It’s easy to say you care about your spouse and children, but words are empty compared to actions. Earlier this year, a California multimillionaire was forced to decide what was most important to him in life.
Mohamed El-Erian was CEO of a $2-trillion investment firm called PIMCO. He’s a very successful and hard-driving businessman who has made a lot of money. In 2011 alone, his income was $200 million. But he shocked the financial world in January when he quit his job — not to jump to a rival firm, but to spend time with his wife and daughter.
We can all learn something from his choice.
El-Erian was forced to decide what was most important to him — his family or his income — because his daughter challenged him. Writing for Worth magazine in May, El-Erian explained his crisis of values.
He said he asked his daughter to do something — which he recalls as brushing her teeth — and the two ended up arguing about her lack of compliance. He reminded her that she had always been quick to obey him, but she asked him to wait a minute, then she disappeared briefly to get a piece of paper from her room.

Party of ‘limited government’ fails when given chance to shrink state
Partisans defend every kind of evil when it’s done by their own allies
FRIDAY FUNNIES
In defense of the legal right to anonymous speech, political lies
NOTEBOOK: Get ready for the epic snoozer of Obama vs. Romney
Good artists show us what we can’t yet see with our own eyes
Cop’s murder has me pondering why humans kill those they love
Few things scare humans like the prospect of living, dying alone