Warren Buffett has a famous take: you don't need external backing to build real wealth. His early years prove it. The man spent five years just grinding—taking on small jobs, staying disciplined with every dollar—to scrape together $120 for his first stock purchase at eleven years old. No connections. No seed capital from wealthy parents. No master blueprint handed down. Just time, focus, and the ability to say no to spending. That's the foundation story most people miss when they look at his track record. The real lesson isn't that you need to start young, though that helps. It's that sustainable wealth comes from compounding small wins over years, not from chasing quick gains or waiting for the perfect opportunity to appear. Every successful investor knows this deep down—shortcuts almost never work out. The discipline to save, the patience to wait, the willingness to learn before you leap. That's the actual formula.

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