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@travelwritemoney
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This is a great question. It creates some introspection on my part. Having grown up with very little, there are habits and ways of thinking that are hard to let go as they are a part of me in ways that I am unaware.

A quick example is the tendency to hold on to things that "might be useful in the future". The result is a house full of clutter that is distracting and takes time and effort to manage. The alternative would have been to give it away or sell it. If I need it again, I can buy it again. There are subtle poverty mindset tendencies like this that worry me about being prepared for abundance. Will I waste time to save a buck, or spend a few dollars to save time? At what point does my time become more valuable than my money? When you're poor, your money is most often worth more than your time.

At some point, our crypto holdings were somewhere near $20,000. I haven't calculated our present holdings, yet, which have grown. Still, that was more than we had ever saved in our lifetimes. For now, we can get away with not dealing with it by not withdrawing. Thus, we don't feel the abundance or future prosperity. We don't see it. For now, it's an abstract curiosity.

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