I'm begging you to own less stuff.
I used to live in chaos. Multiple jobs, packed schedule, too much going on. I thought that's just what life was.
Then I decluttered one room. And realized what a clean simple space actually feels like.
Everything shifted after that.
Every time I've gotten rid of something I thought I needed, I've never missed it.
The stuff we own ends up owning us.
And most of it isn't making us any happier.
Most people never hit publish because they’re waiting for the perfect script, thumbnail, edit. But the algorithm doesn’t reward perfection. it rewards consistency.
Get 1% better with each video and in a year you’ll be unrecognizable compared to where you started.
How To Add A Zero To Your Bank Account (Step By Step)
$0 → $10K: Build discipline (this part sucks)
$10K → $100K: Build systems, stop chasing pennies
$100K → $1M: Use leverage, make money work FOR you
3 paths to $1M:
1️⃣ Slow Lane → 40-60 yrs saving.
2️⃣ Medium Lane → 10–20 yrs side hustles + real estate.
3️⃣ Fast Lane → 3–10 yrs building a scalable business.
I chose the Fast Lane. Which would you pick?
How I Hit Financial Freedom at 24 (and How You Can Too)
📚 Read 1 book a week
🎧 1 podcast a day
🏠 House hacked rent = $0
🚗 Drove a $5K Honda
🍗 Ate cheap meals for 3 yrs
💻 Learned scalable skills (YouTube, writing, funnels)
📉 Cut all extras (TV, takeout, clothing)
The creators who succeed aren't the most talented. They're the ones who stick around long enough to get good. YouTube is compound interest for content creators. Small, consistent investments pay off massively!
Want to hit $10K/month?
Here's what's working right now...
→ Start a YouTube channel
→ Post consistently 1-3x per week
→ Create digital products to sell
→ Eventually hire people to help
→ Don't quit after 3 months
This literally prints money if you stick with it
Why 'Enough' Is Everything
1. Know your 'enough'. more stuff doesn’t = more joy.
2. Contentment > chasing wealth. Gain time & freedom.
3. Own your choices. Stop blaming & start living.
Starting a business scared me.
But you know what scared me more?
The thought of cleaning offices until I was 65.
Sometimes being scared of staying broke is more motivating than being scared of failure.
The "safe" path everyone talks about:
→ College → Good job → Save 10% → Maybe retire at 65
What actually worked for me:
→ Learn valuable skills → Build something once → Get paid forever.
One of these takes 40 years. The other took me about 7.