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A Librarian's 3 Secrets To Millionaire Status

It doesn't take six figures to build wealth

By Destiny S. HarrisPublished 9 days ago 4 min read
A Librarian's 3 Secrets To Millionaire Status
Photo by Kenny Eliason on Unsplash

Mr Ox wrote a stellar article on how his father retired as a millionaire on a 48k salary (check out the article in the link below at the bottom of this read).

You're incorrect if you think it takes six figures to save seven figures of wealth. People are becoming millionaires on significantly less income with something called Discipline.

It's never about how much you make; it's always about how much you keep. You can make tremendous financial progress if you prioritize living below and within your means for long enough.

So what exactly are the three secrets Mr. Ox's father leveraged to produce millionaire wealth?

Save hard

Invest wisely

Stay healthy

The Three Secrets

1. Save Hard

It's extremely easy to spend money you have and don't have. We live in a world that prioritizes spending money, overconsuming, living in the moment, and keeping up with appearance, but none of these things will produce wealth if you're living above your means and never saving any money.

A person who saves hard is committed to building wealth. They live below their means, don't prioritize buying luxuries, and focus on saving and investing their money.

2. Invest Wisely

What is the one thing every wealthy person does? They invest their money. And if they want their money to grow, they prudently invest it. 

What does investing wisely mean, though?

Invest early

Invest consistently

Invest thoughtfully

The best time to start investing is as early as possible, but a later start is better than no start at all. 

Investing here and there isn't as productive as consistently investing. Invest at full throttle. Don't take breaks from investing. Instead, consistently invest your resources so they work around the clock for you 24/7.

Investing thoughtfully means doing your due diligence. It means thinking before you invest, studying and learning about what you invest in, and ultimately educating yourself about the world of personal finance and investing so you can make informed decisions about where your money is going.

3. Stay Healthy

This one might not immediately come to mind for many, but if you think about it: Health is wealth. Though you might believe you don't have complete control over your health, you gain quite a lot of control over your health outcomes by integrating a few things:

  • Clean diet
  • Regular exercise 
  • Healthy amounts of sleep

Living a sedentary lifestyle that focuses on consuming unhealthy food (I know it's tasty and tempting) will not elevate your health; instead, it will deteriorate it. If you want to promote longevity, treat your body right, and it will likely treat you right.

You mitigate disease and sickness by investing in your health.

What else do you mitigate by caring for your body and mind? Your health expenses.

When your stress levels are lower, you get proper sleep, consistently work out, and eat well, you promote a more robust and healthier body; this decreases your likelihood of getting sick and becoming dependent on pharmaceuticals/medications, which can all be costly in the present and over the long-term.

Why Is This Story Compelling?

What makes this story compelling isn’t just the outcome — it’s the repeatability of the process. There’s nothing exotic or inaccessible about the strategies used. No stock-picking genius. No risky leverage. No shortcuts. Just long-term discipline applied consistently in the background while life carried on.

This is what many people misunderstand about wealth. They assume it requires constant optimization or exceptional intelligence. In reality, it requires staying the course longer than most people are willing to.

Saving hard isn’t glamorous.

Investing wisely doesn’t produce daily excitement. Staying healthy doesn’t feel urgent until it suddenly is. But together, these three pillars compound into something powerful over decades.

Another overlooked factor is time alignment. When your saving, investing, and health habits are aligned, they reinforce each other. Saving reduces stress. Lower stress supports better health. Better health increases productivity and longevity. Increased longevity gives your investments more time to compound. Each decision quietly strengthens the others.

There’s also a humility baked into this approach. Living below your means often requires opting out of social expectations. It means not upgrading just because you can. It means saying no to things that look impressive but don’t move the needle. That restraint isn’t deprivation — it’s strategic patience.

Many people focus on how much they could earn instead of how much they’re willing to protect. Protecting capital matters just as much as growing it. A dollar not lost to lifestyle inflation, high-interest debt, or poor health decisions is a dollar that can compound quietly for years.

Health, in particular, is the silent multiplier. Medical expenses are one of the fastest ways to derail even strong financial plans. Chronic stress, poor sleep, and neglect compound just like money — but in the wrong direction. Investing in health early reduces future liabilities that no portfolio can fully offset.

It’s also worth noting that this approach creates psychological freedom. When you’re not dependent on high income to sustain your lifestyle, you gain flexibility. You can tolerate job changes, economic shifts, and unexpected setbacks without panic. That flexibility often leads to better decisions, not rushed ones.

This story also dismantles the myth that wealth requires perfection. Mistakes will happen. Markets will dip. Life will intervene. What matters is not avoiding every error but maintaining the systems that absorb shocks. Discipline isn’t about rigidity — it’s about resilience.

Ultimately, the lesson isn’t that everyone must live frugally forever. It’s that frugality early buys options later. By keeping expenses low, investing consistently, and protecting health, you give yourself room to maneuver. Wealth becomes a byproduct of alignment rather than obsession.

The path may be quiet, but it works. And for those willing to commit to it, the results speak for themselves over time.

Thank you, Mr Ox, for your article.

Start investing

This article is for informational purposes only. It should not be considered Financial or Legal Advice. Not all information will be accurate. Consult a financial professional before making any significant financial decisions."

adviceinvestingpersonal finance

About the Creator

Destiny S. Harris

Writing since 11. Investing and Lifting since 14.

destinyh.com

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