David Meltzer
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I feel bad. You've helped in teaching me that.
Because that's what creates the value-add rule. If you really believe that there's more than enough in everything for everyone, so here's how I believe. I give everything I have. I'm going to be given more. I'm going to receive more. I'm going to ask for more than more from people who have it.
Because that's what creates the value-add rule. If you really believe that there's more than enough in everything for everyone, so here's how I believe. I give everything I have. I'm going to be given more. I'm going to receive more. I'm going to ask for more than more from people who have it.
Because that's what creates the value-add rule. If you really believe that there's more than enough in everything for everyone, so here's how I believe. I give everything I have. I'm going to be given more. I'm going to receive more. I'm going to ask for more than more from people who have it.
Then I have more than more, and I'm giving more than more, giving more than more, to receive more than more, to ask for more than more.
Then I have more than more, and I'm giving more than more, giving more than more, to receive more than more, to ask for more than more.
Then I have more than more, and I'm giving more than more, giving more than more, to receive more than more, to ask for more than more.
You see, I end up with more than more than more of everything where everyone else ends up in a zero-sum game because you and other people that I've met like you that are beautiful, my first responders, just generous, kind people, they give 100%, but then they only, oh, you know what, I'll only take 98% because that's enough for me. Well, your new 100% becomes 98%. It's a zero-sum game.
You see, I end up with more than more than more of everything where everyone else ends up in a zero-sum game because you and other people that I've met like you that are beautiful, my first responders, just generous, kind people, they give 100%, but then they only, oh, you know what, I'll only take 98% because that's enough for me. Well, your new 100% becomes 98%. It's a zero-sum game.
You see, I end up with more than more than more of everything where everyone else ends up in a zero-sum game because you and other people that I've met like you that are beautiful, my first responders, just generous, kind people, they give 100%, but then they only, oh, you know what, I'll only take 98% because that's enough for me. Well, your new 100% becomes 98%. It's a zero-sum game.
You end up at zero sooner or later.
You end up at zero sooner or later.
You end up at zero sooner or later.
You know what? It relates to so much. One of my biggest messages to young people when I talk about the stock market is investing in stocks and not stuff. We are like the most, the largest consumer generation probably in history. We want what we want when we want it, right? I always have joked, and I do it myself. I see something on Instagram that I want.
You know what? It relates to so much. One of my biggest messages to young people when I talk about the stock market is investing in stocks and not stuff. We are like the most, the largest consumer generation probably in history. We want what we want when we want it, right? I always have joked, and I do it myself. I see something on Instagram that I want.
You know what? It relates to so much. One of my biggest messages to young people when I talk about the stock market is investing in stocks and not stuff. We are like the most, the largest consumer generation probably in history. We want what we want when we want it, right? I always have joked, and I do it myself. I see something on Instagram that I want.
I'll go to buy it, and then it will offer me... It may be a $19 item. And then it will say, well, if you want it delivered yesterday, you could pay $25 to have it gotten there quicker. So I'm paying more to have what I want when I want it for the thing that it would have no value. But you're describing that. We don't really think of the value of time. First of all, something we'll never get back.
I'll go to buy it, and then it will offer me... It may be a $19 item. And then it will say, well, if you want it delivered yesterday, you could pay $25 to have it gotten there quicker. So I'm paying more to have what I want when I want it for the thing that it would have no value. But you're describing that. We don't really think of the value of time. First of all, something we'll never get back.
I'll go to buy it, and then it will offer me... It may be a $19 item. And then it will say, well, if you want it delivered yesterday, you could pay $25 to have it gotten there quicker. So I'm paying more to have what I want when I want it for the thing that it would have no value. But you're describing that. We don't really think of the value of time. First of all, something we'll never get back.
And also to think about that we are buying things. We need things. We think we need things. And there's just want and need and what that equation gives us at the end, which is getting things at the minute we own them, they actually start to lose value. And so that's a mindset that I try to teach people.