By the time he was 25, he was already worth $100 million. At 30, he had to hide the Porsche 911 to convince shareholders. Steve Jobs accumulated throughout his career a net worth of about $7 billion. However, there was a time when his fortune was reduced to his two hands.
Steve Jobs almost survived on other people’s charity
During the cold winter of 1973, Jobs attended an ISKON (International Association for Krishna Consciousness) temple every Sunday. He walked the seven miles that separated the dormitory from the temple. Their bond didn’t start by accident, but after their usual student meetings.
Ironic, These lessons in frugality and brotherhood made him feel separate of his academic life and dropped out of Reed College. I was enrolled for less than half a year. Steve didn’t want his parents to work their ass off paying college tuition, which by Jobs’ criteria didn’t bring him much educational benefit.
Some people remember that back then, Steve also helped clean the temple, scrub pots, and distribute food. Even a more radical brahmachari, a practitioner who did not see this “tourist” kindly, accused him of only having come to take advantage of the free food. Steve was forced to stop attending the temple.
stay Hungry Stay Foolish

From here began a long journey of self-discovery. Jobs no longer received financial compensation. He began to live in his classmates’ apartments, because when he stopped paying school fees, he was left without a dormitory. Of course he slept on the floor or in a rickety chair; the beds were for the students.
that stressed his almost childish habit of sitting on the floor instead of a comfortable sofa Each time, many years later, he would visit his friends. It was around this time that he began collecting glass Coca-Cola bottles to resell for five cents. Having raised a few dollars, he took the opportunity to buy groceries. He also made some money by helping with moves, recycling rubbish, etc. He occasionally took a class as an auditor, but little else.
These are phrases that Jobs himself recalled in his popular speech “You must find what you love” to Stanford University students on a sunny June 12, 2005 morning. The words “stay Hungry Stay Foolish“takes on a different nuance when one is aware of the hardships Jobs went through.
However, Jobs did not mean hungry for food, but for knowledge. Insatiable, dissatisfied, eager to learn. Also, “fool” in this context is not dumb or stupid, but “illusioned,” which retains that inquisitive mind typical of children, able to sign up for any challenge just for the fun of being able to do it.
Some have called this little talk at the Stanford Commencement Address one of the most useful knowledge pills of our generation. He spoke of love, loss, death, but projected a vital message that has touched thousands of people. And that’s still going on.
Home | Creation by Jonathan Mak as a tribute to Steve Jobs
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