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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma
The Worry-Free Way to Financial Independence
The Money Habit emphasizes mastering financial behaviors rather than chasing quick wealth. Mike Michalowicz provides actionable advice to develop sustainable money habits that lead to long-term financial security and a more fulfilling life.
Most of us try to manage money with a budget. We plan our spending, track it in a spreadsheet or an app, and promise ourselves that we’ll stick to it. Sounds sensible. But it rarely works.
The problem isn’t effort or intelligence. The issue is deeper – it’s about hardwired human behavior. Budgets demand that you follow a script, just like a strict diet. You start strong, but sooner or later, there’s always some reason to go off-script. You’re too tired, or too busy, or too stressed. Small exceptions creep in, good intentions are replaced by quiet avoidance, and the plan fades.
The alternative is to work with the grain of habit.
Think about exercise. It’s easier to skip a run when your sneakers are in the closet. Placing them someplace you’ll see them – or, better yet, be forced to pick them up – makes it harder to bail on your commitment. When you literally trip over them on your way to the bathroom, you have to deal with your decision. Psychologists call these moments of friction commitment devices.
The truth is, most people check their bank balance, not their budget. That’s where the real decision point lies. If your system doesn’t meet you there, it gets ignored.
So a different structure works better. Instead of one account and one big number, you split your money into separate “wallets.” Each wallet has a clear job. Income flows in, then gets distributed across them.
You’ll need to create a few simple categories. Needs cover essentials like rent, groceries, and utilities. Wants pay for dinners out and cinema tickets. Dreams hold long term goals, like a home or a big trip. Fix or Future tackles debt or planned expenses like car repairs. Emergency is there for the unexpected.
Now imagine you want to spend extra on a weekend away. You don’t guess – you look at your Wants wallet. If there isn’t enough to cover the expense, you have to move money from somewhere else: maybe you dip into the Dreams wallet, or take it out of Emergency. The decision might be justifiable. It might not. Either way, the system forces you to think about the trade off.
In other words: you can still choose freely, but you can’t choose blindly.
This shift matters because money stress usually has more to do with uncertainty than the amount you have. When everything’s sitting in one account, every decision feels loaded. That’s what causes the hesitation, the second-guessing, and the avoidance. Clear structures remove the noise, reducing the number of decisions you need to make each day. Instead of constant willpower, you rely on design.
The Money Habit (2026) works with the grain of human habit to show how to gain control of your finances. It introduces a simple system of dividing money into purpose-driven accounts, helping you see clearly where your money goes while supporting goals like paying off debt, saving, and enjoying life.
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Try Blinkist to get the key ideas from 7,500+ bestselling nonfiction titles and podcasts. Listen or read in just 15 minutes.
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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma