Don’t just work for money to afford the things you want today, make long-term investments where your money works for you.
What do you think is the difference between making money and attaining wealth?
If you’re like most people, you probably didn’t even realize there was one!
But there is an important distinction:
“Making money” describes a process where you work for money, but “attaining wealth” means being in circumstances where money works for you.
To better understand this, imagine that you work as the manager of a profitable factory, and every month you take home a very good wage.
Clearly you’re making money, but are you attaining wealth? Not necessarily.
For that, you need to go through the process of saving up and investing some of that money. For example, if you were to save part of your income and invest it in real estate, you would be attaining wealth, because your money would be working for you and not the other way around.
Making money is usually done to achieve short-term financial success: you usually only care about the things you can buy with that next paycheck, while the future is of little concern. But there is an inherent danger in this kind of thinking: what if the next paycheck never arrives?
Attaining wealth, on the other hand, involves longer-term goals.
For example, the real estate that you bought won’t bring you immediate wealth; rather, you have to first pay off the investment or wait for its value to increase. This can take a while, but once the investment starts paying off, it will most likely keep doing so for as long as you own it.
This kind of long-term planning can help provide security for unexpected events like losing your job.