In every family there is one invisible scoreboard.

It is rarely spoken about, but everyone knows it exists.
For many in the older generation, success is measured by one simple formula:
Salary = Respect.
If a man wakes up every morning, goes to a job, comes back with a monthly paycheck, he is considered responsible, hardworking, and respectable.
Anything outside that formula confuses them.
Business cycles?
Investments?
Rental income?
Asset creation?
Those things simply don’t exist in their mental framework.
Recently I had one such moment in my own life.
Out of the blue, my father-in-law exploded in anger and declared that I was “sitting and eating from my wife’s income.”
The irony is almost poetic.
My brother-in-law earns around ₹70,000 a month. His wife doesn’t work, and the family runs on that income.
Meanwhile, I earn three to four times more than him, and even more than my wife, but the structure of my income is different.
Instead of chasing salary slips, I focus on building assets.
Rental income.
Investments.
Long-term wealth generation.
My wife’s salary goes into family expenses like children’s education and one house EMI. My rental income goes into building the next asset, the next EMI, the next investment.
It is a cycle of wealth creation.
But to someone who believes the only respectable money is a monthly salary, anything else looks suspicious.
This is where psychology becomes interesting.
The older generation grew up in a world where:
A job meant stability.
A pension meant dignity.
Business meant risk.
So when they see a different financial model, they don’t analyze it — they attack it.
And sometimes there is another layer beneath it: comparison.
If their own son earns a salary, they must defend that model at all costs. The easiest way to do that is by questioning the son-in-law who operates differently.
It is not logic.
It is ego protection.
But the world has changed.
Today wealth is not just built by salaries. It is built by assets, systems, and patience.
Some people understand this shift.
Some people don’t.
And some people grow old before their thinking does.
So when someone tries to lecture me about manhood, income, and responsibility while ignoring reality, I simply remind myself of one thing:
Age may add years to a person, but it does not automatically upgrade their thinking.
