I Will Teach You To Be Rich (90% WORKING)

The first lesson Leo learned was the hardest: guilt is a useless currency. He had spent years feeling ashamed of his daily vanilla lattes. He assumed being "rich" meant living like a monk. But as he researched and practiced, he realized that being rich meant spending extravagantly on the things he loved while cutting costs mercilessly on the things he didn't. He stopped buying cheap clothes that fell apart in a month and kept the latte. Surprisingly, the math worked.

His journey didn't start with a lottery win or a stock market miracle. It started with a spreadsheet. I Will Teach you to be Rich

Leo stared at his reflection in the greasy window of a late-night diner. He was twenty-five, exhausted, and stuck. His bank account held exactly forty-two dollars, and his "financial plan" consisted of hoping his car wouldn't break down before payday. The first lesson Leo learned was the hardest:

One evening, three years later, Leo sat in that same diner. He wasn't there because he had to be; he was there because he liked the pie. He opened his banking app. His net worth wasn't in the millions yet, but the "Emergency Fund" line gave him something he hadn't felt in a decade: the ability to breathe. But as he researched and practiced, he realized