Pompidou
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,242
- Location
- Plainfield, CT
Exactly. In the end, it's a question of values, not a question of "value." If I had a kid who came to me and said "Ma, I think I want to do something worthwhile in this town -- we need a good electrician here, I'm going to become one," I'd wish him all the success in the world. If I had a kid who came to me and said, "Ma, I think I want to spend my life maximizing return to the stockholders," I'd disown him.
Everything comes down to balancing time and money. If you want to have good values, you'll have them whether it takes you one hour or ten hours to make one hundred dollars. If you make more money in less time, you'll have more time to spend helping people in other ways, and more money to help you do it. Work is just a means to an end - at least to me. When my cafe opens, I'll be working hard - averaging 66 hours a week for 30,000 a year plus profit sharing. If we succeed, our goal isn't to make more money, it's to bring on more partners till we're making the same amount of money for say, 10-20 hours a week or less. To me, wealth alone isn't the end all of success. A warehouse worker pulling good overtime can make 40,000 or more a year, but the key word is overtime. True success is making enough to do everything you want in life, while maximizing your free time to just enjoy it.