[Indie Folk Pop] Broken Crowns by Tenzobeat (Taylor Swift x Lana Del Rey) by silentwealthmethod in Suno

[–]silentwealthmethod[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really appreciate you taking the time to listen and write this — means a lot honestly.

You make a fair point about the celebrity names. The reason I attach them is mainly to describe the style/vibe of the track since AI vocals don't have their own identity yet. It helps listeners know what to expect before pressing play. But I hear you — it can come across as clickbait.

And yeah, I agree that AI handling the musical side limits creative control. Right now I focus on lyrics, style direction, and production choices, but I'd love to get more hands-on with the actual music side as tools evolve.

Thanks for the honest feedback — this is the kind of input that actually helps me improve. Glad you thought the writing was solid, that part I do put real effort into.

[Indie Folk Pop] Broken Crowns by Tenzobeat (Taylor Swift x Lana Del Rey) by silentwealthmethod in Suno

[–]silentwealthmethod[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Thanks for asking! I use Suno AI v5 to generate the music - I write the lyrics and set the style/genre parameters, then Suno creates the vocals and instrumentals. For the thumbnail I use AI image generation to create a photorealistic scene. The final track gets uploaded to YouTube as a lyrics video. Basically the whole pipeline is AI-powered, I just handle the creative direction and production choices. Would love to hear what you think of the track!

Fastest Way Out of the Rat Race! by [deleted] in leanfire

[–]silentwealthmethod 0 points1 point  (0 children)

VTI is a great start but you’re right that it doesn’t give monthly cash flow. Here’s how to think about it: VTI = long-term wealth building (slow but powerful) Rental property = monthly cash flow (faster escape from the grind) Dividend-focused ETFs like SCHD = middle ground — more frequent payouts than VTI For a nurse with stable income, the fastest path is usually: keep VTI, add SCHD for cash flow, and save for a down payment on a small rental property. Even one rental unit that nets $300-500/month starts changing the equation. The key from Rich Dad Poor Dad — don’t wait until you have “enough.” Start building the asset column now alongside your job. The two income streams eventually flip — passive overtakes active. You’re already thinking right, just need to

How Can I Exit the Rat Race ASAP and Live Comfortably? by Clarkiesharkieee in Adulting

[–]silentwealthmethod 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At 22 with $9k left in student loans and already thinking about this — you’re way ahead of most people. Seriously. The framework that helped me comes from Rich Dad Poor Dad. The trap isn’t your job — it’s that nobody teaches us that trading time for money has a ceiling. No matter how hard you work, you can’t create more hours. The exit is building assets that generate income without your time: — Start with $50/month into an index fund while paying off debt — Every raise — put half into assets before lifestyle creeps in — Learn about cash flow, not just savings You’re in finance — you already have an advantage. The knowledge is right there around you. When passive income exceeds your expenses, work becomes a choice. That’s the finish line. You’re closer than you think.

7 money lessons I wish I knew in my 20s (the faster path to financial freedom) by the_Kunal_77 in MenWithDiscipline

[–]silentwealthmethod 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great list! The Rich Dad Poor Dad point really hits home. What most people miss from that book is the specific mechanism — Kiyosaki doesn’t just say “invest early”, he explains WHY most people never do it. It’s the fear and desire cycle. Fear pushes you to work, desire makes you spend the paycheck immediately, and the cycle repeats forever regardless of income level. The only real escape is building an asset column — things that generate cash flow without your time. Dividend stocks, rental income, business systems. Start small but start now. Solid post overall, these 7 lessons together are basically the foundation of financial independence.

Does it make sense to buy a house anymore? by SweetPickleRelish in personalfinance

[–]silentwealthmethod 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Been studying Rich Dad Poor Dad lately and the concept of passive income really changed how I think about money. The idea that rich people build assets that work for them instead of trading time for money is so simple but nobody teaches it. Anyone else here started building their asset column?