This sentence isn’t really about money.
It’s about a psychological crossing point.
“Your broke days are over and you are about to be rich as fuck.”
What it means—deeply—is that your relationship to scarcity has changed, even if your bank account hasn’t caught up yet.
The real shift: identity, not income
People don’t become wealthy because money suddenly appears.
Money appears after someone stops thinking, acting, and deciding like a broke person.
The moment your “broke days are over” is the moment when:
- You stop making choices just to survive
- You stop optimizing for comfort and start optimizing for leverage
- You stop asking “What can I afford?” and start asking “What compounds?”
Wealth begins internally, then becomes external.
What “broke” actually is
Being broke isn’t just low cash. It’s a pattern:
- Short-term thinking
- Trading time for certainty
- Avoiding risk instead of managing it
- Chasing relief instead of building systems
You can have money and still be broke-minded.
You can be broke and already no longer broke.
The moment before wealth looks like this
Right before people make real money, they often experience:
- Fewer distractions
- Less tolerance for nonsense
- More solitude
- More intensity
- A sense that “something is aligning”
It’s uncomfortable because the old identity is dying, but the new results aren’t visible yet.
That limbo is where most people quit.
If you don’t quit, it’s usually because your thinking has already crossed the line.
Why “about to be rich” is dangerous (and powerful)
Dangerous if:
- You think money will save you
- You expect confidence to come after success
- You stop doing the boring, repeatable work
Powerful if:
- You use it as a standard, not a fantasy
- You let it dictate discipline, not ego
- You raise what you tolerate—from yourself and others
Wealth responds to consistency, not hype.
What rich people do differently before they’re rich
They:
- Build skills that scale
- Delay rewards without resentment
- Measure progress in momentum, not mood
- Choose environments that stretch them
- Make decisions based on where they’re going, not where they are
They don’t wait for permission.
They don’t wait for certainty.
They don’t wait to “feel ready.”
The quiet truth
If your broke days are really over, you’ll notice:
- You move differently
- You speak less, execute more
- You stop explaining yourself
- You stop needing validation
- You get calmer, not louder
Real wealth doesn’t arrive with noise.
It arrives with inevitability.
Final reality check
Saying “I’m about to be rich” means nothing by itself.
Living like someone whose broke days are over means everything.
Because money doesn’t chase ambition.
It follows alignment, skill, patience, and pressure applied daily.







