How to Survive the Hell of Inflation? | A Survival, Investment, and Hope Guide in a Collapsing Economy

Book Summary

“How to Survive the Hell of Inflation?
A Survival, Investment, and Hope Guide in a Collapsing Economy”

Do you want to understand why prices keep rising every day and what real strategies exist to fight inflation and economic crisis?
This book is a comprehensive, practical, and psychological guide to preserving capital, managing finances, and rebuilding hope in Iran’s challenging economic conditions. Drawing from economic analysis, collective psychology, and cosmic cycles, it shows you how to make smart decisions amid market instability and overcome fear.

The book answers key frequently asked questions such as:

  • Why has inflation in Iran soared so much and what are its underlying causes?
  • Is the US dollar still the safest investment haven, or should we consider alternatives?
  • Is investing in gold better or cryptocurrencies? What are the benefits and risks of each?
  • How can we resist inflation and even profit with fixed income?
  • Why do we feel poorer every day despite earning income? What is our economic psychology?
  • How can small investors survive in high-risk markets with limited capital?
  • Which jobs remain stable during crises, and how to safeguard your career?
  • How can we maintain hope and motivation amidst fear?
  • How can we improve financial literacy and make better economic decisions?
  • What is the roadmap to overcome crisis and build a better financial future?

If you are looking for a precise, scientific, yet inspiring guide to protect wealth, increase financial knowledge, and strengthen hope during hard economic times, this book is written exactly for you. By reading it, you will not only confront today’s challenges but also acquire the tools necessary to build a better tomorrow.


Relevant Keywords:

Inflation in Iran, crisis investment management, smart investing, dollar or gold, cryptocurrencies in Iran, how to preserve your money, financial literacy for all, stable jobs in crisis, hope during inflation, overcoming economic crisis, practical financial education.

Author: Vahid Zekavati

Copyright: NLP Radio

Introduction

“How to Survive in the Hell of Inflation?”

A Survival Guide, Investment Manual, and Source of Hope in a Collapsing Economy

When you wake up every morning to another price shock, when simple groceries have become a luxury, and when fear of the future poisons even the taste of bread, you can no longer wait for a miracle. This book was written for exactly those moments — when you don’t know what to do with your money, when you doubt tomorrow, when it feels like everything is slipping away.

This isn’t just a book about economics. It’s about your soul. It’s about the hope that still burns in every Iranian heart, even when there’s no visible sign of relief. In this book, we walk through the fire together — with clear but understandable analyses, stories rooted in real experience, a fusion of psychology and intuition, and personal financial strategies for survival.

If you think you’re the only one who doesn’t know what to do right now, this book is for you. If you feel your hope is fading but you’re not ready to give up, this book is for you. “How to Survive in the Hell of Inflation?” is the steady, quiet voice of someone who has been through the fire — and found a way forward. This book will walk with you.


🟦 Chapter One: Why Has Everything Become So Expensive?

At night, when shop lights go out, prices stay awake. It is as if the market no longer follows time but fear. A fear that circles minds and lifts prices without mercy.

From my window, I stare at Tehran’s grey sky and wonder how a bag of rice suddenly became half a man’s salary. Something in this city is no longer in place. Time, value, security — all feel distorted.

Many believe the problem is just price increases. But roots grow deeper in hidden soil. If we don’t know where the tree bends, we’ll keep pruning leaves in vain.

Inflation isn’t a number the Central Bank announces. It’s a living being: afraid, hungry, aggressive, and sometimes retreating. And we are not bystanders — we are part of the game.

Why are bread, fruit, meat, medicine, and even hope becoming rare? Because a blend of policy error, sanctions, and mistrust in the future has scorched the land. People fall further behind daily.

We often blame the dollar. But the dollar is just a curtain before a dark room. Behind it lies chaos: mismanagement, capital flight, and a people unsure whom to trust.

The root of inflation is also in our minds. When everyone buys in panic, fearing tomorrow will cost more, we pour fuel on inflation’s fire. In these times, collective thought is more dangerous than the Central Bank.

From a cosmic view, cycles are unfolding not only on Earth but in higher energies. The year 2024 is a crossroads: destruction, rebuilding, and redefining security.

