2024-12-02
2 小时 15 分钟Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
My guest today is Morgan Housel.
Morgan Housel is a partner at the Collaborative Fund and an expert in private wealth generation and management.
He is also the author of the spectacularly best selling book, the Psychology of Money.
And today we talk about the psychology of money.
We talk about how money can change your psychology.
We talk about how most people tend to lie at the extremes of either saving too much money or spending too much money.
And we talk about how most people get it completely wrong when it comes to framing in our minds what money is, what its real value is in its ability to generate happiness within us.
And no, I am not going to tell you, and Morgan is not going to tell you that beyond a certain dollar amount, you don't increase your happiness.
Because as we all know, money cannot buy happiness, but it can buffer stress.
We acknowledge that from the outset.
And then Morgan goes on to explain that really what we're seeking when we talk about seeking wealth or money is freedom.
Freedom is really about independence and that if we are constantly in pursuit of wealth, well then we are not truly free or independent.
So today's discussion is as much about being happy, being free, feeling independent, feeling free of stress, as it is about this thing that we call money.
So in other words, Morgan explains not just how to generate and manage monetary wealth, he explains that, but he also explains how to organize your life in and around this thing that we call career, the pursuit of wealth and happiness.
And I can think of few topics as important as today's topic.
I read Morgan's book, the Psychology of Money and I loved it.
I also love today's discussion because I'm certain that after it's done, you will realize that you've probably been thinking about wealth and money incorrectly in a number of ways.
And you've probably been pursuing it incorrectly in a number of ways.