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I Will: Teach You To Be Rich

By the end of the first year, the "Psychology of Money" had changed his life more than the numbers had. He realized that most people argued about nickel-and-dime expenses while ignoring the "Big Wins"—negotiating a salary, picking the right bank accounts, and starting to invest early.

One evening, three years later, Leo sat in that same diner. He wasn't there because he had to be; he was there because he liked the pie. He opened his banking app. His net worth wasn't in the millions yet, but the "Emergency Fund" line gave him something he hadn't felt in a decade: the ability to breathe. I Will Teach you to be Rich

The notebook in front of him was open to a blank page. At the top, he had scribbled a title he’d seen on a bookshelf: I Will Teach You to Be Rich. He wasn't sure who he was writing to—maybe his future self, or maybe just a version of himself that didn't feel like he was drowning. By the end of the first year, the

The second lesson was automation. Leo was a procrastinator by nature. If he had to manually move money into savings, he wouldn't do it. He set up his accounts so that on payday, his "future self" was paid first. Money vanished into an investment account before he could even think about spending it. For the first six months, it hurt. Then, it became invisible. He wasn't there because he had to be;

Leo realized he wasn't just writing a story anymore. He was building a roadmap. He closed the book, left a generous tip, and walked out into the cool night air, finally feeling like the master of his own horizon.