There was a time when I thought investing meant one thing: buy low, sell high, and somehow pretend I knew what “low” actually was. Spoiler: I didn’t. I was chasing price. Watching charts like they were heart monitors. Feeling brilliant when a stock went up 3% and emotionally devastated when it dropped 5% like it had personally betrayed me. I wasn’t investing—I was babysitting numbers and calling it strategy. Then something shifted. I stumbled into a much simpler, much calmer idea: what if I stopped trying to predict prices and started focusing on income instead? Not just any income—but income that grows every year . That’s when everything clicked. Because price goes up and down. But income? Income can be engineered to go in one direction—up—if you choose the right companies. This is how I approach it now. Not as a trader. Not as a market psychic. But as someone who wants their money to quietly work harder every year without requiring constant attention. I Stopped Asking “Will...
The Discipline of Rising Dividends: Why Getting Paid to Wait Is the Most Underrated Skill in Investing
There are two types of investors in the world. The first type wakes up, checks their portfolio like it’s a vital sign, and reacts emotionally to every flicker of green and red like they’re watching a heart monitor in a hospital drama. They chase momentum, panic at dips, and celebrate gains like they personally negotiated the trade. The second type? They quietly collect cash. They don’t care what the stock did today. Or yesterday. Or even this quarter. Because they’re focused on something far more boring—and far more powerful: Rising dividends. Not just dividends. Anyone can chase yield. Anyone can find a stock throwing off a suspiciously generous 12% and convince themselves they’ve cracked the system. But rising dividends? That’s a discipline. That’s patience, restraint, and the ability to ignore almost everything the market screams at you. And in a world addicted to speed, excitement, and instant gratification, that kind of discipline feels almost… offensive. The Differenc...