Why is compound interest so difficult?



Many people's understanding of compound interest comes from a beautiful upward curve chart. It seems that as long as you "persist" with some simple things, keep moving forward, time will give you astonishing returns. But in the real world, there are not many things that can continuously accumulate and generate compound interest. Often, you encounter a ceiling shortly after, unable to grow further, or even face reverse compounding and black swan events, causing all accumulation to vanish into nothingness.

The more it leans toward physical tangible things in the physical world, the clearer the accumulation time, upper limit, and speed become. An athlete's peak period is very harsh; it is limited by physical age and cannot be accumulated until 80 years old. The number of tables and turnover rate in a restaurant have clear upper limits, and improvements are limited. In reality, things like human height and weight have definite upper limits and cannot keep growing forever. The entire physical world naturally has a powerful force like gravity, which restricts what can grow.

Even if you escape the physical world’s clear upper limits, compound interest will still be pulled away by constant emergencies and novelty.

"Staying at the poker table" is far more difficult than imagined.

In the long river of time, low-probability events (fluctuations, risks, surprises) are inevitable. This is not a matter of luck but a statistical law. Without the ability to handle them, a single fluctuation can trigger chain reactions, instantly wiping out years of accumulation.

A solid foundation not only raises the ceiling of growth but also serves as your "insurance fee" paid to the system—a form of redundancy design and pre-hedging preparation.

The most important thing in building a foundation is a structure, which cannot be mastered by watching a 5-minute video. It requires solid understanding, daily practice, and reinforcement through experience and cognition.

Many people's understanding of compound interest comes from investing. Looking back, if they had persisted with dollar-cost averaging and invested all their money in a certain asset, they might have achieved hundreds or thousands of times returns.

But in reality, time passes day by day. When a once-good investment hasn't risen for over a decade, and after investing for years, it suddenly crashes by over 50%, causing heavy losses, and when you need money in life... "Is it still effective?" is not just a psychological question but a real practical issue—it tests whether your trust in the foundation still exists, whether it has changed, and requires your judgment.

Yes, everything can change, especially when betting heavily and over long time scales. Blind faith is not enough. Most people investing with "simple" methods are just looking in the rearview mirror, overfitting historical data, and bearing huge risks they don't fully understand. The capital needed for investment isn't just money; cognition, judgment, health and energy, systematic methodology, the ability to handle complex matters, and ultimately what you truly believe in... are higher-dimensional forms of capital.

Compound interest is not limited to investment and money. It can also be accumulated in health, relationships, skills, ways of thinking...

The reason it is difficult is because it requires you to build a system capable of sustained growth in a world full of randomness and interference, maintaining an extremely rare "long-cycle stability."

Compound interest does not reward the smartest, most passionate, or hardest-working individual, nor does it make you rich overnight through lottery-like luck. It is not suitable for everyone or everything. Only in a small number of accumulable, truly understood things can it yield rich rewards.
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