To understand why everything became expensive, we must look beyond markets. To our psyche, to our past, to broken promises and buried hopes. Prices are signs, not causes.

Economics is not just science — it is shared emotion. When trust fades, even stable numbers become unstable. Distrust is the highest inflation rate known.

In school, no one taught us how fear devours economies. No one taught us that when people worry more than they shop, the market abandons logic.

Everything began when policies stopped speaking with people and started deciding for them. Silence costs more than any mistake. When people aren’t heard, prices scream.

Maybe we’re all drowning, but some have learned to walk the waves. The line between collapse and endurance is in knowing and accepting reality — not fleeing, not denying, but understanding.

Last November, I saw an old man weighing eggs one by one under a dim light, buying only what he needed for the day. Life is now measured in grams.

We live in an era where inflation is not just a headline number — it is a scar etched into our subconscious. A shadow following us, even when we don’t shop.

If we don’t face our fears, prices will decide for us. A mind anxious about tomorrow cannot trade wisely. Today, calming the mind is an economic necessity.

From December 2024 to March 2025, a period of relative psychological easing may arise. But only if collective awareness shifts — not just market indexes.

The only way to tame inflation today is to tame the mind that fears tomorrow. Instead of running, pause. Instead of reacting, observe. Instead of impulse buys, plan. Calm is the secret weapon of economies.

The real story is this: we live in a country where prices wake before the people do. But perhaps it’s time we awaken before the prices.

Maybe the answer to “Why has everything become so expensive?” is this: because we kept running from ourselves. Because we delayed instead of healing. And now, it’s time for a meaningful silence to begin.

Chapter Two: Is the Dollar Still the Safest Refuge?

A few months ago, an old friend asked me anxiously, “Is now the time to buy dollars? Or is it already too late?” His eyes weren’t greedy — they were scared. I said, “If you’re only running from fear, then yes — it’s already too late.”

In Iran, the dollar is more than just a currency. It has become a psychological symbol of shelter. When people lose faith in the rial, they naturally seek safety in what they believe will shield them from collapse.

But is the dollar always a good refuge? History shows that in Iran, the dollar’s behavior is more emotional than rational. Not just people — even the market buys out of fear sometimes.

In scorching summers, the dollar’s price heats up too. But what brings it back down? A small shift in public mood, a government intervention, or just a rumor. In the dollar market, sometimes news trades more than numbers.

Veteran analysts say: the dollar is not for everyone, not forever. Choose your shelter wisely — otherwise, your refuge may catch fire. Risk is the dollar’s constant shadow.

From July to September 2024, signs suggest a volatile period ahead for the dollar. Not a sharp fall, not a soaring rise. Just swings that leave the unprepared dizzy.

In such times, your greatest asset is knowing when to stand still. Not to buy or sell, but to breathe. To let the dust settle, so truth can reveal itself.

Some believe buying dollars always works. But they forget: in irrational markets, logic loses value. Many have bought at the peak — now dreaming only of recovering losses.

The dollar is useful only when approached with analysis, not fear. Otherwise, it runs from you too. The market is not just numbers — it’s your mental mirror. If your mind is chaotic, no currency will save you.

They say the real dollar is a calm heart. Because someone with a calm heart sees every market as a chance for mindful decisions — not a battlefield, not a gamble, but a space for observation and patience.

The free market reacts more to emotions than to supply and demand. People fear, so they buy. Then, when calm returns, they sell. And these waves transfer wealth from the unaware to the aware.

From December 2024 to March 2025, a new wave may rise in the currency market. If your eyes are open, you might ride it. But if you run blindly, you’ll be lost in the storm.

A refuge is a place of felt safety. If the dollar is only your escape from fear — not your tool for planning — then you haven’t found a refuge yet. True safety begins within.

Let’s not forget: the dollar itself fluctuates globally. U.S. inflation, interest rates, Fed policies, even elections. We in Iran aren’t just in our own storm — we’re riding theirs too.

If someone seeks financial peace today, they must know that simply holding dollars won’t bring it. A clear, analytical mind must lead — weighing opportunities, taming greed.

The dollar isn’t the only option. But when others lose credibility, it becomes the reluctant king — trusted not out of love, but necessity. And that’s the most fragile kind of trust.

