Would you be at all interested in adopting me, Pauk?
Not to go off-track, but why? I never seem to understand this, but i've heard people say such things before. Like the other day I was watching a program with my sister about the children of billionnaires who spent all of their time doing....well, whatever the hell they liked!!Don't you get bored sometimes?
Not to go off-track, but why? I never seem to understand this, but i've heard people say such things before. Like the other day I was watching a program with my sister about the children of billionnaires who spent all of their time doing....well, whatever the hell they liked!!
And to my amazement, my sister said ''what a wasted life!''. I was like '' 'wasted life?!'...they're living the only lives worth living! People dream of winning the lottery so that they can live like this, and you're saying it's a wasted life??''
Surely going to work for 10 hours per day, 5 days a week is a wasted life in my book!! lol
This is such a big topic with so many facets to it...
My initial thoughts are that you have to consciously separate the role of being a father with the role of teacher. You have to be prepared to accept that the child will never "get it" and still be a great father to them. Whatever happens, your never lower your standards as a father even if they blow up and do something stupid with your money. In some sense, letting them have a mini blow up by themselves (which you still have some control over), and then maintaining your role as great father during adversity, such as taking them for a meal, golf, etc. will have long term benefits. They will remember that.
So I really think you kind of have to "embrace" a P&L hit that was caused by THEM breaking basic rules, e.g. not taking a stop. If they only make money from the beginning, how will they cope later on when they do have a setback? It has to really HURT to lose money as a result of breaking rules, but not because the father says so. If they feel shameful and disappointed in themselves (and it is not you doing the yelling), that is a good sign...then they might have the motivation and determination to succeed and put in the sacrifices that you did. At that point, they want to prove themselves and be willing to run through a brick wall. But I really think the fire has to come from within the person.
If one or both of them walks away for a year or two and does something else, that doesn't mean they won't be interested again at a later date. So although that might be frustrating at the time, you should be ready to re-start again with their education when they are ready.
Play the long game, I would suggest.
Yes, it is very easy and brains are not necessary.... That's why 90% never succeed. LOL.
I want their life to be one of uninterrupted fun. Never any stress or depression that 'work' brings. Just non-stop holidays, fun, complete freedom and relaxation.
My brother in law had very rich parents. He did never learn and never worked.
When he was 25 he was sleeping all day and at night he was watching video's and palying computer games.
He got addicted to pills, divorced from my sister, and commited suicide when he was about 40 (it was his third attempt already and he spent a lot of time in psychiatric clinics and therapy).
People should have a sense in life, he did not have that at all. So he decided to end his miserable life.
His parents wanted to give him the life you are speaking about. Maybe think it over again.
Sounds like you're patting yourself on the back thinking your high IQ is mostly responsible for your trading success..if you have a high IQ, it's not. There have been studies showing mathematicians trying to implement chaos theory into the markets have failed terribly with execution and traders with near-average intelligence have had an unexpected amount of success, if intelligence is the criterion to predict trading success. How do you explain these outcomes?