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My name is Richard, and I need to tell you something that happened six months ago that finally made me see what I'd become. I built everything for my family for 40 years. I started with nothing and built a construction company worth $85 million. I built the house my family lived in. I built the college funds. I built the investment portfolios. I built financial security that would last generations. Forbes called me a self-made success story. Business journals profiled my rise from laborer to CEO. But six months ago, at my daughter's wedding, she stood up to give a toast thanking the important people in her life. And when she got to me, she looked right at me, in front of 250 people, and said, "And to my father, William, thanks for the money. It paid for a lot of things." That was it. Not "thanks for being there." Not "thanks for being a great dad." Just "thanks for the money." I'm 72 years old now. The company's sold. The bank accounts are full. But my daughter sees me as an ATM. Not a father. An ATM. And sitting at that wedding, hearing those words, I finally understood. That's all I'd ever given her. Money. For 40 years, I built everything except what actually mattered. And by the time I realized it, she'd already written me off. And if you're out there right now, working endless hours, telling yourself you're building your children's future, telling yourself providing financially is the same as being present, I need you to hear this story. Because I told myself those exact lies for four decades. And I was wrong about everything. Let me take you back to 1977. I was 32 years old, newly married to Margaret, and I'd just taken out a massive loan to start my own construction company. We had nothing. I mean nothing. We lived in a one-bedroom apartment. Margaret worked as a secretary. I was working construction sites 70 hours a week, trying to get my business off the ground. Margaret was incredibly supportive. She'd say, "We'll get through this. You're building our future." And I believed her. I genuinely believed that if I could just work hard enough, sacrifice enough, build a successful enough business, we'd have everything we needed. Security. Stability. Success.