Wednesday, October 14, 2015
A recipe for true freedom!
It turns out the ancient stoics were right when they
argued that personal liberation could come only from the right attitude – even if
they did not always practice what they preached, and in some cases needed drugs
to achieve the desired framework shift. This is at least the life lesson
offered by financial planner Carl Richards in the NYT (“For True Freedom, Learn
To Deal With Uncertainty”). He draws on the example of a guy working in the
financial industry who was raking in huge sums and living a life of plenty, but
found himself on the rocks when the financial crisis hit – until his boat was
lifted when the financial tide eventually came back. It turns out this guy was
Richards himself. Musing on his fickle fortune, he at one point told a friend, “If you fast-forward
five years, I could end up homeless or own a private jet, or anything in
between.” His friend, a life coach, retorted,
“Yeah, and if you can get yourself to accept that, you’ll finally be free.” This seems to make a lot of sense – and perhaps some
form of meditation could help everybody chillax along these lines. Yet, wouldn’t it be
even more liberating not to face such extreme odds? Not to have to hope or worry
that the “capitalist casino” (as someone impersonating an American presidential
candidate calls it) can toss you up or down with such force? Could we then embrace
a bit more easily the fundamental truth that “life is irreducibly uncertain”? Apparently,
this thought doesn’t merit serious attention. Plus, Richards might
not have the right incentives to entertain it. After all, he
has a new book to pitch, offering “the one-page financial plan” that can reliably
propel you on an upward trajectory. Perhaps the homeless need to read it, too.