Most people think investing is for the wealthy.
For the ones with portfolios, advisors, and time to spare.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
You’ll never become wealthy—in money, love, or legacy—
until you learn to think like an investor.
We’re taught to earn.
To save.
To spend wisely.
But we’re almost never taught to invest.
Not just in the market,
but in ourselves, our children, and our ideas.
Because investing isn’t a skill.
It’s an identity.
It’s how you see the world.
Investors don’t chase instant returns.
They play the long game.
They understand that time—not talent—is the greatest multiplier of all.
Warren Buffett didn’t get rich just because he was brilliant.
He got rich because he started early and never stopped.
He let time do what time does best—
Compound.
And that’s exactly what we need to teach our kids.
Every year, I run two small, high-touch investment clubs — one for adults, one for high school students.
We use real money.
We invest in everything from stocks and real estate to crypto and poker.
But what they really learn isn’t finance.
It’s philosophy.
The moment a teenager buys their first stock, they stop asking,
“What’s the price?”
and start asking,
“What’s the value?”
They begin to see the world like an owner, not a consumer.
That’s the shift we all need to make as parents, too.
Because our lives, our work, and our families are the greatest investments we’ll ever make.
The earlier we start thinking like investors,
the more extraordinary our results will be.
You don’t need millions to be an investor.
You just need to start.
Because wealth isn’t built by those who work the hardest.
It’s built by those who let time work for them.