I wrote about this question before — whether you’re living to work or working to live — and people rocked with it. But if I’m being honest, I didn’t say everything I needed to say. I held back just a little. Not today though. Today I’m giving you the uncut version, because too many people I know are out here still sleeping on this, and I can’t keep watching it happen in silence.
So let’s get into it.
The Corporate Game Is Rigged, and You Need to Know the Rules
I already told y’all — a “live to work” person wraps their whole identity up in their job title. Their self-worth is tied to how their manager sees them, how their quarterly review reads, how many LinkedIn endorsements they got stacked up. And I said it before and I’ll say it again: I could never.
A job is a means to an end. Period. I’m out here putting in the minimal effective effort — doing what I need to do to hold it down — because I understand what the game actually is. The company needs my output. I need their check. That’s the whole transaction. There ain’t nothing romantic about it.
What a lot of people don’t want to face is that you are replaceable — every single one of us is — and the sooner you accept that, the freer you become. You could be absolutely crushing every metric, hitting every target, staying late, coming in early, going above and beyond every single day — and that one bad quarter? That new executive coming in who wants to “restructure”? That AI tool somebody pitched in a board meeting? Any of those things can erase everything you built overnight. I’m not being cynical. I’m being accurate.
They Was Never Loyal to You Like That
Here’s the part I didn’t spell out clearly enough the first time: it ain’t just “the company” that’s not loyal to you. It’s the CEO. It’s the VP. It’s the director. It’s even some of your managers, real talk. The people at the top of the org chart are not losing sleep over your mortgage, your kids, your career trajectory, or your well-being. They’re losing sleep over earnings calls and stock price and their own bonuses.
And yo — I’ve seen it with my own eyes. I’ve watched somebody give fifteen, twenty years to an organization. Show up every day, never cause problems, mentor other people, bleed for that company — and get handed a box and a two-week severance package like it was nothing. Like those years of their life didn’t mean a single thing. That ain’t hypothetical. That’s real life. I’ve been in the room. I’ve seen how fast they flip on you when it’s convenient.
“Employees are a company’s greatest asset — they’re your competitive advantage. You want to attract and retain the best; provide them with encouragement, stimulus, and make them feel that they are an integral part of the company’s mission.” — Anne Mulcahy, former CEO of Xerox
Sounds good, right? Inspiring, even. Now go look up how many Fortune 500 companies have conducted mass layoffs over the last five years while their C-suite was pulling record compensation packages. The words and the actions don’t match up, fam. They never really have.
So here’s the logical conclusion that I live by, the one I preach to my co-workers every chance I get: if they’re not going to be loyal to you, why are you being loyal to them? Why are you turning down other opportunities? Why are you giving extra effort you’ll never be compensated for? Why are you emotionally invested in an institution that views you as a line item on a spreadsheet?
I’m not telling you to be a bad employee. Do your job. Do it well. But protect yourself like they protect themselves — because they definitely are.
“Fuck You” Money: The Most Important Financial Goal You Can Set
Let me tell you the concept that changed how I think about work entirely. It’s called “Fuck You” money, and it is absolutely the most critical financial milestone a working person can chase.
The idea is simple: you accumulate enough money — through savings, investments, and income streams — that you can walk away from any job, any situation, any toxic boss, any disrespectful workplace at any moment without financial panic. When you have that cushion? You have power. Real power. The kind that doesn’t come from a title or a salary bump — it comes from not needing them.
“Fuck you money is the money that gives you options. It’s the money that says, ‘I don’t have to take this.’ It’s the most valuable money in the world, not because of what it buys, but because of what it frees you from.”
When somebody has that kind of financial foundation under them, everything changes. The way they carry themselves at work changes. The way they negotiate changes. The way they respond to a disrespectful manager changes. Because they know — deep down — that they could walk out the door today and be okay. That’s not arrogance. That’s leverage.
This is what I preach to people around me. Not “save for retirement someday” — that’s too abstract and too far away. I’m talking about building toward the day where your job becomes optional. When you get there, the whole dynamic shifts in your favor.
And listen — if somebody reaches that point and decides to up and leave? I cannot be mad at them one bit. Not even a little. Because that company was never going to have their back the way they think. So when they’re ready to walk? Walk, baby. Walk with your head up.
When Your Side Hustle Eats More Than Your 9-5
Here’s where I want to get specific, because the “Fuck You” money concept is most powerful when you combine it with this next idea: your side businesses need to be generating more income than your day job.
That’s the benchmark. That’s the finish line I’m pointing at.
Think about what that looks like in practice. Right now, maybe your 9-to-5 brings in $75,000 a year and your side hustle — whatever it is, an LLC, freelance work, investments, a content business, real estate — maybe that’s generating $20,000. You still need the job. They still have leverage on you.
But the minute that side income crosses $75,001? Everything flips. Now you’re the one with the leverage. Now you’re the one who can look at a bad situation at work and actually do something about it, not just complain about it in the break room and go right back to your desk.
Getting there is not easy. Nobody said it was. But as I’ve written before, rich and wealthy are not the same game — and building real wealth means building systems that generate income whether you clock in or not. A paycheck is not a system. A paycheck is just a leash with better branding.
The path is the same one I’ve always outlined: kill the high-interest debt first, build that emergency fund, maximize your retirement contributions so compounding can do its work over time — but while you’re doing all that, you have to be building the thing on the side. Start small. Start messy. Stay consistent. Because the day your side income surpasses your job income is the day you become genuinely free.
And in this economy? With companies ghost-posting jobs, mass layoffs happening at companies that were profitable, and return-to-office mandates being handed down like we didn’t just prove for three years that we could handle it — depending on one employer for your entire financial life is a risk that most people just don’t think about seriously enough. You wouldn’t put every dollar of your investment portfolio into a single stock. So why is your entire income coming from a single source?
You Control Your Own Destiny — But Only If You Build That Way
At the end of the day, the “work to live” philosophy is only half the picture. Living fully means having options. And options cost money. That’s just the reality of the world we live in.
So yeah — I’m out here working my job. I’m professional, I’m present, I do what’s expected. But I’m also building. Every single day, I’m adding another brick to something that’s mine. Something nobody can put in a box and walk me out of the building with. That’s what keeps me sane. That’s what lets me sleep at night.
Stop being loyal to people and institutions that have a fiduciary responsibility to shareholders — not to you. Protect your time, your energy, and your financial future with the same aggression they protect their profit margins. Build the side income. Stack the “Fuck You” money. And when the day comes that you don’t need that job anymore, make that decision on your terms.
Because nobody ever laid on their deathbed wishing they’d been more loyal to somebody else’s company.
What’s your take? You got “Fuck You” money stacked yet? Drop your thoughts in the comments — let’s chop it up.












































