Insights Blog
The Power of Time
Jun 19, 2023 // Adam Bruderly
Our humans are brains are instinctively wired to prioritize immediate needs and wants, such as quenching hunger, ensuring safety, or yielding to the allure of instant gratification. This is a survival mechanism that has evolved over tens of thousands of years to help us respond to threats, opportunities, and ultimate survival. However, this tendency to emphasize the short term can be counterproductive and have a detrimental effect when it comes to planning and our financial success.
Conversely, adopting a long-term perspective requires a more cognitive effort and strategic approach to planning. It involves focusing on our future objectives, making trade-offs, and postponing our immediate pleasures and emotional impulses. Ultimately, the ability to balance short-term and long-term thinking is a critical skill that can help us achieve success and navigate the complexities of life and financial planning.
At Journey, we recognize the importance of harmonizing short-term and long-term thinking is crucial to achieve your goals, and we are committed to helping you develop a comprehensive plan that aims to help set you up for success at every stage of your life.
What is Wealth?
According to Investopedia “wealth is measured by taking the value of all the assets of worth owned by a person. This is determined by taking the total market value of all physical and intangible assets owned, then subtracting all debts. Essentially, wealth is the accumulation of scarce resources.”
How Many Summers?
After my first son was born, I began to think about what the next phase of our lives looked like. We went from two busy professionals who could hop on a plane for a weekend trip, grab dinner, or chase endless weekend adventures to first time parents. We were 2,000 miles away from family trying to plan the one or two trips a year that we could see them which led me to ask this question, how many summers do we have left?
The Power of Time
Our humans are brains are instinctively wired to prioritize immediate needs and wants, such as quenching hunger, ensuring safety, or yielding to the allure of instant gratification. This is a survival mechanism that has evolved over tens of thousands of years to help us respond to threats, opportunities, and ultimate survival. However, this tendency to emphasize the short term can be counterproductive and have a detrimental effect when it comes to planning and our financial success.