We all want to feel secure with our finances and know that we can handle life’s surprises and move toward our goals with confidence. But security doesn’t just happen. It’s something we build deliberately, piece by piece, with care and balance. “Financial security and independence are like a three‑legged stool resting on savings, insurance, and investments.” — Brian Tracy
When markets get turbulent or headlines turn grim, many people instinctively retreat to cash. It feels safe, predictable, tangible, and readily available. There’s no volatility, no chance of “losing” money overnight. And for certain purposes, cash is exactly what you need. It’s essential for covering short‑term expenses, building an emergency fund, or giving yourself flexibility during life’s unexpected moments. In these situations, cash is not just safe; it’s smart.
When we think about building wealth, it’s easy to picture numbers on a statement, bricks and mortar, or a growing investment portfolio (or even a chest full of gold!). These are the tangible milestones: savings accounts, retirement funds, real estate, and other assets we can point to and measure. But rarely do we consider the intangible part of wealth; the conversations we have about money. And yet, it’s these conversations that often shape the path we take and determine how we feel about the journey.
If you’ve ever looked at your portfolio during a market crisis, like March 2020, you may have noticed something unsettling: everything seemed to fall at once. Stocks dropped. Bonds wobbled. Even “safe” assets felt shaky. It’s a scenario that can leave even experienced investors wondering, “Isn’t diversification supposed to protect me from this?” It’s a fair question, and the answer is both yes and no.
When we are frequently told that we need more and more money, more success, more status, it’s easy to feel like we’re always falling behind. But what if we can expand that story to reveal that real wealth has less to do with how much we accumulate, and more to do with how we live?
Tax season is stressful enough without someone trying to steal your refund, or your identity. Yet every year, as millions of people file their returns, scammers ramp up their efforts to cash in on confusion, fear, and urgency. From Australia’s AI‑powered phishing emails to fake SARS refund sites in South Africa and HMRC impersonators in the UK, tax‑season scams are on the rise globally. Even the US IRS reports hundreds of thousands of identity‑theft cases tied to tax returns each year. So how do these scams work and how can we avoid becoming a victim?
