π«π πππ ππππ πππ πππππ ππππππ?
To accumulate more money is presumably the main reason we spend most of our days working.
But do we keep track of how much we have?
Do we know how much is enough?
I had this dialogue with an unhappy-about-his-work friend (name kept anonymous to protect his & his employerβs identity):
ππ: βπβππ‘ ππ π¦ππ’ ππ π€ππ‘β π¦ππ’π πππππ¦?β
π»ππ: βπΌ ππ’π π‘ ππ’π‘ ππ‘ ππ π‘βπ ππππ.β
ππ: βπβππ π€βπ¦ πππ π¦ππ’ πππππ π π ππππ¦ π‘βππππ π¦ππ’ πππ ππππ π‘π ππππ ππππ ππ ππ‘?β
π»ππ: β¦. πππππππ‘π β¦
Rarely in our life is money a place of genuine freedom, joy, or clarity, yet we routinely allow it to dictate the terms of our lives & often to be the single most important factor in the decisions we make about work, love family & friendship.
Money is not a product of nature. Money doesnβt grow on trees. Pennies donβt rain from heaven. Money is an invention;...