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Let's talk about something that happens way more often than it should: people dropping serious money into pursuits with almost zero shot at payoff.
Parents are sinking thousands into youth sports programs. Sounds familiar to anyone? The dream is there—maybe their kid makes it big. But statistically? The odds are brutal. We're talking microscopic probability of reaching pro level. Yet the spending continues, year after year.
This behavior is fascinating from a decision-making perspective. It reveals something about how humans handle risk assessment and capital allocation. We don't actually think in probabilities that well. We think in possibilities. We think about the one success story we heard about, not the thousands of failures we didn't.
It's the same psychology that plays out in crypto and investment circles constantly. People allocate funds based on hope and FOMO rather than cold math. They see the potential outcome and convince themselves "why not me?" They ignore base rates. They ignore the actual numbers.
Here's the uncomfortable truth: whether you're talking about youth sports investment, startup funding, or crypto bets, the mechanism is identical. Humans are notoriously bad at distinguishing between "possible" and "probable." We throw capital at low-probability events because we're wired for optimism bias.
The lesson isn't that you should never take shots on low-probability plays. It's that you should do so with money you can actually afford to lose, with full awareness of what the math actually says. Most people skip that part.