Sunday, September 21, 2025

Quora : When You Start Making Good Money, Do This..

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1. Buy fewer clothes, but wear the highest quality

How:


2. Eat premium food, not junk

How:

  • Upgrade your baseline: Swap soda for sparkling water, fast food for fresh salads, snacks for fruit or nuts.

  • Shop the perimeter of the grocery store — produce, meat, dairy, fish — fewer boxes and cans.

  • Try farmer’s markets: You get fresher produce and often build a relationship with the grower.

  • Batch cook: Invest a few hours each week preparing simple, high-quality meals so “busy days” don’t push you into junk food.


3. Hire a helper for household chores. Buy back your time

How:

  • Start small: Try a cleaner once every two weeks. Notice how much mental load it removes.

  • Outsource what you hate most (laundry, lawn care, errands). Even 3–5 hours a week returned to you is huge.

  • Use platforms like TaskRabbit, Thumbtack, or local services.

  • Reinvest time: Don’t waste it scrolling. Use freed-up hours for health, learning, or family.


4. Upgrade your mattress. Sleep changes everything

How:

  • Test in-store: Lie down at least 10–15 minutes on each model. Focus on back support + comfort.

  • Don’t skimp on pillows — they matter almost as much as the mattress.

  • Invest in environment: blackout curtains, white-noise machine, proper room temperature (65–68°F is ideal).

  • Measure success: Track how you feel in the mornings, not just whether the bed feels soft.


5. Invest in experiences, not just stuff

How:

  • Budget a “memory fund” (e.g., 5–10% of income goes to trips, concerts, classes).

  • Prioritize novelty: Choose activities that break routine and create stories to tell.

  • Bring others in: Experiences feel richer when shared with friends or family.

  • Capture but don’t over-document: Take a photo, then be present. The point is to live it.


6. Upgrade your financial adviser

How:

  • Interview multiple advisers: Ask how they get paid — fee-only fiduciaries are usually best.

  • Check credentials: Look for CFP (Certified Financial Planner) or CFA.

  • Ask tough questions: “How do you invest your own money?” “What’s your strategy in downturns?”

  • Level up gradually: As your wealth grows, you may need a transition from a basic planner to a wealth-management team.


7. Surround yourself with high-value people

How:

  • Audit your circle: Notice who drains vs. who energizes you. Spend less time with the former.

  • Seek groups: Join professional associations, mastermind groups, fitness classes, volunteering networks.

  • Be useful first: High-value people are drawn to those who add value, not just those who want favors.

  • Upgrade conversations: Ask bigger questions — not “what’s new at work?” but “what are you learning lately?”


Bottom line: Each of these isn’t about luxury for its own sake — it’s about leverage. You’re redirecting money into things that multiply your health, time, experiences, and network.

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