
Money is not a gift that suddenly falls from the sky one day.
Rather, it is closer to a snowball rolling quietly, yet persistently, in unseen places.
At first, it is so small that it is barely noticeable when held in the hand.
It seems as though it would scatter at the slightest breeze, and anyone looking at it would wonder if it could ever grow, as it looks so insignificant.
But what matters is not the size, but the direction.
No matter how much you roll a snowball on flat ground, it does not grow.
Instead, you only lose strength.
Conversely, if you find the right slope, the story changes completely.
Even if you just place your hand on it, gravity is on your side, and the snow begins to stick by itself.
Money is the same.
What people struggle with, feel uncomfortable with, and have left unresolved Problems.
That is the slope where snow accumulates first.
Some pass by it saying, “It’s a nuisance,”
Some turn away saying, “It’s no big deal,”
but some people stop right there and quietly kneel.
And they ask.
“Can I solve this inconvenience?”
From that moment on, money changes from a goal to a result.
Just like how water flows by itself when a channel is opened in dry land.
A handful of snow attaches every time a small problem is solved.
It may seem insignificant, but those handfuls pile up and pile up until, at some point, they become a weight that cannot be lifted by hand.
What matters is not the size, but keeping rolling in the same direction The question is whether it exists. However, many people stop here. This is because, even while rolling the snowball, they keep trying to start over from the beginning. Someone has already been rolling the same snowball from a higher vantage point for a longer time. The snow is firmly compacted on the path that person has created, and if you follow it, you can build a much larger ball with much less effort. Ignoring that path and making a new one from the side is like deliberately walking on a gravel path when there is a paved road. A wise person becomes an observer before becoming a creator. They first read the flow and absorb the already established patterns. Then, they add a very small difference to it. That difference It doesn't have to be grandiose. Just adding these three things—"a little more comfortably," "a little faster," and "a little more understandable"—will cause the snowball to take a completely different trajectory than before. From this point on, the snowball is no longer just a simple lump, but becomes an entity with speed. However, the real difference lies here. Many people stop rolling the snowball, getting caught up in their own questions: "Is this right?" "When will it get bigger?" "Will this make money?" A stopped snowball melts. Very slowly, but surely. It disappears.
Conversely, those who keep rolling leave a record.
They accumulate, one by one, how far they rolled today, which snowballs stuck better,
and where they gained speed.
That record is not a mere memo.
As time passes, it solidifies into the form of ‘trust.’
This is because people trust
the process of it continuing to roll more than the finished result.
The small traces left every day.
A short line of writing, a small insight, a trivial experience.
Like the trajectory left behind by a passing snowball,
they become a path for some,
and for others, a conviction.
And At some point,
the snowball you were rolling no longer moves by its own strength.
People start pushing,
opportunity pushes you from behind like the wind,
and time makes the slope steeper.
It is then that you finally realize.
money is not something you chase to catch,
but something that follows like a result when you repeat it
in the right direction.Ultimately, all differences stem not from grandiose talent
but from the patience to not break simple repetition.
Some people stand in the same place repeating their worries,
while others repeat their actions in the same direction.
And that small difference
one day, an irreversible gap It works.
Even at this very moment, the choice is simple.
Will you find a snow-covered slope,
or spin your wheels on flat ground?
Will you roll it once and stop,
or keep rolling it even if it is small?
A snowball does not lie.
It grows as much as you roll it,
and disappears as much as you stop.