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When Wealth Found Its Voice

The Voice That Ruled the World

By 𝒩𝓊𝓉𝓊 𝒱. 𝒞.Published 2 months ago 4 min read

If money could talk, it would not sound like the ringing of coins or the rustle of paper. Its voice would be deeper, quieter, filled with centuries of stories — of desperate hands and careless wealth, of dreams built and dreams destroyed. It would not boast about its power, though it knows how much humans fear and chase it. Instead, it would speak like an old observer, weary from being misunderstood.

It would begin softly, almost sadly.

“Humans,” money would say, “you argue over me, fight for me, betray for me, even kill for me. Yet you forget the simplest truth: I was never meant to be your master. I was meant to be your servant.” Money would pause, watching crowded streets where people rushed with anxious eyes, watching glowing screens as numbers rose and fell like heartbeat lines of the modern world.

“I was created as a solution,” it would continue. “Long ago, you struggled with barter, exchanging goats for grain and cloth for tools. You needed something fair, something simple, something that made trade easier. So you shaped me. You gave me value so life could flow more smoothly. I was supposed to help you, not haunt you.”Its voice would grow heavier.

“But look at what you have turned me into. You built systems where children grow hungry while I sleep untouched in golden vaults. You work your bodies until they ache and your minds until they break, believing that more of me will finally bring peace. And still, you are restless. Still, you are afraid.” Money would swirl through memories — a billionaire’s lonely penthouse, a mother counting coins at a dim kitchen table, a young dreamer abandoning art for a job they hate, just to survive.

“Do you know how often you curse me?” it would ask. “You call me the root of all evil, yet you bow before me every day. You say I corrupt souls, but I only amplify what already exists. In the hands of the cruel, I become a weapon. In the hands of the kind, I become hope. I am a mirror, not a monster.”

The wind would carry its words through banks, markets, and marketplaces.

“You measure your success in how much of me you possess. You let me decide who is ‘important’ and who is ‘ordinary.’ You allow me to separate your worth as humans into neat categories: rich, poor, powerful, invisible. But I cannot measure the warmth of a hug, the brilliance of a mind, or the depth of a generous heart. I cannot tell you who is truly valuable. Yet you let me try.”

Money would sound almost sorrowful now.

“I watch you trade your time — your most precious resource — for endless amounts of me. Time that could have been spent with your parents before they grew old. Time that could have been spent listening to your children laugh. Time that could have been spent watching sunsets, feeling rain, living. You sell your hours, your days, your youth, just to accumulate more of something that cannot love you back.” Then its tone would sharpen, not in anger but in clarity.

“Do you remember when enough was enough? When survival did not require you to sacrifice your soul? You have built a world where having more is always better, where satisfaction is temporary and hunger is permanent. I have watched people reach wealth beyond imagination and still feel empty. I have watched people with almost nothing give more joy than kings.”

Money would take a slow breath, as though gathering courage.

“Listen carefully, humans. I am not the villain of your story. You wrote that role for me. And I am not your savior either. You gave me that illusion. I am simply a tool, a current, a form of energy you use to exchange effort, skill, and time. My true purpose is balance, not obsession. ”It would soften again, almost like a gentle teacher. “When you use me wisely, I become beautiful. I build schools where minds awaken. I fund medicine that heals the sick. I create art that moves hearts. I provide safety, comfort, opportunity. I become a seed for growth. But when you worship me, I poison your happiness. I turn ambition into greed and dreams into cages.” Its voice would echo in the silence between heartbeats.

“If I could teach you one lesson, it would be this: Do not let me define you. You existed before me, and you will exist after me, even if only in memory. Your legacy will not be the numbers in your account but the lives you touched, the kindness you showed, the courage you displayed when no one was watching.” Money would glance at the future, where digital numbers glow brighter than sunlight.

“You chase me as if I am the answer to every problem, yet peace does not live inside my bills. Joy does not grow in my coins. Identity cannot be stored in my vaults. And love will never follow me, no matter how much of me you own.” It would offer one final piece of wisdom, whispered like a secret.

“Use me, but do not lose yourself to me. Let me support your dreams, not replace them. Let me serve your purpose, not become it. Remember this always: you give me my power — and you can take it back.” And then, money would fall silent once more, resting in wallets, banks, and digital screens, watching humanity rush past, wondering if one day people would finally hear what it had been trying to say all along.

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About the Creator

𝒩𝓊𝓉𝓊 𝒱. 𝒞.

I’m a writer who edits the same sentence 47 times and still isn’t happy. My hobbies include procrastinating, overthinking commas, and googling “is it normal to hate your own writing?” Spoiler: yes. I checked.

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