I suggest everyone change their perspective and manage themselves like a one-person company. Many people's anxiety, exhaustion, and difficulty in improving their skills stem from a problem of perspective. If you live life from the perspective of an employee: You do whatever others tell you to do, feeling like you're working hard when your time is full. But even though you're busy all day, you have no idea whether you're improving or worsening. In the logic of capital, this is called ineffective investment. You've done things, but there's no output. You've put in the effort, but there's no compound interest. You've been busy all year, and your valuation hasn't increased at all. Capital thinking is completely different. It only focuses on two things: resource allocation and return on investment. When you apply this way of seeing the world to yourself, you'll immediately become clear-headed. You'll begin to realize: Your time is a cost. Your energy is a scarce resource. Your abilities, personality, and achievements are your products and assets. Everything you do is an investment. Who you collaborate with, who you talk to, what skills you learn, and where you allocate your time determine your future valuation. Once you view yourself from a capital perspective, many things you used to worry about will become clear. It will instantly become meaningless. For example—you'll no longer waste your energy on ineffective social interactions. You won't let a single comment from someone affect your emotions. You won't do things that lose you money just to save face. You won't invest too much in unimportant relationships, wasting time on things that won't increase your value... This is because you're finally willing to take responsibility for your return on investment. For example, in terms of making money, you won't think that only hard work can earn you money. Instead, you'll ask, "Can I transform my time from something I'm selling into something I can leverage?" This is the core of capitalist thinking: leverage. You'll also begin to understand what compound interest is. You learn a skill not to make money immediately, but to continuously increase the value of your time. This is what capital understands best: the longer the time, the faster the growth. In relationships, you'll naturally filter out those who drain you, reserving your time for truly valuable long-term connections. Because you know: conserve your emotions, conserve your mental energy, and remember that interpersonal relationships are a form of resource allocation. When you start thinking this way, you're no longer being pushed forward by life; you begin to adjust your direction, your financial structure, and your energy allocation. Ultimately... The so-called capital perspective can be summed up in one sentence: treat yourself as an asset to be managed, not as a consumable to be squandered. The sooner you do this, the sooner you will embark on a clear, agile, and sustainable growth path.
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