An essential part of the practice of being good with money is being good with your emotions.
Making money involves being good with other people, through social, emotional, and cultural intelligence. Despite this, these forms of soft skills are often not the things that explicitly and conspicuously make money.
STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) skills are typically easier to monetise because of the direct application to things you count and contain. Acknowledging that good ideas aren’t always good business ideas, isn’t an invitation to ignore social, emotional, and cultural skills. Quite the opposite, it is an invitation to invest in them heavily.
A yogi is not someone who is completely unruffled. A yogi participates in and is part of the world. Detachment is not exclusion. Unlike in the past where the incredibly wealthy would flaunt gold and palaces, well managed wealth can connect and empower.
A wealthy person can live a grounded life, with a background engine reinvested in problem solving. Putting capital to work, and labouring on things that are good ideas but hard to monetise. Unpaid work is often priceless, with value that needs to be funded by the priced.
Detachment becomes that how you make money is how you finance value creation, not how you demonstrate your worth.
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