Wealth5 min read·7 chapters

How to Start Investing With 100 Dollars or Less

You don't need to be wealthy to start investing. You don't need to be an expert. You just need to start.

Teljo Thomas

Financial Wellness Guide

Cover image for: How to Start Investing With 100 Dollars or Less
Part 1 of 7

Introduction

Key Takeaway

Savings lose value to inflation. Investments grow your purchasing power.

Illustration for: The "Sovereignty" Definition: Why Freedom is Not a Number
Part 2 of 7

The "Sovereignty" Definition: Why Freedom is Not a Number

Key Takeaway

Index funds, consistent contributions, and time are all you need.

Most people define "Financial Freedom" as having a specific amount of money—usually a million dollars or more. This is a "Target," but it is not the "Definition." True financial freedom is a state of "Sovereignty"—the point where your life choices are no longer dictated by your financial needs. It is the ability to walk away from a toxic situation, the ability to say "Yes" to a passion project, and the ability to spend your time with whom you want, when you want.

Neurologically, financial freedom is the permanent deactivation of the "Financial Survival Response" in the brain. When you are no longer worried about rent, food, or basics, your "Prefrontal Cortex" (the seat of creativity and logic) can reach its full potential. You move from a state of "Labor-for-survival" to a state of "Labor-for-meaning."

Financial freedom is the "Ultimate Goal" of the MyMindMyWealth journey because it represents the total integration of a healthy mind and a healthy bank account. It is the reward for the discipline, system-building, and mindset shifts you have practiced in the previous 51 articles. In this module, we explore the philosophy and the math of total liberation.

Illustration for: The F.R.E.E.D.O.M. Framework: A Protocol for Total Liberation
Part 3 of 7

The F.R.E.E.D.O.M. Framework: A Protocol for Total Liberation

Key Takeaway

To systematically reach the point of financial independence, we utilize the F.R.E.E.D.O.M. Framework.

To systematically reach the point of financial independence, we utilize the F.R.E.E.D.O.M. Framework.

1. Fix the "Burn Rate" (The Efficiency Phase)

You cannot reach freedom if your lifestyle keeps expanding. Fix your "Monthly Spending Floor." Freedom is reached faster by reducing expenses than by increasing income, because every $1 saved reduces the "Total Goal" by $25 (according to the 4% rule).

2. Realize the "Crossover Point" (The Math Phase)

The Crossover Point is the moment your investment income exceeds your monthly expenses. Calculate this number. If you spend $4,000 a month, you need $4,000 in monthly yield. This provides you with the "Target Destination."

3. Execute "Aggressive Accumulation" (The Grinding Phase)

During this phase, you are a "Capital Accumulator." Your primary goal is to turn "Labor" into "Assets." Aim to save and invest 30-50% of your income. The shorter this phase, the faster the freedom.

4. Establish "Multiple Income Rivers" (The Diversification)

Do not rely on one asset class. Build a portfolio of Indices, Real Estate, and potentially Digital Assets or Side Businesses. Diversification is your "Insurance Policy" against market cycles.

5. Design Your "Post-Freedom" Life (The Purpose Phase)

What will you do when you don't *have* to work? Most people who reach freedom without a plan fall into depression. Define your "Meaningful Contribution" now. Freedom is most enjoyable when it is used for a purpose greater than yourself.

6. Optimize the "Safety Factor" (The Risk Audit)

Once you reach your goal, add a "Safety Buffer" of 10-20%. This protects you against "Sequence of Returns Risk" (a market crash in your first year of freedom). You are "Hardening" your freedom against external events.

7. Maintain the "Freedom Mindset" (The Continuity)

Reaching freedom is a physical change; staying free is a mental one. Avoid the "Status Trap" that pulled you back into the rat race in the past. Your value is now rooted in your "Time," not your "Possessions."

Illustration for: The "4% Rule": The Mathematical Engine of Independence
Part 4 of 7

The "4% Rule": The Mathematical Engine of Independence

Key Takeaway

The most widely accepted shortcut for financial freedom is the "4% Rule." Based on historical market data (The Trinity Study), an investor can safely withdraw 4% of their initial portfolio balance (adjusted for inflation) every year for 30+ years without running out of money. To find your "Freedom Number," multiply your annual expenses by 25.

