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Just came across something interesting about why mega-successful people don't just cash out and disappear. Grant Cardone, who's built a net worth around $1.6 billion through multiple ventures including 10X Studios and various other business operations, literally has zero retirement plans. And honestly, his reasoning is pretty compelling.
Most people assume billionaires stop working because, well, they've already won. But Cardone's take is different. He says work gives him purpose in a way that just sitting on money never could. His perspective is that continuing to build and create keeps him engaged in ways leisure simply doesn't match.
What struck me most was how he frames the whole thing. He mentioned that helping others and sharing what he's learned is what actually drives him forward. Like, he gets energized from being around ambitious people, having real conversations, and knowing his advice might actually help someone figure out their path. That's a totally different motivation than chasing bigger numbers.
There's also this observation he made about how most people work just enough to call it a job, but successful people operate at a different rhythm entirely. They're moving at a pace where the results feel so rewarding that it stops feeling like work and becomes more like a calling. Cardone's net worth didn't just appear overnight - it came from maintaining that mindset consistently.
The whole thing made me think about how Grant Cardone's approach to staying active in business isn't really about the money anymore. It's about impact, about being useful, about that constant exchange of ideas with other driven people. That's what keeps people like him going well past the point where they could comfortably retire. The work itself becomes the reward rather than just a means to an end.