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Reed Calloway

Writer, Real-World Investor, Lifelong Learner

"I'm not a financial advisor and I'm not here to tell you what to do with your money. I'm Reed Calloway — someone with some financial background, a lot of real world experience, and a genuine belief that regular people can build real wealth if they start early, stay consistent, and keep learning."

The Story

I didn't grow up in a household where investing was discussed at the dinner table. We weren't poor, but we weren't wealthy either — and the concept of "building wealth" felt like something other people did. People with money who made more money.

That changed for me in my mid-twenties, when I stumbled onto a book about compound interest and did the math on what I could have had if I'd started investing at 18. I wasn't angry — I was motivated. And I was also confused, because the more I read, the more I realized nobody had ever tried to explain this stuff in a way that was actually accessible to regular people.

So I started learning. I read everything I could get my hands on — books, research, forums, financial journalism. I opened a Roth IRA. I invested in index funds. I made some good calls. I made some bad ones. I bought a stock because a coworker told me it was "about to take off." I tried crypto too early and then too late. I ignored bonds for years and then discovered they actually made sense at a certain stage of life. I've been through multiple market cycles — corrections, crashes, and the recoveries that followed.

Through all of it, I kept coming back to the same observation: most of what separates financially secure people from financially struggling people isn't income. It's knowledge, habits, and time. And the knowledge part is the most fixable.

Why This Site Exists

I started The Wealth Vibration because I kept having the same conversations — with friends, family members, coworkers — where I'd explain some basic concept about investing or retirement accounts, and they'd say, "Why doesn't anyone teach this?" The answer, in my experience, is that nobody has figured out how to make it interesting without making it either dumbed-down or overwhelming.

My goal is to write about money the way a knowledgeable friend would talk to you about it. Not like a professor. Not like a salesperson. Like someone who has actually lived this stuff, made real decisions with real money, and wants to share what they've learned without the agenda.

The site covers everything from the basics — compound interest, asset classes, what a Roth IRA actually is — to more nuanced topics like options trading, cash value life insurance, and how your financial priorities should shift at different stages of life. I also write about current markets and financial events from a regular-person perspective: not what a hedge fund manager needs to know, but what you need to know.

What I Actually Believe

  • Time is the most powerful force in investing. Compound returns love time above everything else. Getting into the market young — even with small amounts — creates a foundation that's nearly impossible to replicate later. This is the thing I most wish I'd known at 18.
  • Regular people can build real wealth. Not because investing is easy, but because the fundamentals work if you give them enough time. You don't need to be a genius. You don't need a finance degree. You need knowledge, consistency, and patience.
  • Financial literacy is not optional. The world will make financial decisions that affect you whether or not you're paying attention. Understanding how money works is a form of self-protection and self-empowerment.
  • There's no one right strategy. I'm not a dogmatist. I've seen index funds work beautifully and individual stocks create real wealth. I've seen crypto change lives and destroy them. Context matters. Stage of life matters. Your specific situation matters. I'll always present options and trade-offs — not prescriptions.
  • Starting beats perfecting. A mediocre investment strategy started at 22 almost always beats a perfect strategy started at 35. Done is better than optimal when time is the most valuable variable.
  • The questions matter as much as the answers. Part of financial literacy is knowing what to ask — of yourself, of advisors, of any investment opportunity. I try to model the questions as much as the answers.

A Few Things I've Invested In

For transparency: I've had money in S&P 500 index funds for over a decade. I've owned individual stocks — some that worked out, some that didn't. I've held Bitcoin through multiple cycles. I've had positions in bonds. I've used a Roth IRA and a 401k. I've paid fees I shouldn't have paid and made allocations I wish I hadn't. None of this is advice — it's just context for where my perspective comes from.

I am not a financial advisor. I don't manage other people's money. I'm a writer and investor who believes deeply in financial education and thinks the world is better when more regular people understand how money works.

A Note on Advice

Nothing on this site is financial, investment, or legal advice. Reed Calloway is a pen name. I write about concepts, strategies, tools, and experiences — but every financial decision you make should be informed by your specific circumstances. Please consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.

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