I’ve bought dollars in the past — and lost. Because I bought from fear, not reason. I wanted an instant fix for my anxiety. But the dollar doesn’t give quick answers — only new questions.

In today’s market, awareness is your greatest asset. Don’t chase numbers — read the signs. Watch people’s behavior, the unspoken news, the meaningful silences. They guide you — not the noise.

Maybe the deepest truth is this: you are the real refuge. If your mind is calm, you’ll choose wisely even in chaos. But if fear controls you, no amount of golden dollars will ever save you.

Chapter Three: Should We Buy Gold or Crypto?

Traditional Stability or Modern Risk?

One day in a bank line, a middle-aged woman said softly, “My son says buy gold, my husband says Bitcoin. But I don’t know what to do.” I asked, “Which one scares you more?” She replied, “My ignorance.”

In a time where money loses value daily, people search for something that won’t vanish. For centuries, gold has been that refuge — a yellow stone echoing security through history.

Standing opposite it are cryptocurrencies: shapeless, placeless, borderless — but full of thrill and dreams. Some call it the gold of the future, others a digital gamble.

Psychologically, gold is like the mother: protective, tangible, comforting. Crypto, however, is more like the father: distant, risky, yet alluring.

From September 2024, gold regains attention — not just due to global prices, but from internal instability. When fear rises, people seek something they can hold.

Meanwhile, cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin will see sharp fluctuations during the same period. Global markets, under technological and political pressure, toss crypto like a boat in a storm.

If one seeks peace, gold is a safer choice. But for those who’ve learned to ride volatility, crypto offers opportunity. The difference lies in mindset, not markets.

I once saw a young man invest all his savings in Bitcoin — and when it crashed, so did he. He knew neither the market nor himself. No investment brings safety without self-awareness.

Gold feels more reliable in the hand. But can a secure past build a safe future? That’s the question dividing many minds: tradition or risk?

Crypto in Iran still lacks regulation. Exchanges shut down, withdrawals are limited, and security risks are real. Yet sudden profits continue to tempt.

For investments under 100 million toman, a blend of gold and crypto is wiser — part to preserve value, part to chase opportunity. But both require education.

Astrologically, Saturn and Uranus are pulling in opposite directions: one seeks stability, the other innovation. Just like the forces battling inside us.

If you make peace with volatility, crypto becomes a teacher. If not, each dip feels like an earthquake. So train the mind before filling the wallet.

The question isn’t whether gold or crypto is better. The question is: what kind of investor are you? Cautious? Opportunistic? Or both? The answer lies in your own reflection.

Personally, I keep gold in a small drawer and crypto in an anonymous app. One gives me stability, the other possibility. Maybe it’s this mix that keeps me balanced.

The biggest mistake is investing from regret or fear — regret over missed gains, or fear of missing out. But markets never soften for emotional decisions.

Gold has history. Crypto has potential. Choosing between them is choosing between past and future. But only your present state gives meaning to that decision.

No market is your enemy — unless you ignore the enemy within. Greed, fear, ignorance. These are the real threats. Not dollars, not Bitcoin, not coins.

Ultimately, a financial refuge is only as safe as your mind is calm. Gold bought in peace is worth more than Bitcoin bought in panic.

And if you still don’t know which to buy — wait. Gold won’t vanish. Bitcoin won’t fly away. But what might slip through your fingers is your peace of mind. Save it — so you can choose well.


🟦 Chapter Four: You Can’t Eliminate Inflation, But You Can Outrun It

How to Preserve Value with a Fixed Income

Inflation is like a tall wave. You can’t stop it — but you can learn to ride it. Otherwise, it swallows you whole, without a moment to scream.

I had a friend who always said, “I’m just a salaried worker — what can I do?” Years later, I saw him run a small online business alongside his job. Now he has two streams of income.

In times of inflation, the only thing that shouldn’t remain fixed is your mindset. A mind trapped in one salary, one skill, or one path cannot rise above the waves — it only drowns.

If you can’t increase your income, learn how to spend it wisely — or better yet, convert it into capital. Capital that works for you — not the other way around.

New skills are capital — even if they don’t pay yet. Someone learning design or translation today can offer services to global clients tomorrow — even while living in Iran.

