如何浪费时间和金钱

Paul Graham 2010-07-01

如何浪费时间和金钱

2010年7月

当我们在1998年出售我们的创业公司时,我突然得到了很多钱。现在我必须考虑我以前不必考虑的事情:如何不失去它。我知道从富有到贫穷是可能的,就像从贫穷到富有是可能的。但是,虽然我过去几年花了很多时间研究从贫穷到富有的途径,但我对从富有到贫穷的途径几乎一无所知。现在,为了避免它们,我必须了解它们在哪里。

所以我开始关注财富是如何失去的。如果你小时候问我富人如何变得贫穷,我会说是因为花光了所有的钱。这就是书籍和电影中的情况,因为这是色彩斑斓的方式。但事实上,大多数财富失去的方式不是通过过度支出,而是通过糟糕的投资。

很难在不注意的情况下花掉一笔财富。一个品味普通的人会发现很难在不想”哇,我花了很多钱”的情况下花掉超过几万美元。而如果你开始交易衍生品,你可以在眨眼之间失去一百万美元(实际上是你想要的任何数量)。

在大多数人的心目中,在奢侈品上花钱会引发警报,而投资不会。奢侈品似乎很自我放纵。除非你是通过继承或赢得彩票获得这笔钱,否则你已经彻底接受过自我放纵会导致麻烦的训练。投资绕过了这些警报。你不是在花钱;你只是把它从一个资产转移到另一个资产。这就是为什么试图向你推销昂贵东西的人说”这是一项投资”。

解决方案是开发新的警报。这可能是一个棘手的业务,因为虽然防止你过度支出的警报如此基本,甚至可能存在于我们的DNA中,但防止你做出糟糕投资的警报必须学习,有时相当违反直觉。

几天前我意识到了令人惊讶的事情:时间的情况与金钱非常相似。失去时间的最危险方式不是花在娱乐上,而是花在做假工作上。当你花时间娱乐时,你知道你在自我放纵。警报很快就会开始响起。如果有一天早上我醒来坐在沙发上看了一整天电视,我会感觉有什么事情 terribly 错了。光是想到这个就让我畏缩。在沙发上看电视2小时后我就开始感到不舒服,更不用说一整天了。

然而,我确实有过一些日子,我本可以整天坐在电视前——在这些日子的最后,如果我问自己那天完成了什么,答案会是:基本上,什么都没有。这些日子后我也感觉很糟糕,但不像我整天在沙发上看电视那样糟糕。如果我整天看电视,我会感觉自己在堕入地狱。但在那些我没有完成任何事情的日子里,同样的警报不会响起,因为我做的事情表面上看起来像是真正的工作。例如,处理电子邮件。你坐在办公桌前做这件事。这并不有趣。所以一定是工作。

与金钱一样,避免享受不再足以保护你。这可能足以保护狩猎采集者,也许是所有前工业社会。所以自然和 nurture 结合起来让我们避免自我放纵。但世界变得更加复杂:现在最危险的陷阱是新的行为,它们通过模仿更良性的类型来绕过我们关于自我放纵的警报。最糟糕的是,它们甚至不好玩。

感谢 Sam Altman、Trevor Blackwell、Patrick Collison、Jessica Livingston 和 Robert Morris 阅读本文的草稿。

How to Lose Time and Money

July 2010

When we sold our startup in 1998 I suddenly got a lot of money. I now had to think about something I hadn’t had to think about before: how not to lose it. I knew it was possible to go from rich to poor, just as it was possible to go from poor to rich. But while I’d spent a lot of the past several years studying the paths from poor to rich, I knew practically nothing about the paths from rich to poor. Now, in order to avoid them, I had to learn where they were.

So I started to pay attention to how fortunes are lost. If you’d asked me as a kid how rich people became poor, I’d have said by spending all their money. That’s how it happens in books and movies, because that’s the colorful way to do it. But in fact the way most fortunes are lost is not through excessive expenditure, but through bad investments.

It’s hard to spend a fortune without noticing. Someone with ordinary tastes would find it hard to blow through more than a few tens of thousands of dollars without thinking “wow, I’m spending a lot of money.” Whereas if you start trading derivatives, you can lose a million dollars (as much as you want, really) in the blink of an eye.

In most people’s minds, spending money on luxuries sets off alarms that making investments doesn’t. Luxuries seem self-indulgent. And unless you got the money by inheriting it or winning a lottery, you’ve already been thoroughly trained that self-indulgence leads to trouble. Investing bypasses those alarms. You’re not spending the money; you’re just moving it from one asset to another. Which is why people trying to sell you expensive things say “it’s an investment.”

The solution is to develop new alarms. This can be a tricky business, because while the alarms that prevent you from overspending are so basic that they may even be in our DNA, the ones that prevent you from making bad investments have to be learned, and are sometimes fairly counterintuitive.

A few days ago I realized something surprising: the situation with time is much the same as with money. The most dangerous way to lose time is not to spend it having fun, but to spend it doing fake work. When you spend time having fun, you know you’re being self-indulgent. Alarms start to go off fairly quickly. If I woke up one morning and sat down on the sofa and watched TV all day, I’d feel like something was terribly wrong. Just thinking about it makes me wince. I’d start to feel uncomfortable after sitting on a sofa watching TV for 2 hours, let alone a whole day.

And yet I’ve definitely had days when I might as well have sat in front of a TV all day — days at the end of which, if I asked myself what I got done that day, the answer would have been: basically, nothing. I feel bad after these days too, but nothing like as bad as I’d feel if I spent the whole day on the sofa watching TV. If I spent a whole day watching TV I’d feel like I was descending into perdition. But the same alarms don’t go off on the days when I get nothing done, because I’m doing stuff that seems, superficially, like real work. Dealing with email, for example. You do it sitting at a desk. It’s not fun. So it must be work.

With time, as with money, avoiding pleasure is no longer enough to protect you. It probably was enough to protect hunter-gatherers, and perhaps all pre-industrial societies. So nature and nurture combine to make us avoid self-indulgence. But the world has gotten more complicated: the most dangerous traps now are new behaviors that bypass our alarms about self-indulgence by mimicking more virtuous types. And the worst thing is, they’re not even fun.

Thanks to Sam Altman, Trevor Blackwell, Patrick Collison, Jessica Livingston, and Robert Morris for reading drafts of this.