>> An overall piece of advice, I would say,
is that it's likely that, for me anyway,
as I aged and had different experiences,
I changed and my interests changed.
So, interests changed.
So, allowing yourself a degree
of fluidity with your career.
And being prepared and poised to reevaluate at
different points of what you're doing is working
for you or if you need to shift and
do something a little different.
That's important because most
of us now go through many,
many different phases of the same career.
It's almost like a theme in variation
of what we originally intended.
So, being prepared to get extra education,
if you need to, to advance yourself
in a certain field and also being prepared
financially, avoiding undo risks through debt
and through being beholden into a few mortgages
or some other arrangement to another party,
which then cuts off the ability to be flexible.
That's devastating.
If you will be ruined by not being
able to be flexible career wise,
it puts enormous amount of strain on you.
So, keeping your debt down to the
extent possible will help you.
And being responsible financially, getting a
financial investor and taking care of yourself,
both in terms of health and your personal
situation, will allow you the flexibility
to work and then be able to change gears
if and as you need to, moving forward.
So, you can enjoy your career as it unfolds
and in the event that you have to work
for a goodly amount of time and you can't
retire at forty with your first ten million.