---
title: 'A hot take about necessity'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=ZGOljd36T50'
video_id: 'ZGOljd36T50'
date: 2026-07-14
duration_sec: 0
---

# A hot take about necessity

> Source: [A hot take about necessity](https://youtube.com/watch?v=ZGOljd36T50)

## Summary



## Transcript

I got a question. I really want to move elsewhere to experience living in another country, but I come from a poor country and have good skills and job opportunities. Do you think it's worth me trying to earn more money in my home country before trying to move, or will I grow and earn more abroad? Man, I cannot give any advice to this without knowing way more context about your life situation, and even then I probably won't dream to give advice on this. But, having said that, here's my hot take. My hot take is that necessity is the mother of all innovation. So, as long as you're not taking so big a risk that your family is literally going to starve, you probably won't regret just taking the plunge and moving abroad. When you get to a new country and [music] you have to make it work, that is a profoundly motivating place to be. I guarantee, from having spoken to a bunch of people who are in this situation, and actually like my mom was in this situation as well. Like, the timing never feels right. When you're making a big life change, it is unusual for people to feel like the timing is perfect. There's always more you could do to optimize your situation. You could always earn more money. You could always complete your exams first. You could always do your postgraduate qualification in medicine and stuff. You could always get into specialty training. You could always, well, get married first. You could always have kids first. You could go, "Well, you know, I kind of need a house now." You could always get a mortgage first. And before you know it, the let me just optimize situation X becomes the prison that keeps you in situation X, even though what you were trying to do was optimization. So, I'm generally a fan of taking imperfect action and acting before you feel ready, knowing that the human bias is there to overweight the fears of something. I say just like take the plunge and do the thing, because taking the plunge and doing the thing, you're unlikely to regret it, right? Worst case scenario, you just move back to your home country and you still can just get another job. Like, that's the worst case scenario. Best case scenario, you move to a new country, get new experience, get new life skills, have a great time. If you were thinking about like minimizing regret, that to me feels like the option that minimizes regret. But, hey, I'm just a guy on the internet. What the hell do I know?
