For
many people with wealth, financial trade-offs don't seem
to exist. You don't have to choose between buying a sailboat
or loaning a friend money to
start a business--you can do both. So why not do both?
There are costs to spending which people sometimes overlook--in
business terms, these are called 'opportunity costs.' For example, if
the owner of a manufacturing plant spends $50 million
upgrading equipment, the foregone option of hiring more
workers or investing the money in real estate are two
opportunity costs.
As
a wealthy individual, your opportunity costs may not be
measurable in dollars, but rather in the cumulative mental,
emotional, and physical energy it takes to manage all
your spending choices. Buying a sailboat involves much
more than writing a check; it requires maintaining it
(or managing someone to do that work for you). Loaning
money to a friend also takes work--negotiating terms,
overseeing the payback, making sure the friendship stays
intact.
You
can't "have it all"--because no matter how wealthy
you are, you are still a human being with finite time,
attention, and energy. Facing these limits means reconciling
with your humanity and ultimately, your mortality.
--Allen
Hancock
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