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I Used to Chase Dividends. Now I Wait for Opportunities There was a time when I believed dividends were the answer. Dividend ETFs made me feel productive. Watching monthly cash roll in was comforting — like my portfolio was "doing something." But it also made me passive. I wasn’t responding to the market. I was reacting to fear of missing out, to a need for stability that wasn’t actually grounded in strategy. But I started noticing something strange: the market would rally, but my income stayed the same. I wasn’t participating in growth. I was just collecting crumbs. The Power of Income — and the Need to Look Beyond There’s no denying it: regular income brings comfort. It gives structure, predictability, and a sense of progress. That’s why so many investors chase monthly yields. And for a while, I did too. But in the stock market, comfort isn’t the whole story. If you want to grow, you have to observe. You have to study. You have to wait for the moment that fits...
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The Market Rebounded, But Did You? The Fear Came Fast The market crashed when Trump’s tariff comments shook investor confidence. We all felt it. Charts turned red, headlines screamed “collapse,” and portfolios shrank overnight. But something unusual followed: a swift rebound. Major indices climbed again, and to many, it seemed as though the fear had never happened. Some Portfolios Recovered. Others Didn’t. Let’s be honest: not everyone came out okay. Even if the Nasdaq (QQQ) almost recovered its all-time high, that doesn’t mean all investors did. Take TQQQ, the 3x leveraged ETF. While QQQ moved from $540.81 (Feb 19) to $531.36 (Jun 12), nearly closing the gap, TQQQ dropped from $91.12 to $74.78 in the same period. That’s still a long way down. It Depends on What You Did in the Fear Maybe you froze. Maybe you had too much debt, and had to sell at the worst time. Maybe you took the opportunity to invest more — and now you’re ahead. Or maybe you caught ...
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When Your Routine Fails, What Should Stay? Routine Recovery Series_3 There have been moments when I almost lost my routine completely. Work piled up again. Life got busy. And I told myself, “It’s okay, I’ll bounce back tomorrow.” But that tomorrow didn’t always come. There were days when I couldn’t deny that my routine had collapsed. So I did what I always do—I went back to my 10-minute walk. Before everything got so hectic, I used to walk for almost an hour and add strength training too. But when I lost that rhythm, I didn’t try to recreate it all at once. I simply started again—gently. 🔄 The Reset List: How I Adapted My Routine Here’s what I added back into my day, slowly: Sitting upright at my desk, even when I felt drained. Walking with purpose—long strides, head up. A few squats before and after meals. Chair push-ups when time allowed. Gentle stretches when nothing else felt possible. Reading quietly for 10 minutes before bed. Every one of t...
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Why I Started Walking Again (And What It Taught Me) Routine Recovery Series_2 When you're burned out, rest feels like the only answer. But what if rest alone isn’t enough? I remember the first day I went for a walk again. I didn’t feel ready. My body was heavy. My mind, even heavier. But I told myself — just 10 minutes. No goals. No pace. Just movement. At first, it felt pointless. But a few minutes in, I noticed something surprising — I was breathing deeper. My thoughts slowed down. And for the first time in weeks, I felt grounded. When You Don’t Feel Ready, Move Anyway Recovery doesn’t wait for motivation. It responds to rhythm. When you move, move with focus. Exercise isn't just about fitness — it's about creating a space where nothing else matters for a moment. That mental pause becomes a powerful return to your everyday life. I didn’t need the perfect workout. I just needed to begin. And each day, I walked again. Slowly. Softly. Intentio...
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How a Gentle Routine Helped Me Survive Burnout Routine Recovery Series_1 Burnout doesn’t always feel like fire. Sometimes, it just feels like fog. You’re not lazy. You’re just tired. Tired from trying, proving, adjusting, showing up. You study. You work. You show up again. And even on your rest day, you’re not really resting. Your body is lying down, but your mind is still running. Are You Burning Out Without Realizing It? You may think you're fine—just busy, just tired. But the signs of burnout are sneaky: Sleep that doesn't refresh Endless to-do lists in your mind Feeling unproductive no matter how much you do <webtoon: A person lying in bed with floating “to-do” items above their head> I want you to know: I’ve been there. The days blur. The sleep isn’t deep. The coffee doesn’t help. And the worst part is, you start blaming yourself. “Why can’t I handle this?” When Rest Doesn’t Work: What Your Body Is Really Telling You Here’s the ...
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Why Buy Individual Stocks When ETFs Are Already Diversified? 10-Year ETF Reality Check Series_part 4 This post is part of a 4-part series analyzing long-term ETF strategies, risks, and smarter investment paths. Many investors lean on ETFs like VOO for broad market exposure and sector diversification. But some still wonder: if the index already includes winners like Apple and Tesla, why bother picking individual stocks at all? 📊 ETF Diversification vs. Single-Stock Potential Let’s compare the 10-year performance of four well-known U.S. giants — AAPL, TSLA, WMT, and JPM — with VOO. These represent sector leaders in technology, innovation, consumer staples, and finance. Initial investment:  $10,000 each, held from Jan 2015 to Dec 2024. While VOO delivered a solid 14.46% annualized return, AAPL returned nearly 30% annually, and TSLA an explosive 43%. However, TSLA also had a -67% drawdown — a nightmare for risk-averse investors. WMT, despite its low volatility, ou...
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Debt vs. Leveraged ETF: What’s the Smarter 2x Strategy? 10-Year ETF Reality Check Series_part 3 This post is part of a 4-part series analyzing long-term ETF strategies, risks, and smarter investment paths. When 2x Exposure Isn’t the Same Let’s say you have $10,000. You want more exposure to the stock market—double, in fact. Should you borrow another $10,000 and invest it all in VOO? Or should you go with SSO, a 2x leveraged ETF? On the surface, both give you a 2x position. But under the hood, they behave very differently. The Setup We tested 3 strategies over a 10-year period (2015–2024): 💳 VOO + $10,000 Loan @ 3% interest 💳 VOO + $10,000 Loan @ 5% interest 📈 SSO with $10,000 capital (2x leverage ETF) Each was benchmarked against plain VOO with $10,000 capital. Key Metrics Compared We focused on: 📈 CAGR (Compounded Annual Growth Rate) 📉 Max Drawdown 📊 Volatility 📉 Worst Year Return Here’s What We Found 1. CAGR : VOO with 3...