06/10/2026
These glasses still have the tag on them. You know why? Because I did not buy them.
The average American carries over $6,500 in credit card debt. The average household debt in this country is over $100,000 when you factor in car loans, student loans, and personal debt. Nearly 60% of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck. And a significant chunk of that debt exists because people are buying things to look like they have money they do not actually have.
To impress people who are also broke.
I drive a 2015 Honda Pilot. I paid $21,000 cash for it. No car note. No interest. No stress. Because I chose to save that money instead of finance something flashier, I kept roughly $10,000 in my pocket that would have gone straight to a lender. And when COVID hit and businesses were shutting down and people were panicking, my car was one less thing I had to think about.
That is not a small thing. That is peace of mind you cannot put a price on.
I invest in things that make sense. Things that grow. Things that build. Not in appearances. Not in tags and labels to impress people whose bank accounts look worse than mine.
Will there be a time for the nice things? Absolutely yes. But right now ladies, we work. We save. We build. We invest.
And we stop performing wealth for an audience that cannot afford the ticket. đź–¤
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