didn't know that any of this is. It should be the biggest problem.
There's several books have been written about it recently, Abundance by Ezra Klein and Derek
Thompson is a good one. There's another book called Stuck that is about the history of zoning rules.
Why is zoning getting in the way? What is it that they want?
Other people not want houses built.
People who already have houses don't want other homes built around them.
The other thing, I think the most dangerous thing that we've done in America in the last 50 years is convince people that rising home prices are a good thing.
And now if you own your house, you think, oh, I bought this house for 200 grand and now it's worth 600.
I just made $400,000.
I've never seen so much money in my life.
A, no, you didn't because if you sold that house for 600 grand, you have to buy another house that is also inflated in value.
So you didn't make anything.
You didn't make any money whatsoever.
Who you did push out is the first time home buyer
who didn't ride that wave of rising home prices
that is now priced out of a house.
That's such a fucking good point.
How have I never thought about this?
That if you buy a house low and sell it high,
you still need a house.
You need another house that is inflated by the same amount.
The only exception to this is if you downsize.
Or if you migrate.
If you migrate or downsize.
I did it.
But most people do neither nor.
I don't own my house.
in America, but I did very fortunately manage to buy a house in the UK. And I did it the other way.
So I went from the northeast of the UK, very working class town where, you know, gosh, at a not
particularly fancy wage, I think less than one year of annual salary for me was my deposit. So in the
space of not too long, by being frugal, I was able to save up enough money to be able to put a
deposit down on the house. Then I moved to America. And the world is very different over here.
It's a different thing. It is a different fucking beast. You know, Trump was, had a very honest comment
about this two weeks ago. And this is one of the great things about Trump. He'll tell you exactly what's
on his mind, won't sugarcoat anything. And he said, look, I'm paraphrasing him, but he said,
if we build more houses, that's going to come at the expense of people who already own houses.
If you build more houses, the price goes down. That's phenomenal for the people who don't own a house
yet and it's devastating for the people who do. And so that's where we're at this, at this,
this huge...
Stalmates between the two, right? And I'm going to guess that local house owners lobby the zoning
people so that we don't want more because we don't want to lose our... Right, I read this book
recently on the history of Levitown. Do you know what Levantown is?
It's, I know a funny joke about it's near Long Island.
There's several of them. And it was at the end of World War II, we stopped building houses in World War II
because we needed the material for other things.
We didn't build a single house, basically.
And then you had 16 million GIs come home,
all of whom what they wanted more than anything else was a house.
And so they came home in the late 1940s,
and there was a massive housing shortage,
and prices surged, and it was a huge problem.
But back then, in most area of the countries,
there was very little zoning.
And so the Levitt brothers started buying up old abandoned farms,
and they built tens of thousands of house,
just threw them up.
And this became like the quintessential white picket fence.
small that housed all the GIs.
And one of the parts of the book that's really interesting is, like I said, there's
virtually no zoning back then.
If you bought a farm, do whatever the hell you want with it.
Now, we're sitting here in Austin, Texas.
Texas is one of the few states that still more or less has that.
And what is true about Texas housing?
It's cheap relative to other areas of the country.
And if you go to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, extremely difficult zoning.
And an entry-level shit house costs $2.5 million.
And it's absolutely devastating to the young generation who rightly feels that the opportunities that were afforded to their parents and their grandparents don't even though.
I should do more about this on the pod.
If you were to bring somebody on the podcast, who would I speak to?
Who do you think is good on this topic?
Probably Derek Thompson.
Okay.
I understand it more than anyone.
And can articulate it very well.
Okay.
I'm going to, I should do more about this.
The book stuck is very good.
and the history of zoning.
And zoning started really with,
as a way to keep Chinese immigrants
out of white people neighborhood,
out of Native neighborhood.
And it started with that and just expanded,
expanded, expanded.
And blew up there.
So it has like very, you know,
strict, racial beginnings
that came into as something
that almost every city in America now practices.
