HomeBooksBook Extract: Pathfinders

Book Extract: Pathfinders

JL Collins' third book, Pathfinders, reads like the essays published often in Readers Digest. Easy to read, accessible, communicated complicated ideas and situations simplistically, and most importantly, made readers think about financial literacy.

October 19, 2024 / 16:03 IST
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JL Collins is the international bestselling author of The Simple Path to Wealth: Your road map to financial independence and a Rich, Free life. He has been called “The Godfather of FI” in the financial independence community. He launched his eponymous financial blog, jlcollinsnh.com, in June 2011 and is the founder of the legendary Chautauqua financial independence retreats. His Talk at Google has received over 1.4 million views, and he has appeared on dozens of popular finance shows and podcasts.

His first job was selling flyswatters door to door and picking up empty pop bottles from the side of the road for the 2-cent deposit (at the age of eight). His last was working as talk show host and magazine publisher. His work has taken him to most US states as well as Canada, Germany and England. He has also travelled widely in his own time. Pathfinders is his third book.

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The manner in which he has divided the sections of the book are very telling. These are: Freedom, Debt, Saving, Lifestyle Inflation, Investing, F-You Money, Staying the Course, Family, and Endgame. Every part begins with a story. It is not clear whether it is a straightforward case study or an amalgamation of cases with the key characteristics highlighted to tell a good story stressing on different financial aspects. Nevertheless, Pathfinders reads like the essays published often in Readers Digest. Easy to read, accessible, communicated complicated ideas and situations simplistically, and most importantly, made readers think about financial literacy. This is precisely what Hasan Minhaj stresses upon in his preface. He says:

Growing up, financial literacy is something we never discussed as a family.   If you talk about money, you’re labeled as being obsessed with it, or you’re blaming a loved one for not having it. Money was always too scary, too touchy, and too real to talk about in our household. Especially the stock market. It was framed as something that only Wall Street bigwigs could figure out, or it was an outright rigged system that turned the layman into a sucker. So I stayed away from it. I spent years in school learning about Mesopotamia and mitosis, but didn’t know the difference between a W-2 and a W-9. I figured I’d stack my bread like a drug dealer and tuck it away in a mattress. That would be my protection.  

But it wasn’t . It was a defense mechanism to avoid dealing with the painful truth of adulthood: You need monty to take care of yourself, your loved ones, and ensure a financially stable future. Money doesn’t solve all your problems, but it sure as hell solves your money problems.