The best financial plans include space for being wrong. Not because you’re careless, but because reality is messy.
Room for error is a margin: extra time, extra cash, extra patience, extra humility. It’s what keeps a small mistake from becoming a life-changing disaster. It’s what allows you to endure bad luck without making desperate decisions.
People often avoid margins because margins look inefficient. Money sitting idle feels wasteful. Extra time feels slow. Conservative choices feel like missing out. But margins buy something that efficiency can’t: resilience.
And resilience is what allows you to stay in the game long enough for compounding, opportunity, and luck to work. A fragile plan may look brilliant on paper and still fail in practice—because practice includes chaos.
Room for error is not a luxury. It’s the cost of operating in a world that doesn’t care what you expected.