
I got a call yesterday from a friend who signed up for Hive some years ago. He began to ask about Hive and why he wants to be serious with it because he was broke.
That conversation stayed with me long after the call ended. Not because it was unusual—but because it was painfully familiar. I’ve had that same urgency before. That moment when your account balance is low, your responsibilities are high, and suddenly, every opportunity starts to look like a lifeline.
When I think about it, I realize that most people don’t start chasing money when things are going well. It’s when things fall apart that the hunger becomes intense.
When I’m broke, everything changes. My thinking sharpens, but it also becomes desperate. I start seeing money not just as a tool, but as a rescue plan. Bills begin to feel louder. Needs become urgent. Even small opportunities start to look big.
That’s the truth: being broke doesn’t just affect the pocket—it affects the mind.
I’ve noticed that when people are financially stable, they tend to move calmly. They plan, they take calculated risks, and they’re patient. But when someone is broke, patience becomes a luxury they feel they can’t afford. They want results fast. They want something that works now.
That’s exactly what I heard in my friend’s voice.
He wasn’t just asking about Hive. He was asking for hope.
And I get it. I’ve been there too—scrolling through opportunities, signing up for platforms, trying to figure out which one will finally “work.” It’s not greed that drives that behavior. It’s survival.
But here’s the hard truth I’ve had to learn: desperation can push me to act, but it can also push me to act wrongly.
When I’m broke, I’m more likely to:
Jump into things without understanding them
Expect quick money instead of building real value
Lose consistency because I don’t see immediate results
That’s the trap.
Making money—whether it’s through Hive, a business, or a job—rarely rewards desperation. It rewards consistency, patience, and strategy. And those are exactly the things that feel hardest to maintain when I’m struggling.
So why do people want to make money the most when they are broke?
Because that’s when the need is real.
Because that’s when the consequences of not having money are visible.
Because that’s when survival instincts kick in.
But I’m beginning to understand something deeper: the best time to build something that makes money is not just when I’m broke—but before I get there.
What my friend really needs—and what I’ve needed in the past—is not just an opportunity. It’s a shift in approach.
If I truly want to escape being broke, I have to stop chasing money only in moments of crisis. I need to build systems, habits, and skills that can generate income consistently, whether I feel pressure or not.
That call reminded me of something important: being broke can wake me up, but it shouldn’t be the only reason I take action.
Because if I only move when I’m desperate, I’ll always be starting from zero.
And honestly, I’m tired of starting from zero.
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