You see, there are many types of wealth and money is only one of them. I have different wealths, like the weal... — Chris Eubank Sr.
You see, there are many types of wealth and money is only one of them. I have different wealths, like the wealth of my health.
Author: Chris Eubank Sr.
Insight: We live in a world obsessed with net worth, yet most of us have experienced that hollow feeling of having money but nothing else working. The real wake-up call comes when health fails—suddenly all those career wins and savings account digits feel like they belong to someone else's life. Chris Eubank's point cuts through the noise: your actual wealth is the sum of things money can't directly buy but absolutely can lose. Consider the everyday trade-offs we make without naming them. The person grinding through 70-hour weeks with deteriorating sleep. The friend who's financially comfortable but hasn't laughed in months. The hustle culture that treats health like optional maintenance. These aren't failures—they're just the result of treating money as the primary scoreboard. But when you reframe wealth to include your physical vitality, your relationships, your peace of mind, even how much you've learned—suddenly you're looking at your life differently. A person with moderate income, strong friendships, and stable health is genuinely wealthier than a millionaire falling apart. The uncomfortable part? You can't outsource these other wealths. No amount of money fixes poor health if you won't prioritize it. No salary heals lonely relationships if you never show up. That's actually liberating—it means you have way more control over your real wealth than you think.