Showing posts with label Pressure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pressure. Show all posts

Friday, July 30, 2021

Under Pressure

You can get into a situation where you do have a stable, decent, income, and yet are still not able to still the waves of money anxiety. Trapped with a big portion of that income servicing past consumption. Where you are not paying enough to get the hovering debt to shrink. Struggling for scraps to feed the beast. Cornered there, it is difficult to get to the point where “your money is making money”. 

Finding stillness requires both a source of income and control of spending. External forces make that difficult. The goal is shifting that challenge internally. Where you are the one creating the discipline. Limits don’t disappear, but you want their form to be your conscious choice. Where the boundaries are not “there is no money” or “I owe someone money” or “you must do this for money”. 

Where your money is available and working, and you can choose not to harass it or have it harass you. Where your money is capable of absorbing your shocks and stress in bad times. Where you are capable of repairing and building your capital in good times. Getting to this point, even with a job or stable business, can be difficult if you are under spending pressure from your own behaviour or your chosen community. You need to gain control of the collisions in your container.

Thursday, September 24, 2020

Last Resort

The idea of a “Lender of Last Resort” (LOLR) brings harsh focus to the importance of liquidity. Price isn’t value. If you have stuff no one wants, the price is zero. It doesn’t matter what it is. It doesn’t matter how much you think it is worth in normal times. If you don’t have the capacity to reach normal times. The price may even be negative. You may have to pay someone to take something with long term value from you, because you simply have no option. There is nothing as dangerous as having no options. The role of LOLR is played by Governments or Central Banks. Selectively and inconsistently. Lending to institutions they don’t want to fail when no one else will. The Bank of Mom and Dad plays this role for many surface level risk takers. For the majority of people, there is no last resort. There is no one to step in. They are their own last line of defence. Risk is deeply personal.