Earning in foreign currency isn’t only for the rich. Sometimes all it takes is a phone, a laptop, and some time. The key is knowing what within you can be turned into a service.

One reader of this book wrote to me — she teaches Persian cooking on YouTube and earns in dollars. Inflation no longer scares her — because she rose above it.

August, October, and December 2024 are months when cosmic energy favors creative income streams. Start then — and you may build something that lasts.

Inflation-resistant income means income that rises as prices rise. These are often digital, skill-based, and detached from the rial’s value.

If you’re a vendor tied only to the local market, you’ll be forced to lower your prices daily. But if you serve clients outside inflation, your value stays intact.

Digital services — content creation, online education, graphic design, specialized consulting — these are not shields, they’re swords in the war against inflation.

Even if you’re not tech-savvy, you can earn by selling ideas, collaborating, or using simple partnership models. The key is breaking out of passivity.

Don’t think you must become a millionaire overnight. Even an extra 2 or 3 million toman monthly beyond your salary can lift you out of fear.

Entrepreneurship during collapse has a unique form. No need for offices or loans. Just ask: what can I do that others will pay for?

That question is your survival map. Maybe you have a good voice, beautiful handwriting, a sharp memory, or the pain of lived experience. All of it is monetizable — if you look closely.

Money always follows skills — not luck, not prayer. Enrich your inner world, and your outer life will reflect it. People fail not with empty hands — but with empty minds.

Inflation isn’t the enemy of the poor — it’s the enemy of the still. If you move, inflation — no matter how fast — will always arrive late.

Don’t believe opportunities are gone — they’ve simply changed shape. They’re no longer in the streets — they’re in our phones. In our words, images, sounds, and services.

Creating income during collapse means finding stability in chaos. It means building a lamp in the dark. And you, if you choose, can be the one to light it.

Chapter Five: Why Are We Getting Poorer Every Day?

Mental Bias, Economic Psychology, and Deadly Comparisons

Each morning when I wake up, I don’t first think about how much money I have. I think about how far ahead others are. And that’s exactly when poverty begins.

We don’t become poor because we lack money — we become poor because we compare. Social media doesn’t show poverty in numbers — it shows it in pictures. And the mind fears images more than logic.

If someone lives in a small apartment in Tehran but sees northern villas on Instagram daily, their soul bleeds. The wound of comparison runs deeper than the wound of hunger.

Inflation is an economic fact — but the feeling of poverty is mostly a psychological disorder. Even in this collapsed market, some still grow — because their minds haven’t panicked.

Saturn and Neptune, in the second half of 2024, bring a mix of illusion and rigidity to our collective psyche. Fears will feel more real than facts — and that will paralyze us.

Even if your income stays the same, your sense of poverty may double — just because you’re comparing yourself to people whose real situation you don’t know.

The mind has a hidden enemy: constant comparison. You can’t feel peace if you’re always comparing yourself to others, to your past, or to dreams of the future. Peace lies in accepting the now.

If you think you have nothing, ask yourself: what do I have that I’d gladly pay for, but currently have for free? The answers will shake you.

Sometimes wealth lies in being able to sleep safely, in being able to call someone, in still having hope. These are riches that financial poverty can’t steal — unless you forget them yourself.

Our biggest error is believing others are happier. But most of them likely think the same about us. Poverty is a contagious illness passed mind to mind.

If you check the dollar rate daily but ignore your inner worth, it’s natural to feel powerless. Inflation scares the mind — but a strong mind can neutralize its effects.

In late 2024, constant media crises will lead to “chronic economic anxiety.” The remedy is distancing yourself from this toxic feed.

Learn to skip certain news, ignore some flaunted luxuries, and distrust every fear. The mind is a garden — left unguarded, weeds take over.

Understand that the feeling of poverty always stems from unawareness: of your path, your abilities, others’ truths. Awareness is the beginning of wealth — even if your wallet is empty.

When I realized comparisons were killing me, I turned off my phone. I stayed away for a week. When I returned, I saw myself — same income, same home — but a mind that was no longer poor.

Sometimes, you have to tell yourself: I am enough. I am learning. I am still standing. And in this ruin, just standing is a form of wealth.

