Gabriel Mizrahi
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And I think it's in addition to the pain of losing the money, there's that sting of, am I really as smart as I thought I was? Am I really as good of an investor as I thought I was? And I think the same advice applies here, that the best thing you can do is when you take the L, try to learn from it and just apply that to everything else you do from now on. What else are you going to do?
You can't change the past. You can't change this company. But I just think it's really interesting. Sometimes when you make a mistake, you can just sit with that mistake and it's just a mistake. It just hurts over and over again. But if you do something with it, then it starts to feel a lot different.
You can't change the past. You can't change this company. But I just think it's really interesting. Sometimes when you make a mistake, you can just sit with that mistake and it's just a mistake. It just hurts over and over again. But if you do something with it, then it starts to feel a lot different.
You can't change the past. You can't change this company. But I just think it's really interesting. Sometimes when you make a mistake, you can just sit with that mistake and it's just a mistake. It just hurts over and over again. But if you do something with it, then it starts to feel a lot different.
Hello, Jordan and Gabe. My mom is 70 and lives alone. She's always been a fiercely independent person. She raised my sister and me alone from the ages of eight and five, respectively. And she's always lived in the same small town in rural Canada that she grew up in, like most of our family has. I now live with my husband in Florida.
Hello, Jordan and Gabe. My mom is 70 and lives alone. She's always been a fiercely independent person. She raised my sister and me alone from the ages of eight and five, respectively. And she's always lived in the same small town in rural Canada that she grew up in, like most of our family has. I now live with my husband in Florida.
Hello, Jordan and Gabe. My mom is 70 and lives alone. She's always been a fiercely independent person. She raised my sister and me alone from the ages of eight and five, respectively. And she's always lived in the same small town in rural Canada that she grew up in, like most of our family has. I now live with my husband in Florida.
I don't get home as often as I used to, but I do visit one to two times a year, and I get her down here about the same. After COVID, though, we do see each other a little less often, maybe once a year, because it's expensive and I need to take a chunk of time off to make the expense worth it. Over the past few years, my mom has had some warning signs of possible memory loss.
I don't get home as often as I used to, but I do visit one to two times a year, and I get her down here about the same. After COVID, though, we do see each other a little less often, maybe once a year, because it's expensive and I need to take a chunk of time off to make the expense worth it. Over the past few years, my mom has had some warning signs of possible memory loss.
I don't get home as often as I used to, but I do visit one to two times a year, and I get her down here about the same. After COVID, though, we do see each other a little less often, maybe once a year, because it's expensive and I need to take a chunk of time off to make the expense worth it. Over the past few years, my mom has had some warning signs of possible memory loss.
She's also exhibited some behavioral changes, including avoidance of getting something taken care of, like her well water not working and living off of water bottles, a lack of awareness about how severe a situation is, like getting an oil spill in her basement from having backflow into her oil tank, or
She's also exhibited some behavioral changes, including avoidance of getting something taken care of, like her well water not working and living off of water bottles, a lack of awareness about how severe a situation is, like getting an oil spill in her basement from having backflow into her oil tank, or
She's also exhibited some behavioral changes, including avoidance of getting something taken care of, like her well water not working and living off of water bottles, a lack of awareness about how severe a situation is, like getting an oil spill in her basement from having backflow into her oil tank, or
losing home insurance because of a forgotten payment, being oblivious, like having a flight delayed and not calling or texting to let me know that she would arrive another day, just to name a few. She's also had diagnosed seasonal affective disorder for years, as well as insomnia, and she's been on many medications for them for decades.
losing home insurance because of a forgotten payment, being oblivious, like having a flight delayed and not calling or texting to let me know that she would arrive another day, just to name a few. She's also had diagnosed seasonal affective disorder for years, as well as insomnia, and she's been on many medications for them for decades.
losing home insurance because of a forgotten payment, being oblivious, like having a flight delayed and not calling or texting to let me know that she would arrive another day, just to name a few. She's also had diagnosed seasonal affective disorder for years, as well as insomnia, and she's been on many medications for them for decades.
These weird moments, or behaviors, seem fleeting and vague, so up until now my sister, who lives nearby, and I have been keeping an eye out. But recently, my sister called me frantic one night because my mom had miraculously been found driving her car in the wrong direction, about 40 minutes away from home.
These weird moments, or behaviors, seem fleeting and vague, so up until now my sister, who lives nearby, and I have been keeping an eye out. But recently, my sister called me frantic one night because my mom had miraculously been found driving her car in the wrong direction, about 40 minutes away from home.
These weird moments, or behaviors, seem fleeting and vague, so up until now my sister, who lives nearby, and I have been keeping an eye out. But recently, my sister called me frantic one night because my mom had miraculously been found driving her car in the wrong direction, about 40 minutes away from home.
She's been driving at night and left my sister's house after dropping her off, but must have taken a wrong turn or two and not looked at signs. She actually almost hit another car turning on a narrow road. She can't tell us how she ended up there and doesn't seem phased by the fact that somebody had to drive her home.