FinancevsFear-CommonFinancialFears&HowToFaceThem
If you’re somewhere in your mid-20s and have just kicked off your career, there are three things we can predict about
you with complete certainty:
Not because adulting is a feat we have unlocked and achieved completely — (still regret not being able to properly chop an onion) — but because in the process of figuring it out, there are a few personal finance truth bombs that we’ve unearthed which are definitely worth sharing.
Yes, you read that right — you don’t have to be a finance expert in order to understand how to manage your own money.
For most of us merely using the words ‘budgeting’ and ‘personal finance’ clout our approach to the matter, and we end up
zoning out and putting it off until it’s absolutely necessary — by which time it’s already a bit too late.
But here’s the thing: once you cut out the noise, and skip the jargon — at the core of it, money management is about
building a better habit, and not about ditching fun for a complicated excel sheet.
It’s simply about finding the balance between spending, saving, investing and the occasional splurging (yes, you are
allowed to do that as well every now and then).
Now, ₹1 may seem like an insignificant amount to invest but imagine rounding up every transaction — small and big, from petrol to long shopping lists — and investing every digital spare change of yours — from ₹1 to ₹10 (or more!), and letting your money grow over a significant period of time from something little to something amazing.
Because therein lies truth bomb #2.5 — successful investing is mainly about how long you stay invested, rather than how much you are investing.
If you’re somewhere in your mid-20s and have just kicked off your career, there are three things we can predict
about
you with complete certainty:
Not because adulting is a feat we have unlocked and achieved completely — (still regret not being able to properly chop an onion) — but because in the process of figuring it out, there are a few personal finance truth bombs that we’ve unearthed which are definitely worth sharing.
Yes, you read that right — you don’t have to be a finance expert in order to understand how to manage your own
money.
For most of us merely using the words ‘budgeting’ and ‘personal finance’ clout our approach to the matter, and we
end up
zoning out and putting it off until it’s absolutely necessary — by which time it’s already a bit too late.
But here’s the thing: once you cut out the noise, and skip the jargon — at the core of it, money management is about
building a better habit, and not about ditching fun for a complicated excel sheet.
It’s simply about finding the balance between spending, saving, investing and the occasional splurging (yes, you are
allowed to do that as well every now and then).
Now, ₹1 may seem like an insignificant amount to invest but imagine rounding up every transaction — small and big, from petrol to long shopping lists — and investing every digital spare change of yours — from ₹1 to ₹10 (or more!), and letting your money grow over a significant period of time from something little to something amazing.
Because therein lies truth bomb #2.5 — successful investing is mainly about how long you stay invested, rather than how much you are investing.