Skip to the content.

The 5 Types of Wealth You Need More Than Money

Sahil Bloom reveals the 5 essential types of wealth beyond money that create true abundance and fulfillment in life, exploring holistic approaches to prosperity.

Overview

🎧 Podcast: The Genius Life | 👨‍💼 Expert: Sahil Bloom
🎯 Topic: The 5 Types of Wealth Beyond Money
⏱️ Key Takeaway: True wealth encompasses health, relationships, time, knowledge, and experiences - not just financial assets

Sahil Bloom - 5 Types of Wealth on The Genius Life
  • Host: Max Lugavere
  • Guest: Sahil Bloom, author and entrepreneur exploring wealth beyond finances.

The Money-Happiness Equation

  • Early Life Patterns: Society conditions people from a young age to equate money with happiness, especially when basic needs (Maslow’s hierarchy) are unmet—money reduces burdens and enables pleasures like vacations.
  • Diminishing Returns: After a certain income threshold, additional money no longer boosts happiness proportionally:
    • Historical Studies: Daniel Kahneman’s 1970s research suggested $70,000 as the cutoff, though disputed due to averaging across diverse living costs (e.g., higher in cities like LA vs. rural areas).
    • Modern Estimates: Recent data suggests $200,000 on average, potentially $400,000-$500,000 in major cities, lower in rural settings.

Productive Use of Money

  • Beyond Basics: Once essentials (food, shelter, safety) are covered, money’s best use shifts to enabling experiences—relationships, health pursuits (e.g., marathons), purpose-driven projects, or freedom to explore new activities.
  • Money as a Tool: Post-threshold, money transitions from the goal to a means for flourishing (eudaimonia), not the end itself.

The Five Types of Wealth

  • Sahil’s Framework: From his book, Sahil outlines five wealth types:
    • Time Wealth: Freedom to choose how time is spent.
    • Social Wealth: Rich relationships with loved ones.
    • Mental Wealth: Purpose, growth, and mental space.
    • Physical Wealth: Health and fitness.
    • Financial Wealth: Traditional monetary success.
  • Origin Story: Sahil’s concepts stem from personal insecurity and chasing external success (money, status) in his 20s, leading to a 2020-2021 epiphany after a friend highlighted limited time with loved ones.

Life Before the Shift

  • Career Path: Worked in private equity, rising from analyst to higher ranks, but prioritized status over balance, straining relationships, health, and mental well-being.
  • Rock Bottom: Despite outward success, Sahil faced isolation, poor health (drinking, overweight), and fertility struggles with his wife, prompting a reevaluation.

Key Insights

  • Arrival Fallacy: Chasing milestones (promotions, bonuses) leads to fleeting euphoria, not lasting fulfillment.
  • Hedonic Treadmill: Constant pursuit of more leaves people unfulfilled, as past desires become taken for granted (e.g., Sahil’s son interrupting work reminded him of prior prayers for a child).
  • Comparison Trap: Social media amplifies envy by exposing curated lives globally, not just locally, fueling discontent.

Practical Applications

  • Daily Habits: Small, consistent investments compound across all wealth types (e.g., texting a friend when inspired builds social wealth).
  • Journaling (1-1-1 Method): Sahil’s two-minute nightly practice—one win, one stress, one gratitude—improves sleep and mental health by offloading thoughts.
  • Failure’s Value: Teaching resilience through support and effort, not excuses (e.g., Sahil’s baseball tryout failure at 12, supported by his dad).

Broader Implications

  • Wealth Traps: Pursuing “bought status” (e.g., Rolex) over “earned status” (e.g., six-pack) leads to fleeting validation, not lasting respect.
  • Raising Kids: Financial wealth complicates instilling delayed gratification and resilience; Sahil prioritizes modeling effort and time with his son.
  • Health Analogy: Like cleaning a fishbowl before medicating a sick fish, addressing life’s ecosystem (wealth balance) trumps quick fixes.

Conclusion

  • Redefining Success: Sahil advocates living intentionally, asking tough questions about priorities, and building a life aligned with personal values, not societal defaults.
  • Host’s Reflection: Max appreciates Sahil’s insights, connecting them to his own journey (e.g., sushi as a symbol of earned abundance) and the broader health movement.

This conversation explores wealth’s multifaceted nature, challenging listeners to rethink happiness beyond money through actionable habits and self-awareness.

⬆️ Back to Top