And it's now been inherited
by domestic,
domestic people that American...
Everywhere.
And when you frame it again
as the first part of the equation,
like at the value of your house
doubles, you didn't gain anything
because the house that you have to buy.
So frame it as this.
We are stifling
young people's ability to buy a house
so that old people
can raise the value of their house
when they're not actually gaining
anything at all to begin with.
They don't actually gain any wealth.
Because it's the entire waterline.
Up and down.
It's all of it.
Everybody's going up and down together.
I suppose...
And so here's the other thing.
that's so crazy about this. To Trump's comment, if we build more houses, the value of homes would
fall and that would hurt people, it wouldn't actually hurt them. If your house is currently worth a
million dollars and then we'd build tons of houses and now it's worth 500, you didn't lose anything.
Because you can buy another. Because you sell that and buy another house that's 500.
I suppose the problem here is you need a God's eye view to coordinate all of the houses to go up
and down together. And so much of this is the vast majority of it is local rules and laws.
And if you think national politics is dysfunctional, local is much more.
more so. Okay, out of spending money, talked about a million different ways that you can get
spending money wrong. What about not spending money? Because there are the misers. There's the Ebenezer
Scrooge on the other side. Bill Perkins's book, Die with Zero is fucking fantastic. Fantastic.
Yeah. Wonderful. What is your perspective? What is there to know about people who can't put their
hand in their pocket as opposed to keep putting it in too frequently? I have two views on this. One is it's
just as broken and detrimental to have a mentality of I can't spend this money to the person who can't
spend it fast enough and runs himself over a cliff. It's just as much of a mental illness in that
situation. And if you talk to a lot of financial advisors, they will tell you the number one
psychological ailment of their clients are baby boomers who have saved several million dollars
can easily afford to safely have a wonderful retirement and can't bring themselves to spend
a penny of it because their financial identity is number goes up every year. I'm a saver. I'm a saver
and my net worth goes up every year. And the idea of starting to entrench that down is so painful
to them. The other side of this of why I think it's actually half rational is we're fortunate
to live in a world where if you retire at 60, there's a meaningful chance you're going to live
into your 90s. And so you're talking about it was not that long ago. I mean, 60 or 70 years ago,
the idea of retirement, by and large, didn't exist for most people.
People just worked up until they...
They worked until they died.
It couldn't work anymore.
Your retirement party was also your funeral.
That was how it worked.
And retirement was something that rich people could afford to do.
But ordinary people, it didn't work at all.
And even if you go back to the 1980s, you retired at 60, you're probably going to die at 68.
So you're talking, you might need to fund a retirement for three, five, maybe 10 years.
Now you're legitimately looking at people who might need to fund a retirement for 40 years.
And the amount of money that you...
So the idea that they are worried about spending too quickly and you're like, yeah,
Good worry. You should think about that.
Yeah, between some people getting to wealth escape velocity and longevity, increasing
lifespan, you could end up with, well, I mean, even for your adult life, you're talking about
only maybe about 50% of your time being spent working. If you live until you're 90.
And you retire at 65. You got, I mean, that's, that's, that's a big, and it's a period of time
that you need to fund that would have been just such a magical thing to, to, you know, to,
my grandparents' generation, to our grandparents' generation. So the idea that people think about that
longevity and don't want to ever spend makes a lot of sense. And you can match that with people who still have a
mental affliction of, I can't bear seeing the numbers go down. I don't know if I'll do a good job
with this, honestly. I'm in wealth accumulation growth mode right now. When I'm 80, I don't know if I'll
do a good job of it because I do feel like, in a way that's probably not good. You know what I think
number go up is important to my identity. Yeah, I think a good line from Bill Perkins's
book about give your kids their inheritance when they're 30.
That's my favorite takeaway from his book and changed profoundly how I think about inheritance
for my children.
Yeah.
The simple fact that if you wait until you die, your kids don't need your money.
Right.
But they desperately need it when they're 30 and trying to buy a house.
