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A daily dispatch on money, life, and the discipline of building both at the same time. One story. One thing to do. One thing she wishes someone had told her earlier. Delivered before the market opens.
What arrives in your inbox
A real woman and a real money moment — written with enough detail to feel true and enough craft to feel worth keeping. No composites dressed as inspiration. No rags-to-riches arcs. Just the specific, honest version of what actually happened and what she did next.
"She looked at the number on a Wednesday. Not when she was ready. Just when she finally ran out of reasons not to."
One thing she did — or one thing she wishes she had. Not a five-step framework. Not a checklist. A single, specific action rooted in the story you just read. Applicable by Thursday.
"The move isn't to open a brokerage account. It's to open it with the amount you were about to spend on the thing you almost bought instead."
The thing she wishes someone had told her before the reckoning. From inside a family office, from behind a spreadsheet that finally told the truth. The insider perspective, given freely.
"The most expensive thing I ever bought was time. Every asset I build now is me buying more of it back."
"The desire doesn't go away.
The target changes."
— The Wishlist Method
Who reads this
She understands money in theory. She works hard, earns well, and spends beautifully. Her brokerage account tells a different story. She's not looking for someone to explain compounding — she's looking for someone who gets it.
She's been through something. A wedding that didn't happen, a number she finally looked at, a Tuesday when the last payment cleared. She's past the reckoning. Now she wants the build.
She's tired of being told to want less. She doesn't want a monk's life in exchange for a growing portfolio. She wants both — the handbag and the dividend stock. The Wishlist Method is for her.
Not for
Anyone looking for hot stock picks, crypto calls, or "five tips to retire early." The Miss Wallstreet newsletter doesn't do that. It does story, strategy, and the honest interior of building wealth while living a life you don't need to recover from.
From the archive
Miss Wallstreet
She looked at the number on a Wednesday.
She'd been meaning to look for three years.
Not at the salary — that she knew. Not at the checking account — she checked that every other Tuesday with the mild dread of someone who already suspects what they'll find. The real number. The net worth number. The one that requires opening every tab at once and not closing any of them until the arithmetic is finished.
She did it on a Wednesday because there was nothing special about Wednesday. No intention. No ceremony. Just a slow afternoon and a browser she hadn't closed.
The number was lower than she'd told herself. Higher than she feared. Both true simultaneously, which is how most honest reckonings work.
She didn't change anything that day. She just wrote it down.
——
The move: Write yours down. Not in a spreadsheet, not in an app — on a piece of paper, with a pen. Date it. Put it somewhere you'll find in two years. This is the before photo. Everything else comes after.
What she wished she'd known earlier: The number doesn't have to be good. It just has to be real. You cannot build from a number you won't look at.
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One story, one move, one thing she wishes someone had told her earlier — delivered to your inbox every morning. Free. No ads. Written by a woman who works inside wealth and is finally building her own.