Joined January 2022
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📰ℹ️2025 - Year 5 -🎯Dividend Update✅ 🏁Goal of 1250$ in dividends received🏁 I totally missed this goal, earning ❌$1,134.41!❌ I "spent" 10 months of 2025 just reinvesting dividends. This contributed to the goal not being achieved. 🎯2026 Goal ⏳💰 1500$ in dividends!🎯
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Saving money is important, especially early on. But long-term wealth is often driven by the ability to increase earnings, develop valuable skills, and create new income streams. The most effective strategy is usually combining strong saving habits with growing earning power.
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💰💰💰2026 Weekly Buys #25 (Week 25) Following the same approach as last week: ✅ Bought 2 shares of $NVDA at $211.16 Once again, the increase in PADI is almost insignificant and irrelevant. This position is solely based on its growth potential! Brick by brick!📈
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The Dividend Engineer retweeted
💥💵🔦💰Capital Accounts💰🔦💵💥 Increase your investing knowledge!🦉 Follow:👇 Stocks/Finance:📈🏦 @earnlearninvest @loveleesfinance @SandraMushale @Dividend_Engine @DivIncomeBcast @ArchitectIncome @Real_Money_Blog @Financewisdom01 @Mindset4Money_X #stocks #dividends
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The Dividend Engineer retweeted
💥💵🔦💰Capital Accounts💰🔦💵💥 Increase your investing knowledge!🦉 Follow:👇 Stocks/Finance:📈🏦 @TslaGroupie @DividendMil @Divy_strategist @BullMarketBoss @Dividend_Engine @DividendBlast99 @DevotedDividend @EdwardCoronaUSA @KingMakerIQ #dividends #stocks #money💰
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Many investors focus on contribution size and overlook contribution timing. The market rewards capital that stays invested for long periods. That’s why starting early, even with modest amounts, can have a greater impact than investing much larger sums later in life!
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Investing becomes enjoyable because it turns abstract goals into visible progress. Each contribution is a vote for your future self. Over time, the focus shifts from chasing quick results to watching years of disciplined decisions gradually compound into something meaningful.
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Most people begin their financial journey by selling their time for money. That’s normal. The real transition occurs when a portion of that income is used to acquire assets, businesses, real estate, or investments that can generate value independently of your daily effort!
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Debt isn’t inherently dangerous but misused debt is. The key distinction is whether borrowed money is helping create future income, cash flow, or value. When debt finances consumption, the bill remains long after the excitement disappears.
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While spending habits matter, retirement outcomes aren’t always simple. Income levels, family responsibilities, health issues, and career interruptions all play a role. What remains true is consistent investing over long periods increases the odds of financial independence.
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Inflation changes the meaning of financial milestones over time. That’s why successful investors focus on purchasing power rather than account balances alone. Wealth isn’t measured by the number of dollars you have… It’s measured by what those dollars can actually do.
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Many retirement calculations assume you’ll stay exactly where you are today. But retirement isn’t just a financial decision. It’s a lifestyle decision! Lowering your future living costs can dramatically reduce the portfolio size needed to achieve financial independence!
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The real mistake isn’t choosing between an emergency fund and investing. It’s treating them as mutually exclusive. A modest cash buffer can prevent costly mistakes while still allowing compounding to do its work! 📈 The strongest plans balance growth with staying power.
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The investing stories that get attention usually involve bold predictions and constant action. The stories that create wealth are often far less exciting: buying quality assets, staying invested through uncertainty, and giving compounding decades to work!
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Investors often spend hours searching for an extra 1% of return while carrying debt costing 15% /year. The math is straightforward: reducing a guaranteed negative return can be more powerful than pursuing an uncertain positive one.
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People define financial success by income, possessions, or status. A better measure is when you can invest consistently, handle unexpected expenses, avoid destructive debt, and generate income from multiple sources, by building a foundation that can resists any events!
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People often assume wealth comes from a few brilliant decisions. More often, it's the result of thousands of ordinary choices made correctly over many years. Compounding doesn't reward perfection. It rewards consistency!
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Many people treat investing as something they'll do once everything else is taken care of. The problem is that "everything else" tends to grow with income, so good investors often make investing a priority, allowing compounding to start working while everyone else is waiting...
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Most investors spend years hoping for lower prices and then become fearful when it arrive. That's because market declines test conviction, not intelligence. Long-term wealth is often built by continuing to follow a process when emotions are encouraging you to do the opposite!
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Investing is one of the few fields where doing less can lead to better outcomes. The urge to constantly optimize, trade, and react often creates more mistakes than opportunities. Boredom is uncomfortable, but it's frequently a sign that compounding is working uninterrupted.
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Investors often imagine they'll be aggressive buyers during a downturn. Then the headlines turn negative, portfolios fall, and uncertainty rises. The paradox of investing is that the moments that create the long-term opportunities are usually the hardest moments to act on!
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