A story about familiarity bias and financial future shows how people choose what they know over something new, even if that new thing could help them save more money.
Imagine you have a piggy bank full of coins. Every day, you put your allowance into it, and you love the sound of clinking coins. That’s your familiarity bias, you stick with what you know because it feels safe and fun.
Now imagine there's also a jar that promises to grow your money if you put coins in it every week. But it looks different from your piggy bank, and you’ve never used it before. That jar is like your financial future, something new that could help you save even more money later.
But because you love your piggy bank so much, you keep putting all your coins there instead of trying the jar. You don’t realize that the jar might grow your coins into bigger coins someday!
So sometimes, being comfortable with what we know can make us miss out on better chances, just like choosing a piggy bank over a magic growing jar.
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