The Biggest Money Mistake Is Not What You Think | Bill Perkins

最大的金钱错误并非你所想象 | 比尔·珀金斯

The Daily Motivation

2025-12-13

6 分钟
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Leave an Amazon Rating or Review for my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy! Check out the full episode: https://greatness.lnk.to/1529 "I think the biggest psychological crime is people fear running outta money instead of fear of wasting their life." - Bill Perkins Bill Perkins watched busloads of senior citizens arrive in St. Petersburg, Russia. Not a single person climbed the 115 steps to see the breathtaking view from the church balcony. They had the money for the trip, the time to travel, but their bodies wouldn't cooperate anymore. That moment crystallized everything he'd been thinking about how we get life backwards. We treat money like it's the goal when it's actually just a tool, one that loses effectiveness as our bodies and minds decline. Your body peaks at 33. After that, it's plateau and decline. Those hiking trips, those physical adventures, those experiences that require energy and health—they have expiration dates we refuse to acknowledge. We tell ourselves we'll do them later, when we're more financially secure, but later means weaker knees, less stamina, different limitations. Perkins talks about life in buckets, periods you'll never get back. Your twenties happen once. The years with small children happen once. Each phase has experiences designed for it, and if you miss them, they interfere with each other or disappear entirely. He uses a Tetris metaphor: imagine standing in heaven with God, throwing every experience you want into a bucket. Hiking, building businesses, raising kids, traveling to places that require climbing, all of it. God says you can have everything, you just have to get the order right. That's the game. That's what most people get catastrophically wrong. They're so afraid of judgment, so terrified of running out of money that they waste the periods of life when those experiences would mean the most, when their bodies could actually do them. This isn't about reckless spending. It's about understanding that your ability to convert money into fulfilling experiences decays over time, and no amount of savings can buy back the body you had at 33. Sign up for the Greatness newsletter: http://www.greatness.com/newsletter Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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  • Hi, my name is Lewis Howes and welcome to the Daily Motivation Show.

  • What do you think is the biggest psychological crime someone can make when it comes to their money?

  • I think the biggest psychological crime is people fear running out of money instead of fear of wasting their life.

  • And so, you know, they have this fear of embarrassment of like,

  • I'm going to run out of money and I'm going to be broke or I'm going to X, Y and Z.

  • Instead of fear like, I am wasting my life.

  • I have for the, we were talking about the 20 to 30 bucket.

  • I'll just, you know, this is it.

  • This is the only period I'll be 20 to 30.

  • There are certain activities, experiences that are meant for this bucket, right?

  • People are marketing services and products to you.

  • You know that they're there, right?

  • Like I don't want to do them like go have fun, right?

  • But but and you only get one shot one go around You know and so and they're worried about you know in the 30 40 so I think people worry about embarrassment.

  • What other people think?

  • Judgment about their lifestyle or them failing in the future,

  • etc as opposed to worrying about like I don't want to waste this ride Mmm,

  • and it's not even the ride for the whole life every single period of your life.

  • So if you're a parent with small children, not wasting that period with teenagers,

  • I know a lot of us would like to waste that period,