08/01/2026
Few lines from my upcoming book:
Money is commonly viewed as a transactional tool. It is earned through labor, exchanged for goods and services, saved for security, spent for comfort or pleasure, and sometimes lost through unforeseen circumstances. In this framework, money is seen as external, separate from the inner world, governed by effort, skill, opportunity, and economic conditions. For generations, this belief has shaped society: more work leads to more income, time is sacrificed for financial gain, and constant hustle is rewarded.
Yet lived experience exposes a flaw in this logic. Individuals can apply similar effort, possess comparable intelligence, and hold equivalent qualifications, yet achieve vastly different financial outcomes. If money were purely transactional, results would be consistent and predictable. They are not. This inconsistency points to a deeper influence at work, one that goes beyond transactions alone.