Get it the first house.
Do it.
And having kids and take care.
You know what else you could do?
This might actually be a wonderful intervention to get people, parents.
to feel the pain, or to dampen the pain,
or maybe even completely negate the pain,
of the downsizing and of the number go down thing of,
well, yeah, sure, we had a big house,
but we had a big house because there was three kids in it.
And now it's just, I know you've talked about this as well,
that you and your wife have discussed,
okay, what are we going to do when kind of the golden era's over of the kids,
and now we've got the next thing,
and maybe it'll be a lake or maybe it'll be whatever.
And, okay, well, if you,
at 60, 65, we're going to downsize. We don't need the big house. All of the kids are grown. And it looks
like none of them are coming back, which, hooray, we did a good job. Let's sell the house. How much money
we're going to get out of the house? Well, that's a few hundred grand or maybe more. Wouldn't that
be wonderful? And I'd listen to that Morgan guy. And I think we should give it to the kids in the late
20s, early 30s. And then they can do it. You go, well, the number's going to go down and the house is
going to go down and we'll have to downsize a few things. But look at what we got out of it.
Yeah. You know, what a wonderful way to trade money for a better life for my family.
But the people that you were doing it for all along.
I think in a very broken way, it's well-intentioned, but it's, I think, a very wrong way,
is that what's holding a lot of parents back from doing that is, well, I had to work when I was 30.
I worked my ass off and bought my house. This kid has to do it too. It's reverse intergeneration
And here's why I think that's wrong.
You baby boomer parent who thinks that you built all this,
you live a life that makes you look like a spoiled little bitch
in the eyes of your grandparents.
You have antibiotics.
You have air conditioning.
You have jet travel.
If your grandparents could see how you lived,
you say, you spoil.
You don't have to, you think you know hard work?
I used to work in a cold mine.
You think you worked hard?
I think the goal of every generation
should be to create kids and grandkids
who appear by the standards of a problem,
previous generation to be spoiled. That's the goal. And so the idea of using your money to give your
kids a benefit so that they appear spoiled by your generation's terms, I'm kind of like,
that's the goal, right? Isn't that the way to do it? I remember having this conversation recently
of a guy who his parents were immigrants, worked their absolute asses off to support him and his siblings.
And now he himself is pretty successful. And he's like, I feel guilty that like I didn't,
I didn't have to work as hard as my parents. And I said, look,
I bet if we could talk to your parents right now, they would say that was the goal.
The reason they worked their asses off is so that you would not have to. That's the goal.
And so don't feel guilty. Like, this is what it was supposed to happen.
Dude, I feel the exact same about living in the U.S. I'm an only child. My mom and dad only have me.
I'm their sole progeny. And I decided to fuck off to the other side of the Atlantic. And any time that I think about it, I think, well, why do you think that they encouraged you to work hard and get a university degree?
Because it wanted you to be who you are today.
it means that I get to go and do the thing that I want.
I think it was Steve Harvey.
I think it was he said this.
I don't know if it was his quote or if I just heard him say as someone else.
He said that I think it was at his father's funeral.
Someone told him, your dad was the only person, the only man in the world who wants you to exceed him.
The only man in the world who wants you to do better than him.
And I think that's by and large shoe.
When most particularly men look at each other.
I want.
Yes.
I want you to do an exceive.
brother. Especially your brother. I want you to be successful. But not more successful. Not more than I am. The only person who doesn't believe that's your dad. I want you to be more successful than I am. And so tying this all together, if you can use her money and supercharged that at age 30, do it. That's the shift that I had from Bill's book. Morgan, you're the goat, dude, episode eight or nine or whatever this is. You're so fantastic. Let's do it again. Can't wait. I can't wait. What have you got out? Where should people go to get all of the things that you do? You know, the three books I've written, psychology and money,
Same as ever, the art of spending money.
Every half decent thought that's ever entered my head about money is in those three books.
Unreal.
I appreciate you, man.
Until next time.
Thank you.
