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Here's How I Got Started Investing at 14 Years Old

And now it's your turn

By Destiny S. HarrisPublished about 6 hours ago 4 min read
Here's How I Got Started Investing at 14 Years Old
Photo by Precondo CA on Unsplash

Destiny S. Harris

This isn't a story about genius. It's not a story about market timing, secret strategies, or some early obsession with spreadsheets.

It's a story about starting before I understood anything - and why that mattered more than all the knowledge I picked up later.

When I was 14, my parents brought an advisor from Edward Jones to our house. She literally sat at our dining room table in the kitchen. I remember I was sitting right next to her, I was excited about what we were doig (and forver grateful to my parent for taking that step so early).

We all opened accounts together. It wasn't dramatic. It wasn't intimidating. It was very… normal.

We set up individual retirement accounts. We chose Roth IRAs. I believe the fund I was put into was some kind of American growth fund. The advisor gave a presentation, explained some basics, answered a few questions, and that was it.

No trading apps. No YouTube rabbit holes. No hot takes. No clue.

And here's the part people don't like admitting: I had no idea what the f*ck I was doing.

I asked a few questions because that's what I always do. But I didn't truly understand compound interest, asset allocation, market cycles, risk tolerance, or even the fund I was investing in. I didn't understand fees. I didn't understand returns. I didn't understand volatility.

I just… started.

That's the part most people miss.

There's this myth that you need to know before you begin. That investing requires confidence, expertise, or some magical moment of clarity. That's bullshit.

What you actually need is permission to start imperfectly.

At 14, I wasn't trying to beat the market. I wasn't optimizing anything. I wasn't chasing returns. I wasn't even thinking about money the way adults do.

I just knew a few things:

Saving felt good

Money sitting still seemed wasteful

Investing sounded like a smarter version of saving

That was enough.

At the time, we were reading all the usual personal finance books. Rich Dad Poor Dad was around. So were authors like Robert Kiyosaki, David Bach, Dave Ramsey, and Suze Orman.

Did I fully understand all the concepts they were discussing in their books? Not really.

I grasped ideas in fragments. Save money. Avoid debt. Invest early. Own assets. Don't be stupid. That was about the depth of it.

But understanding wasn't the point.

Exposure was.

Most people wait for certainty before they act. I didn't. Not because I was brave - but because I didn't know enough to be afraid yet.

That ignorance was an advantage.

Here's something no one tells beginners: you do not need mastery to begin investing. You need a baseline level of responsibility. That's it.

I wasn't gambling. I wasn't picking random stocks. I wasn't day trading. I was in a long-term, diversified fund inside a tax-advantaged account. That's not reckless. That's boring. And boring is exactly where beginners should live.

The biggest mistake people make is confusing not knowing everything with doing something dangerous. Those are not the same thing.

You don't need to understand every moving part of an engine to drive a car safely. You just need to know enough not to crash it. Same with investing.

Look up the fund. Ask questions. Understand, at a high level, what you're buying and why. Then start.

The rest comes later.

What starting early actually did for me had very little to do with returns and everything to do with identity.

I didn't grow up thinking investing was "for other people." It wasn't something I needed to psych myself up for as an adult. It wasn't intimidating. It wasn't foreign.

It was just… something you do.

That matters more than people realize.

When investing is normalized early, you don't treat it like a high-stakes decision every time. You don't freeze. You don't overthink. You don't wait for the perfect moment that never arrives.

You adjust. You continue. You build.

Contrast that with what I see now.

Adults who are terrified to start because they feel "behind." People in their 30s and 40s paralyzed because they think they should know more by now. People who binge content instead of taking action because learning feels safer than committing.

They know more than I did at 14.

They just haven't started.

Starting early also teaches you something subtle but critical: markets move and life goes on.

You learn that numbers go up and down. That panic is optional. That time smooths a lot of mistakes. That consistency beats cleverness.

If you begin late, every fluctuation feels personal. If you begin early, volatility becomes background noise.

I didn't need to understand compounding to benefit from it. I didn't need to optimize returns to benefit from time. I didn't need confidence to build momentum.

I just needed to not stop.

And that's the real takeaway here.

People overestimate how much knowledge they need and underestimate how powerful starting is.

You don't need to be an expert. You need to be responsible enough to not sabotage yourself.

That means:

Don't gamble money you can't afford to lose

Don't chase hype you don't understand

Don't jump in and out emotionally

Don't wait for perfect clarity

It also means accepting that you'll feel stupid at first. That's fine. Feeling stupid is not the same as being wrong. It's just part of learning.

At 14, I didn't know what the f*ck I was doing. But I wasn't doing nothing.

And that made all the difference.

Because everything else - strategy, optimization, asset allocation, risk management - those are layers you can add over time.

You can't add layers to something that doesn't exist.

If there's one lesson I'd pull from starting that young, it's this: momentum beats comprehension in the beginning.

You can refine later. You can learn later. You can correct later.

But you can't recover time spent waiting.

Starting doesn't require confidence.

Confidence comes from starting.

Clarity follows action.

And that's the part most people never flip.

-

Now it's your turn to start investing.

Disclaimer: This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial, investment, tax, legal, or professional advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Always do your own research or consult a licensed financial advisor before making financial decisions.

adviceinvestingpersonal financestockseconomy

About the Creator

Destiny S. Harris

Writing since 11. Investing and Lifting since 14.

destinyh.com

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