Friday, April 17, 2026

265. When the Mission Is Clear, the Struggles Become Worth It

 


One hard truth about being a financial advisor is this:

This work can break your heart if your mindset is shallow.

Why?

Because this profession comes with plenty of disappointment.

  • Clients cancel meetings.
  • Prospects delay decisions.
  • People say they are interested, then disappear.
  • You give your best effort, and sometimes the result still falls short.

That is why a financial advisor cannot survive on excitement alone.

  • You cannot build a lasting career on hype alone.
  • You cannot depend only on commissions to keep you going.
  • You need something deeper.

You need a mission-driven mindset.

  • Because when your work is just about income, rejection feels heavier.
  • When your work is just about recognition, slow days feel unbearable.
  • When your work is just about hitting the next sale, setbacks can easily make you question yourself.

But when your work is anchored on mission, you become harder to discourage.

You remember that your role is not merely to sell.

  • Your role is to serve.
  • To guide.
  • To protect.
  • To help families make wise decisions.
  • To prepare people for risks they often do not see coming.

That is not small work.

That is meaningful work.

And meaningful work is rarely easy.

I see a similar reality in my own work as Head of Strategic Marketing and Business Development for Malayan Savings Bank.

The task of helping bring a bank to greater prominence and profitability is not easy at all.

  • It takes effort.
  • It takes patience.
  • It takes alignment.
  • It takes perseverance.

And many times, it takes doing the right work long before the results become visible.

  • There are challenges.
  • There are delays.
  • There are pressures.
  • There are moments when the climb feels steeper than expected.

But even then, there is fulfillment in the mission.

  • Because when you know that your work is helping move the bank forward…
  • When you begin to see the brand gaining strength…
  • When you see good ideas turning into actual progress…
  • When you realize that the institution is steadily moving toward relevance, prominence, and profitability…

You are reminded that the struggle is not empty.

It is worth it.

And that is the same thing I want financial advisors to remember.

  • Not every day will feel rewarding.
  • Not every effort will produce immediate results.
  • Not every client will say yes.

But if your mission is clear, you will not quit too easily.

You will understand that every conversation matters.

  • Every follow-up matters.
  • Every client educated matters.
  • Every family protected matters.

Because this career is bigger than production.

This is about impact.

A mission-driven advisor keeps going not because the work is easy, but because the work matters.

That kind of mindset creates resilience.

  • It helps you recover from rejection.
  • It helps you endure dry seasons.
  • It helps you remain faithful when others become easily distracted or discouraged.

The same is true whether you are building a client base or helping build a bank.

If the mission is right, the hardship becomes easier to carry.

So when the setbacks come, do not just ask:

Why is this so hard?

Ask instead:

Why did I begin?

  • Go back to your mission.
  • Go back to the people you are called to serve.
  • Go back to the purpose behind the pressure.
  • Go back to the meaning behind the effort.

Because when the mission is clear, the disappointments do not disappear, but they do become easier to endure.

And one day, when you begin to see the results of years of faithful work, you will realize something important:

  • The road was hard.
  • But the work was worth it.
#acgadvice

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

264. Not All Debt Problems Begin with Overspending

 



When people talk about debt problems, the usual assumption is simple: someone must have spent too much, bought too many unnecessary things, or lived beyond his means

Sometimes that is true. There are cases where debt begins with poor discipline, impulsive spending, or trying to maintain a lifestyle that income cannot support.

But not all debt problems begin with overspending.

  • Some debt problems begin with illness. A sudden hospitalization, maintenance medicines, laboratory tests, and follow-up consultations can quickly drain savings and force a family to borrow. 
  • Some debt problems begin with job loss, delayed salary, reduced commissions, or a business slowdown. 
  • Others begin with family obligationhelping parents, supporting siblings, paying for a child’s education, or stepping in during a household emergency. 

In these situations, debt does not begin with luxury. It begins with pressure.

Many decent, responsible, hardworking people fall into debt not because they are reckless, but because life became heavy before they were financially ready. 

  • A breadwinner can be careful for many years and still find himself borrowing because income stopped while expenses continued. 
  • A parent can be disciplined and still resort to loans because tuition became urgent. 
  • A family can be modest in lifestyle and still end up in financial trouble because one medical event changed everything.

The problem is not always spending too much. 

Sometimes the real problem is having too little margin for disruption.

This is where financial planning becomes very important. 

A household may appear manageable when everything is normal. 

  • Salary is coming in. 
  • Bills are being paid. 
  • The children are in school. 
  • The mortgage is current. 
  • Daily life looks stable. 

But if there is no emergency fund, no health protection, no life insurance, and no financial buffer, then one interruption can push that household toward debt very quickly.

In many cases, debt is not the first problem. It is the result of another problem.

  • The debt came because savings were too small.
  • The debt came because there was no income replacement.
  • The debt came because a medical cost had to be paid.
  • The debt came because obligations remained even when income weakened.
  • The debt came because responsibility arrived before preparation did.

That is why good advice should go deeper than simply telling people, “Do not overspend.”

  • Of course people should avoid unnecessary spending. 
  • Of course, discipline matters. 

But if we stop there, we miss the bigger lesson. 

Many debt problems are not just spending problems. 

  • They are preparedness problems. 
  • Protection problems. 
  • Cash flow problems. 
  • Vulnerability problems.

A person can avoid luxury purchases and still be financially exposed.

This is also why some people feel confused about their situation. 

They tell themselves, 

  • I was not irresponsible. 
  • I was not extravagant. 
  • So why am I drowning in debt?

The answer is often painful but clear: 

  • because debt can grow not only from indulgence, 
  • but from unplanned hardship. 
  • When there is no cushion, even a responsible life can become financially fragile.

That is why emergency savings matter. That is why proper insurance matters. That is why affordability matters more than appearance. That is why a person should not build a financial life that only works when nothing goes wrong.

Because sooner or later, something usually does.

I have come to believe that one of the most important things people need to understand about debt is this: debt becomes dangerous not only when people want too much, but also when life demands too much all at once. 

And when that happens, the real defense is not shame. It is preparation.

This should also make us more compassionate in the way we look at others. Not every borrower is careless. Not every person in debt is financially immature. Some are simply carrying burdens that outsiders do not see. A family health crisis. A job interruption. A dependent relative. A failed business cycle. An urgent responsibility they could not walk away from.

So yes, overspending can create debt problems.

But let us not pretend it is the only cause.

  • Sometimes debt begins with survival.
  • Sometimes debt begins with love.
  • Sometimes debt begins with responsibility.
  • Sometimes debt begins with a crisis that came too early and hit too hard.

And that is exactly why sound financial planning is not just about telling people what not to buy. It is about helping them build enough stability so that when life becomes difficult, borrowing does not become the only option left.

Because not all debt problems begin with overspending.

Some begin with being unprotected in a world where emergencies do not wait for perfect timing.