Example 2, fictional story...ET. Say a guy is a boring accountant and dreams of becoming an at home daytrader. He is married with 2 kids. He thinks he has 2 choices. Stay at a job he hates which is safe but will support his family, or quit his job, take all his savings and go into daytrading full time. There are tons of threads on ET about this btw. Both choices are sub optimal. Why not spend most of your time doing the boring job you hate (it pays the bills and keeps the wife happy) and spend a little bit of time and money giving this daytrading a try. If he gets lucky (and I mean really lucky) and finds out he is a master daytrader, then he will be happy he took the risk. If on the other hand he loses his entire "small" experimental account and he realizes he hates daytrading, then he will be happy he never quit his accounting job. The wife will be happy too.
Too often we make life decisions as either or when in reality there is a more optimal solution that both maximizes our utility and produces a long term acceptable result.
Too often we make life decisions as either or when in reality there is a more optimal solution that both maximizes our utility and produces a long term acceptable result.