
We all dream of the 100x crypto gem—that single, life-changing windfall that makes us financially independent. But what if I told you the fastest way to get rich isn't finding a moonshot coin, but simply stopping yourself from being poor?
The biggest wins aren't a high-stakes bet; they're the small, consistent, almost mundane decisions we make every day. My journey to radical financial freedom doesn't start with an ICO, but with a highly caffeinated, extra-caramel-y, Grande Latte Macchiato. My ultimate guilty pleasure!
Twice a week, I work in Brussels. My morning routine is strictly budget-friendly: I make my four coffees at home and fill a thermos. It's an addiction I've managed to keep productive and cheap.
The test of my frugality comes at lunchtime. I go for a walk, and that walk always, and I mean always, ends back at my local Starbucks for a decadent refill: a Grande Latte Macchiato Caramel. Price tag: €6.50.
If I do this twice a week, 50 weeks a year, that’s:
€6.50 x 2 times/week x 50 weeks = €650 per year
That’s a full stack of $LEO$ power! Suddenly, my little guilty pleasure looks like a small whale feeding frenzy.
It recently dawned on me (as a friend—not a financial advisor—pointed out) that bringing your own cup gets you a discount. It’s €0.50 off.
My logic was simple: I get the exact same delicious, decadent coffee, but I save half a Euro for doing practically nothing. It’s good for the planet and for my wallet. The ultimate win-win.
New Price: €6.00 Annual Savings: €50
"Ah, the simple, consistent action," I thought. "That's the financial equivalent of curating content every day on InLeo."
This is where the real fun started.I was standing at the counter, mug in hand, and for some reason, I hadn't fully tucked my work badge into my pocket. The friendly barista noticed the government emblem.
"Oh, you work for the government? You get a 10% discount!"
I nearly dropped my caramel concoction. Even better, the discount was applied to the original €6.50 price tag, meaning the total discount was actually €0.65.
Final Price: €6.50 - (€0.50 + €0.65) = €5.35 Total Savings Per Coffee: €1.15
I am now saving €1.15 per coffee (an 18% reduction!) simply by remembering my own cup and, well, being a little less tidy with my pocket space. That simple, embarrassing flash of a badge saves me €115 per year.
I constantly try to teach my kids that a dollar you don't spend is a dollar you don't need to earn. We're not raising piggy banks who fear enjoyment; we're teaching them that the only difference between frugal and wasteful is intentionality.
We enjoy life. We travel. We go out to eat. But we treat finding a discount like a small, fun treasure hunt.
For instance, when we travel abroad, we use apps like The Fork to book restaurants. Not because we want cheap food, but because the app often provides a guaranteed discount (20% to 50% off the food bill) for simply reserving a table at a time they need to fill. We get to experience a fantastic, often high-end local restaurant, and the savings cover the cost of a few other experiences on the trip. We are living the life we want, just at a discount.
This brings me to the story of the bike.
A few years ago, we were buying a new bike for one of the boys. Total price: €350. As the shop owner was ringing it up, I did what I always do:
"Hey, we love the bike. It's great. Any chance you can do a better price on it, or maybe throw in a water bottle?"
The owner hesitated, shrugged, and knocked €50 off the price.
My sons were baffled. Their faces were a perfect mix of embarrassment and astonishment. "Dad, it was only fifty Euros..."
I looked at them and said: "Fifty Euros is fifty Euros that stays in our family. If you don't ask, the answer is guaranteed to be 'No.' If I ask, the worst they can say is 'No,' and we're right back where we started."
Whether it's the €50 saved on a bike (which is now sitting in an investment account, compounding) or the €1.15 saved on a latte, the lesson is the same: The little things add up. They always do.
In life, in finance, and especially in crypto, success is not a one-time grand gesture. It’s the sheer force of small, consistent, smart choices that eventually turn into a monumental result.
So, go ask for that discount. Bring your own cup. Book a great restaurant using The Fork. Don't be afraid to save that Euro. Because every Euro saved is a Euro that gets to work for you instead of a massive corporation.
So: What's the one "silly" micro-habit you have that saves you a significant amount of money over the course of a year, while still letting you live the life you want? Share your most successful frugal hack below!
Cheers,
Peter
Posted Using INLEO
Exactly, one of the issues with these things is that you only ever hear of the rare big winners who hit the lottery, a big combo bet or crypto moonshot which gives a completely false sense of how possible it is. The common sense grind over multiple years while compounding is a much more likely way to success.
I don't feel like LEO rewards stuff they way they used to after the turned off inflation or whatever it was. I can't think of anything off the top of my head, but my wife and I often do a lot of things to save money in our regular budget.