RHODEY wrote:Iwasawitness wrote:LarsV8 wrote:
Well yes, it is on him...but.
These guys get spoon fed basketball, and basketball only from age 10. Basically everything gets paid for, and there is very little real world opportunity to learn the lessons of money.
There might have been a personal finance presentation at some point in there, but I doubt a good number of these folks are prepared to handle personal finance.
The resources and the organization is there to hedge against these types of situation. I am not talking about the guy should be getting millions of dollars or something, but there should definitely be some sort of social security type mechanism to prevent these guys from going homeless.
I think I read somewhere that AI was almost homeless as well, but somewhere along the line someone was kind enough to set up a trust fund for him.
And you know what? That's their own fault.
I can understand being in your 20s and letting what feels like unlimited wealth go to your head. But by your 30s, you should at least be mature enough to understand that basketball isn't going to be around forever, and at that point you should already have been planning for the future.
Depends on your social circle, family friends , if no one around never knew how to deal with wealth, and you are not a self aware type of person, it can happen.
This is both true, while also being a cop out and excuse at the same time.
When we reach enough maturity, around mid 20's, it now becomes time for us to gain greater self awareness and put in the time and effort to upgrade the tools we have, deal with our past traumas/influences, and address the impacts of our upbringing.
When you're a child, teen and younger adult, yes, there is more leeway, so that's when this is true.
After a certain point, this is just an excuse and just a sign of not engaging in growth and self improvement.
Many people fall into this false idea of using how you grew up as an excuse for behavior and decisions when they reach proper adulthood (no, not 18 years old "adult"). This is part of why we find so many adults acting like children, among other things like impacts of "safe" drugs on adolescent brain development and all the other fun stuff.
A part of the growth in being an adult, unless you have some sort of mental illness impeding you, in which case, that's the thing you need to deal with, but a part of the growth as an adult is being able to realize what tools you were (were not) given in your upbringing and to put in the work to upgrade your tools, to grow, improve, etc.