The most widely accepted shortcut for financial freedom is the "4% Rule." Based on historical market data (The Trinity Study), an investor can safely withdraw 4% of their initial portfolio balance (adjusted for inflation) every year for 30+ years without running out of money.

To find your "Freedom Number," multiply your annual expenses by 25. *Example: $50,000 Annual Expenses x 25 = $1.25 Million Freedom Number.* At this level, your portfolio produces enough "Yield" to cover your life forever. This isn't "Wealthy" in the sense of private jets; it is "Free" in the sense of total sovereignty. The goal is to reach this number as efficiently as possible.

Illustration for: Tactical Guide: The "Freedom Roadmap" Audit
Part 5 of 7

Tactical Guide: The "Freedom Roadmap" Audit

Key Takeaway

Follow these three steps to calculate your distance to freedom. **Step 1: The "Freedom Number" Calculation** Look at your current "Optimized Lifestyle" monthly cost.

Follow these three steps to calculate your distance to freedom.

Step 1: The "Freedom Number" Calculation

Look at your current "Optimized Lifestyle" monthly cost. Multiply by 12, then multiply by 25. Write this number on your bathroom mirror. This is the "Price of your Life."

Step 2: The "Gap" Analysis

Subtract your current Invested Assets from your Freedom Number. Divide the remainder by your monthly "Surplus." *Result*: This is the number of months remaining until your absolute freedom.

Step 3: The "Velocity Hack"

Identify one way to increase your monthly surplus by 10%. Recalculate your months. Notice how a small change today "Pulls Future Freedom Closer" by years.

Illustration for: Reflection: The "Sovereignty" Audit
Part 6 of 7

Reflection: The "Sovereignty" Audit

Key Takeaway

To understand your "Readiness for Freedom," answer these questions: 1. **The "Boredom" Test**: If you had no financial need to work starting tomorrow morning, what would you do for the first 8 hours.

To understand your "Readiness for Freedom," answer these questions:

  1. The "Boredom" Test: If you had no financial need to work starting tomorrow morning, what would you do for the first 8 hours? What about the next 8? (If the answer is "Watch TV," you are at risk of a post-freedom crisis).
  1. The "Enough" Realization: Why do you want to be free? Is it to "Escape" something, or to "Run Toward" something?
  1. The "Fear" Variable: What is the #1 thing that scares you about "Retiring" from the standard workforce? (Address this fear now so it doesn't sabotage your accumulation).

Naming your "Purpose" is the first step in achieving it. You are moving from "Working for a Living" to "Living for a Reason."

Illustration for: The 30-Day Blueprint for a Freedom Mindset
Part 7 of 7

The 30-Day Blueprint for a Freedom Mindset

Key Takeaway

A month-long journey to transition from "Employee Reflex" to "Master of Time." **Week 1: The Math Lock** - Action: Calculate your "Freedom Number" and your "Months to Freedom." - Goal: Gaining "Absolute Clarity." **Week 2: The Gap Widening** - Action: Perform a "Radical Frugality" experiment for 7 days to see how low you could push your "Enough" number. - Goal: Testing the "Leverage of Less." **Week 3: The Asset Audit** - Action: Review your current portfolio allocation.

A month-long journey to transition from "Employee Reflex" to "Master of Time."

Week 1: The Math Lock - Action: Calculate your "Freedom Number" and your "Months to Freedom."

  • Goal: Gaining "Absolute Clarity."

Week 2: The Gap Widening - Action: Perform a "Radical Frugality" experiment for 7 days to see how low you could push your "Enough" number.

  • Goal: Testing the "Leverage of Less."

Week 3: The Asset Audit - Action: Review your current portfolio allocation. Ensure it is optimized for "Growth and Yield" rather than "Speculation."

  • Goal: Hardening the "Wealth Engine."

Week 4: The Vision Finalization - Action: Write your "Freedom Manifesto"—a 1-page description of what your integrated, free life looks like.

  • Goal: Finalizing the "Neural Target."

Financial freedom is the natural result of an integrated life. By the end of this month, you will find that you haven't just calculated a number—you have finally seen the path clearly, and you have started walking it with a sense of inevitable success.

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Teljo Thomas

Teljo Thomas

Teljo Thomas brings over 18 years of hands-on management experience to the wealth conversation, fusing street-smart pragmatism with deep pattern recognition.

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Editorial note

This article is educational content only — not financial, legal, or psychological advice. Always consult a qualified professional for your specific situation. See our editorial standards.