The average U.S. salary is around $50,000. And over a 40-year working career, that adds up to about $2 million.
Let that sink in for a second.
Two million dollars. That’s what flows through the hands of the “average” person over their lifetime.
So if that’s true, why do so many people feel broke?
Why do smart, hardworking people still struggle to get ahead, even when they’re doing everything “right”?
The answer isn’t how much you make.
It’s what happens after the money hits your account.
The Perspective: You don’t need to be rich to start acting like it
If you’ve ever thought, “I’ll start managing my money better when I make more of it,” you’re not alone.
More money doesn’t fix bad money habits. It just makes them more expensive.
The key to building financial independence isn’t earning more (though yes, that helps). It’s building tiny, repeatable habits that give every dollar a job. Even if you’re living paycheck-to-paycheck right now, you can start creating space between stress and survival.
You don’t need six figures to have a financial structure. You don’t need to feel wealthy to build wealth.
You just need to move a small percentage of your income into separate bank accounts, each with a clear purpose, so you know what your money is actually doing.
And no, we’re not talking about cutting out every coffee or selling your car. We’re talking about small shifts that add up.
The Action: Create a “DREAMS” account and move 1% Into It
Today’s action step isn’t going to change your whole financial life overnight, but it’s the beginning of something that can.
Set up one new bank account. Call it “DREAMS.”
Then, take just 1% of your next paycheck and move it into that account.
That’s it.
- If you make $600/week, that’s $6.
- If you make $1,200 every two weeks, that’s $12.
- Even if it’s just $3, move it.
It might not feel like much. But it’s a crack in the dam.
You’ve just created a space that’s not for bills, not for survival, not for guilt. It’s for you.
This is your space to save toward something meaningful. A trip. A class. A debt-free holiday. Something that reminds you why money matters in the first place.
It’s not about how much. It’s about starting.
But Mike, what if I cannot afford to save anything right now?
A totally fair question. If you’re living check to check, 1% might feel like a luxury.
But here’s what I’ve seen, again and again: even in the tightest budgets, a little separation changes everything.
Try this:
Instead of thinking of the DREAMS account as “extra,” think of it as non-urgent survival. Because the truth is, living in constant crisis mode isn’t survival. It’s burnout.
You’re sending a signal: “I’m not giving all of myself away anymore.”
Why this works (even when it feels too small)
Here’s what 1% does:
- It gets you in the habit of saving without pain
- It gives you your first taste of breathing room
- It builds a muscle that’s 100% under your control
You don’t need to earn more, do more, or deprive yourself to start.
The Big Picture: Lifetime Wealth Built from Small Moves
Let’s go back to that $2 million lifetime earnings stat.
If you had a system that saved and allocated even 5–10% of that money with intention, without stress, you’d be sitting on hundreds of thousands of dollars in savings over time.
And that starts with doing the un-sexy, un-shiny thing: Opening a second account. Naming it. Moving $5 into it.
Not someday. Today.
Final Thought: You Don’t Need to Be Rich to Build Security
You are not behind.
You are not too late.
And you do not need a six-figure salary to start winning with money.
What you do need is structure. Separation. A plan that works even when money is tight. A system that honors your goals and gives you a break from the constant grind.
This week, create that system one step at a time.
Open your DREAMS account.
Move 1% in.
Set it to repeat.
That’s the habit. That’s the win. That’s how you take your power back.
– Mike
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