No one makes you poor but the voice inside that says, “You’re less than others.” Silence it — not with shouting, but with awareness. Awareness of who you truly are.

Life may get harder — but don’t be harder on yourself. In crisis, if you lose your self-compassion, no wealth can save you.

And finally, know this: you’re not getting poorer every day — you’re simply in growing need of awareness. A mindful mind can live with grace, even in scarcity. That wealth is more real than any number.


🟦 Chapter Six: What Can We Do With Little Money?

Investment Strategies Under 50 Million Tomans

When money is scarce, fear grows large. It’s as if the digits in your bank account are tied to your hope. But even with little, big steps are possible — if your perspective shifts.

Our problem isn’t that our capital is small — it’s that we see it as worthless. Money that’s humiliated cannot grow. Every amount, no matter how small, deserves respect.

A friend of mine had only 10 million tomans. He slowly bought physical silver — not for quick profit, but for sheltering his savings from inflation.

If your capital is under 50 million, your greatest ally is patience, not urgency. Markets always hold hidden treasures for the calm-hearted.

August, October, and March 2025 are good months for small entries. These times are energetically aligned with caution, focus, and gathering momentum.

Fixed-income funds are a place to begin. They won’t make you rich — but they’ll protect your money while you prepare for a leap.

You could invest in learning. Take an online course, buy a practical book, or gain a sellable skill. This is investment not in the market, but in yourself.

Investing isn’t just buying coins or currency. Starting a service page on Instagram or Telegram, with minimal cost, could open a new revenue stream.

One reader bought a good microphone, studied voiceover, and now earns in dollars. With just 30 million tomans, she invested in herself — not in fear.

With little money, making mistakes is more important than making profits. The small lessons you learn now will save you from big losses later.

Always keep some cash aside. Not for emergencies — but for opportunity. The market rewards those who are liquid and ready to act.

If gold is too expensive, buy silver. If currency is out of reach, learn a service that earns it. The road always exists — you just need to know its shape.

Small money demands a creative mind — one that knows how to build a big puzzle from little pieces. Not seeking miracles, but ready to build.

Psychologically, small wins from small capital build financial confidence. And that confidence is the key to all larger investments ahead.

Avoid comparing yourself to those with massive funds. They started somewhere too. What matters is not your starting point, but your consistency in learning and action.

In inflationary times, holding cash is slow death. But channeling it into value creation — even small — offers a path to survival.

Yes, Iran’s markets are risky — but even in chaos, there are opportunities. Small money needs precision, not blind hope.

Sometimes, a basic skill — Photoshop, fast typing, or social media design — can open a door to income. You just need to knock on one.

No capital is ever useless. Even one million tomans, used wisely, can be the start of a long journey. What matters is your intention.

And finally, know this: the world is kinder to those who begin with little. So if today your money is small — don’t be afraid. Right here, right now, a big opportunity is hidden.

Chapter Seven: Will My Job Survive?

Identifying Risky vs. Resilient Jobs in Times of Crisis

When prices rise nonstop, a quiet fear lives in every working heart: What if I lose my job tomorrow? What if my profession becomes obsolete? What if no one needs what I do anymore?

Sudden job loss shatters the mind more than lack of money. You feel useless. And in an era where usefulness equals survival, that fear becomes your fiercest enemy.

The year 2024, astrologically speaking, marks a shift: Uranus is redefining traditional professions. What once seemed stable may no longer guarantee survival.

Jobs today fall into two groups: those rooted in place, and those rooted in skill. The first group is at risk. The second is rising.

If your job depends on a fixed location, physical presence, or government resources, be cautious. Structural changes can collapse such careers from within.

But if your work is based on personal ability, creativity, and online delivery — especially globally — your chances of stability are far greater.

Healthcare, mental health, education, digital services, data analysis, content creation, and international freelancing are among the most crisis-resilient fields ahead.

One reader, formerly in in-person sales, moved her business online in 2023. Not only did she survive the crisis — she grew.

The most vital professional skill during inflation is flexibility: the ability to pivot, learn quickly, and redefine yourself. Sadly, schools never taught us this.

If your job feels stable today, rejoice — but don’t assume it will stay so. Always build a second bridge, a parallel path, or a backup skill for the day you may need it.

