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❕You will always have problems. And that’s not a bad thing. You’ve probably heard these phrases many times. Mo money, mo problems. More money won’t solve your problems, it will solve your money problems. When you’re healthy, you have many problems. When you’re sick, you have just one. They may sound worn out, but there is real truth behind them. It’s common to think that life works like a checklist. Make enough money and everything will be fine. Quit bad habits and everything will be fine. Find the right partner and everything will be fine. In reality, problems do not disappear. They change. More money helps, but it brings new pressure. Taxes, structures, legal questions, responsibility. These may be better problems than being broke, but they are still problems. They still create stress and require effort to solve. Quitting destructive habits can be life-changing, but it also removes the things used to avoid deeper issues. Solving one major problem often reveals several smaller ones underneath. Relationships work the same way. Being single has its own set of struggles. Being married or committed has a different set. No stage of life is problem-free, it just comes with a new configuration. The mistake is chasing X with the belief that it will fix everything. X can be worth chasing. Money, health, and relationships matter. They just are not a universal cure. If someone is overwhelmed and unhappy today, waking up tomorrow with more money or status will not erase that. It only changes the setting in which the same internal problems are lived out. Life is problems. The real skill is learning to live with them without constant suffering. There is a Buddhist idea that captures this well. Everyone has problems. Fix one, and another appears. The real problem is wishing life had none. You will always have problems. That is not a failure. It means life is happening. ✅Subscribe to@cryp