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REDDIT

The accomplishment isn’t the million dollar net worth, it’s that you’ve changed the trajectory of the next generation.

**breaking a generational cycle through financial literacy.**
I (34F) wish someone had taught me about saving and investing when I was younger. I grew up in a family where financial literacy simply didn't exist. I'm the youngest of five siblings and the only one to graduate college and build a professional career. My entire family lives paycheck to paycheck, has no retirement savings, and often prioritizes new cars and designer purchases over financial security.
I don't blame my mom entirely. She grew up in poverty, immigrated to the U.S., and gave us opportunities she never had. But I also followed the same unhealthy habits. I started working at 14, making $400–500 a week at a nail salon while helping my mom pay bills. That experience made me hardworking and independent but terrible with money. By 17, I was buying Louis Vuitton, Dior, and Prada, opening store credit cards, maxing them out, and only making minimum payments. By 22, I'd paid my way through school, rented an apartment I couldn't afford, had a credit score around 400, and ignored my 401k entirely. Everything changed when I started dating my now husband at 23. His parents had taught him to save, invest, and live below his means. After plenty of arguments and even couples therapy over my spending habits, I finally changed my mindset. Today I contribute 10% to my 401k, 10% to my Roth 401k, invest in a personal brokerage account, keep a healthy emergency fund. We're now working with an estate planner since we recently surpassed a $1 million combined net worth. Since 2020, we've been raising my two nephews and my niece. We don't have biological children, but they're our kids in every way that matters. One of my goals has been to give them the financial education I never had. I added all three as authorized users on my credit cards, helping each of them build credit scores over 700 before they even got started on their own. My oldest nephew (22) lives with us and works retail. When he decided college wasn't for him, I told him he needed to work and build a future instead of drifting. A few weeks ago, I helped him enroll in his employer's 401k, contributing 5% to receive the full 4% company match. I showed him how much that money could grow if he simply stayed consistent. A few days later, he came to me asking if I'd help him open a Roth IRA and whether he should move money from his checking account into an emergency savings fund. He even wants to work more hours so he can save and invest more. I can't describe how proud that made me. Breaking generational cycles isn't just about earning more money, it's about changing the mindset around money. Younger me, who had to learn every lesson the hard way, would've never imagined she'd be the one helping someone else build a better future. Now I’m just praying he stays consistent and that I can also convince the other two to do the same.