In many crisis-struck countries, those who adapted early suffered less. Not because they were smarter — but because they resisted change less.

Jobs built on repetition, obedience, or outdated systems are most endangered. The world is moving on from these structures — with or without us.

Ask yourself: If the internet shuts down, will my job remain? If the national currency collapses, will my income hold? If my audience shrinks, will anyone still need what I do?

These questions reveal your job’s resilience. Careers born in fear often stay fearful. But those born in awareness tend to endure.

Even a simple service, smartly presented online, can carve out its market. Social media is no longer just for ads — it is the market.

The future belongs to those who are not job-dependent, but job-creators. They don’t wait for opportunity — they build it.

Fear of unemployment can only be cured by action — not prayer or denial. You must transform from a static worker to an evolving human being.

If you have only one skill — now is the time to learn a second. If you have only one income source — now is the time to build a second. Today’s world rewards diversity, not monopoly.

And if you have no job today — that means you can build one without attachments. This may be the seed of the biggest transformation in your life.

Chapter Eight: Hope Is Our Only Real Asset

How to Stay Motivated Amidst Fear

There have been nights I lay awake, staring at the ceiling, asking myself: Can I really survive this? I had no money, no clear future — just one thing alive inside me: a hope that refused to die.

In times of inflation, we lose most of what we have. But what truly keeps us going is the hope that decides to stay, even when no logic supports it.

Hope is the one asset banks can’t seize, markets can’t devalue, and inflation can’t touch. Because it’s made of spirit — not numbers.

I know a man who bought a house during a currency crash. Everyone called him crazy. He said, “I’m scared — but I refuse to surrender.”

I saw a woman who used her last money to start a soap business. Three months later, she paid off her debt. Because she took hope seriously — not just as a feeling, but as a decision.

To have hope means to say yes inside when the world screams no. To act in the face of doubt — not because you know it’ll work, but because standing still is worse.

From August to October 2024, cosmic energies offer a chance to rebuild financial confidence. Those who transform themselves then will be stronger in years to come.

You may have no money. No job. No partner. But if you can still wake up and say, “I will continue,” you are wealthy.

Hope is like a dim light in a dark room. It doesn’t brighten everything — but it shows enough to take the first step. And that is enough to begin.

In counseling sessions, I often ask, “What still keeps you alive?” People usually say, “I don’t know. I just feel I shouldn’t give up.” That means hope is still working.

Inflation, fear, comparisons — they shake our inner pillars. But what doesn’t collapse is our unkillable urge to live. That, my friend, is hope.

Hope doesn’t just soothe — it sparks action. It pushes you to move, even when the road is hard. And that movement is where miracles begin.

We must learn not only to feel hope — but to practice it. Write it, say it, pass it through your eyes to others. Every hopeful breath makes the world a bit safer.

A simple hope exercise: Every night, list three things you still have. No matter how small. Your mind needs this reminder.

Most people don’t die from poverty — they die from hopelessness. Poverty, with hope, is survivable. Hopelessness, even with riches, brings ruin.

At rock bottom, hope whispers, “There is no bottom unless you declare it.” That sentence alone can lift you again.

If you’re surrounded by hopeless people, don’t hide your hope. Spread it like fire. You may be the only spark that becomes a flame in someone else.

Remember: history’s greatest revolutions were born from despair. So if you feel broken now, you may be on the edge of transformation.

Hope is simple. Sometimes, it’s just one sentence. Sometimes, a soft reminder: “This too shall pass.” In that simplicity lies power — enough to rewrite time.

And finally, if hope is all you have — don’t worry. Hope is powerful enough to create everything else — from nothing.


🟦 Chapter Nine: Every Iranian Is a Mini-Economist

Building Financial Awareness Without a Degree

I’ve never studied economics — but inflation taught me plenty. I had to learn how money evaporates, why income no longer stretches, and how to survive in the cruel world of numbers.

In today’s Iran, you may lack a degree — but you can’t afford to lack financial awareness. If you don’t see, you become a victim — of decisions made without your permission.

When the price of eggs tripled, that was the first clue. When rent surpassed salaries, that was the second siren. But most of us just cursed “expensiveness,” without asking why.

Economic thinking means spotting patterns before disaster strikes. It means realizing that markets have moods, policies have impact, and money grows like plants — in specific conditions.

