The other night I witnessed an odd situation in a Burger King. An employee showed up and was informed that he no longer worked there. It seems that he had said some “colorful” things over the intercom to a customer that an assistant manager heard. The manager told him that he was fired upon his return. In a quick farewell with a former coworker, he asked “Why do you still work here? Do you even like it here? I was just here for the money.” He was honest for sure but it felt like he was missing part of the equation.

“I’m in it for the money!” is a relatively famous line from one of my childhood heroes, Han Solo. While he ends up being proved wrong over time, Han probably believes it in the moment too. The problem is that they’re both wrong. Neither of them are truly in it for the money. The money is just a conduit. It’s portable power that helps someone create an exchange. Whether paying off a mob boss or buying a new pair of shoes, the money is not the actual thing. To be honest, neither is the payoff or the shoes but that’s for another blogpost. For now, it’s the basic idea that no one wants pictures of dead presidents or more accurately numbers on a computer screen. They want the things that they think the money will bring.
Money is nothing more than portable power. People want that power in order to exchange it for something. They want to control their circumstances but often lack the ability to control themselves first. Our young friend will no longer be getting anything from Burger King because he lacked the self-control to get what he was after. He wanted the money but wasn’t careful enough to avoid killing the golden goose. No one is truly in it for the money but it takes self-control and self-awareness to get to the end of that equation effectively. It’s largely an internal game that you’re playing. So don’t get fooled by all of the pictures of dead presidents. You’re in it for something else.
“No reward is worth this!”
Pete










