For all the noise around getting rich, the people who actually build lasting wealth tend to be remarkably boring about it. They automate, they ignore the headlines, and they let time do the heavy lifting.
Behavioral economists have spent decades studying what divides households that accumulate wealth from those that never quite get ahead, even at similar income levels. The answer is rarely a single brilliant trade. It is a set of small, repeatable habits compounding quietly in the background.
The first is automation. Money that never touches a checking account is money that never gets spent. The second is indifference to short-term volatility — a discipline far harder than it sounds when every screen is flashing red.