We often think economics is just dollars and gold. But it’s also about whether you buy soda or save the money. That’s an economic decision too.

Every teen should know the difference between “nominal profit” and “real profit.” You may earn more — but if inflation grew faster, you’re actually poorer.

The “inflation-recession cycle” is brutal. First, prices soar. Then, markets stall. Stores empty, factories close — and then a new inflation wave comes. Understanding this is like reading the weather: know when to bring an umbrella.

The simplest way to understand economics? Pretend you’re the government. If you’re short on cash, where would you get it? Answer: print money. But that printing — what does it do to all of us?

Liquidity means the total money people hold. When it grows, everything inflates like a balloon. But eventually, it pops or deflates. Learning this isn’t luxury or academic — it’s essential.

Understanding why currencies rise, why goods vanish, or why salaries fall behind — keeps you sane. It shows your suffering is not personal, but systemic.

If you don’t know what interest rates are — you should. If you’ve never heard of “inflation expectations” — now’s the time to learn. You live in this storm — like it or not.

Economic thinking is like a muscle. Train it, and it grows. Complain instead, and even simple analysis escapes you. So train — read the papers, compare prices, watch financial news.

Reading economic news is code-breaking. The headline says, “Currency stabilized.” But you must read between the lines. That takes an economic eye — not an ordinary one.

One easy way to train your mind: comparison. What could your current salary buy last year versus now? That simple act raises awareness.

If your child is in school, talk about money. Let them see money doesn’t fall from the sky. That choices have consequences. Economic minds are formed in childhood.

Economics is the science of the future. Your decisions today shape your financial tomorrow. That’s called responsibility — not blaming others for misfortune.

No country grows unless its people understand money. We must seek not just “more income,” but “deeper understanding.” That depth steadies us in storms.

Knowing when to buy, when to wait, when to sell — that’s economic sense. And it’s not reserved for the wealthy. You too can build it.

In the end, economics isn’t just numbers. It’s a lens — one that says: I am not a victim. I am the analyst of my own life. And that view alone can save you — even if your wallet is empty.

Chapter Ten: From Escape to Victory

The Story of Overcoming Crisis and Mapping the Future

There was a time when every honk, every power outage, and every price spike felt like an alarm. Everyone wanted to escape, to find a place of peace.

But life teaches us that escape is not the solution. Because crises, whether far or near, penetrate within us. If we are unprepared, we remain captive wherever we go.

I have learned that overcoming crisis means facing fears, doubts, and despair bravely. It is never easy, but it is the only way to grow and rebuild.

The map of the future is one that looks not at failures, but lessons. At every step taken, not as a fall, but as a point to rise again.

The first step is to set small goals. Measurable goals, not unrealistic dreams. For example, today, save a little or learn a new skill.

These goals become guiding lights. When stuck in darkness, it is these small steps that move us forward. Just a bit more effort, a bit more learning each day.

One success story is of a man who invested all his savings in education. Today, he has paid off debts and owns an independent business.

No one says the path is easy. But if we want, we can improve our condition. We must take responsibility for our lives and act.

Financial planning is like drawing a map where every move is calculated. We must know where we are, where we want to go, and what resources we have.

Exercises on this path are simple but effective. Writing expense lists, setting monthly budgets, and defining clear financial goals are good starts.

Also, do not fear seeking help. Consulting experts or experienced friends can open new perspectives and smooth the path.

An important part is clearing our minds from fear. Fear is the enemy of progress. We must recognize, face it, and turn it into motivation instead of fleeing.

Mental readiness is key. We need to practice stress management and emotional control to make good decisions under pressure.

Changing our view of crisis from threat to opportunity begins victory. When we realize crisis can make us stronger, we channel energy towards solutions.

On this journey, every failure is a lesson, every hardship an experience, every small step forward a victory. This mindset frees us from despair.

We must hold a clear image of the future in our minds. A financial vision drives us to move even when everything seems bleak.

And finally, remember this: no period lasts forever. Just as we entered crisis, we can pass through it. Iran will stand again. If we stand firm.

7 thoughts on “How to Survive the Hell of Inflation? | A Survival, Investment, and Hope Guide in a Collapsing Economy

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