June 1, 2010

Diagnosis: Net Worth Calculator Obsession

June 1st, 2010

Running your financial numbers through a net worth calculator is a necessary exercise when you want to give your personal finances a thorough look. But by no means is it the only exercise that matters. Make sure you care for other important parts of the personal finance picture – controlling debt, budgeting appropriately, and adding to retirement savings are just a few examples. Moreover, don’t get hung up on calculating your net worth, and certainly don’t let it become an obsession. Calculating your net worth once a year is often enough. If you keep on top of your financial goals, your net worth will be fine and you won’t have to obsess over it.

I know that our society is obsessed about money; being obsessed about your net worth is just a natural extension of that. So, I can understand if you want to calculate your net worth frequently. But when you are done calculating your net worth, you might do this exercise to help keep things in perspective.

1. Think about how many people you know who have a high net worth. You know of the big time billionaires like Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, Steve Jobs, the Walton family, and the billionaires of times gone by like the Rockefellers, Vanderbuilts, Morgans, etc. All these people and families have a high net worth. (The Rockefellers are still wealthy just like the Kennedys or the DuPonts are.)

2. Now think about nice and famous people who make a difference for humanity. You have heard about the Dalai Lama who is an icon of peace, even if the Chinese Communists disagree with that view. Then you’ve got Mother Teresa, who made an enormous difference to people whose poverty we cannot even imagine. Maybe you even want to include some rich people who have a bent for philanthropy like Warren Buffet and George Soros. But you can think of a lot less nice people than rich people, right?

3. Finally, think about the people who make a difference in your life. How many of them are wealthy? How many of them are kind? – I bet you that you know a lot more nice people than you know wealthy people. I also bet you that you appreciate the nice people in your life a lot more than you appreciate the wealthy people. (I mean no offense to the wealthy, but I think it’s a safe bet that the Rockefellers are not reading my blog. I’m pretty sure, too, they know very few poor folks, nice or not, although I’m fairly sure some of their wealthy friends are really nice.)

The moral of this post: While your net worth is important to survive (well) in our society, your kindness has a lot more positive impact on the people around you. So, while you nourish your net worth, don’t forget to also develop well as a human who makes a difference to the people who know him or her.

Do you know the saying, “It is nice to be important, but it is more important to be nice”?

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