NAPA Wine Country Castello di Amorosa in Calistoga STAIRS

The MAGIC of Incremental Improvement

If We Could Accept Progress Step-by-Step

Popular self-help books promote the idea that if we can switch our thinking, we will live lives of abundance (attraction theory, self- affirmations). Things will magically click and we’ll be happy bazillionaires!

Honestly, that’s not the way things work. Sure, you may have spurts of success here and there, but to really see solid growth you need to accept that incremental gains through consistent steps toward your goal are where there are magical-compound results.

NAPA Wine Country Castello di Amorosa in Calistoga STAIRS

Compounded Gains

Finance people and investment advisors have been talking about the benefits of compounded growth. If you’ve missed it, here’s a quick overview.

If you invested just $100 and added only $5 a month for 5 years while earning a measly 4% compound interest, you’d end up with a jaw-dropping 447% increase. If you had instead invested $5 a month (after your initial $100 investment) in an ETF such as Vanguard’s S&P, You would have $637.60 after 16.86% annual compound growth. (This return is as of 9/30/2021 and accounts for that massive dip in March 2020.)  Now, imagine if you had invested $1,000, initially, and added $50 a month. You’d have $6,376!

Most often, we see similar results after we direct consistent effort toward other goals in our life.

Unexpected Gifts

When we take one step and then another, consistently, we compound our progress toward miraculous gains!

Consistency is the key. One step at a time.

We hate it because that’s not the message we get from best-selling books and seminars. Yet, this is how people grow impressive nest eggs. This is how people declutter without suffering trauma because they let go too soon a sentimental memento or family heirloom. Sure, there are stories of seemingly overnight successes; but what we usually don’t hear and see are the months if not years of consistent action. The same holds true for today’s bitcoin millionaires.

Steps repeated consistently over time will yield unexpected gifts. Actually, they are expected because we’ve worked consistently toward them. They’re UNexpected when the magic of compound growth results from small steps taken repeatedly to build upon the earlier ones.

Whether decluttering or building something awesome, it takes time and dedicated effort. Consider the awesome beauty of this medieval castle built using old-style workmanship that now attracts visitors from around the world.

Dario Sattui’s all-consuming passion to build “13th century Tuscan castle winery to honor his Italian heritage and deep love for medieval architecture” began in 1994. He completed the Castello di Amorosa 15 years later. It was his labor of love.

Grandpa’s Garage

What do you do when your garage accumulates three generations of stuff temporarily? You start to declutter and get your space back.

We generally have a variety of items in the garage (STUFFology 101: Get Your Mind Out of the Clutter, A Man’s Home Garage is His Castle“). Vehicles, bicycles, tools, games, and general storage to name a few. Ideally it is organized in a reasonable fashion and each item in the garage is easily accessible. And so it was with my own garage, until I temporarily stored items there from my deceased parents’ home.

I saved a few precious keepsakes, boxes of family photos and slides, as well as select antique furniture in a small portion of the garage to be sorted out in a timely fashion, in the beginning of 2018. Now that it is late 2021, some of that timeliness has been extended. Sadly, I have yet to sort through any of the family photos and slides. But many of the keepsakes and antique furniture have been incorporated into my household. Progress of sorts.

That accounts for two generations of stuff, what about the third? Enter my oldest daughter, who was forced to move back home several months ago due to the disruption of the COVID 19 Pandemic. She has spent that time getting her life back in order and is now in the process of moving to another state. Unfortunately, some of her stuff remains in my garage. Why?

Good question. The short answer is she no longer needs it. She did hold a garage sale where some of the stuff was liquidated, but not all. The remainder is to be donated to my charity. But I have not contacted them for pickup yet. Thus, three generations of stuff is now in my garage temporarily.

Has this happened to you? I ask because life unfolds in ways we cannot always control. I have started again to declutter and am in the process of getting my garage space back. My daughter is finishing her move today. I am setting up a pickup date for my charity today. And another daughter will be sorting through the photos and slides in the weeks ahead.

Decluttering three generations of stuff stored temporarily in my garage is a process not an event. Progress.