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How Elon Musk got himself ready to change the world

elon musk spacex
elon musk spacex

(Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

Elon Musk became a self-made millionaire at the age of 27, when he sold his first company, Zip2.

By age 41, his estimated net worth had surpassed $1 billion, and today, the SpaceX and Tesla CEO has an estimated net worth of $10.5 billion.

Long before any of these feats, he lived off just a dollar a day, he told astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson in an episode of Tyson's StarTalk Radio podcast.

He bought mostly hot dogs and oranges in bulk — and occasionally mixed in pasta and jarred tomato sauce — not because he couldn't afford to spend more, but as a personal challenge to see if he had what it takes to be an entrepreneur.

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"In America it's pretty easy to keep yourself alive," he told Tyson. "So my threshold for existing was pretty low. I figured I could be in some dingy apartment with my computer and be okay, and not starve."

He set aside a $30 food budget for the month. About four weeks later, he passed his own test.

"I was like, 'Oh, okay. If I can live for a dollar a day — at least from a food-cost standpoint — it's pretty easy to earn $30 in a month, so I'll probably be okay,'" he told Tyson.

After completing the "Elon Musk challenge" myself this past January (I increased the amount I could spend to $2 a day to account for inflation), I reached out to Musk for commentary.

"That's great, although I would not encourage anyone to live on $1 a day," he wrote me in an email. "That would not be super fun. Also, I did this back in 1990, so a dollar went a lot further back then. Would be much harder to do that today."

I don't recommend neglecting greens and overloading on carbs for a month, either — but it did give me the confidence that I could probably make it as a bootstrapping entrepreneur and changed my perspective on what truly is possible.

As Tyson said after Musk described completing his experiment: "Not to put words in your mouth, but that's a starting point to launch anywhere you want to go."

"Yeah. Absolutely," Musk replied.

NOW WATCH: We tried the ‘Elon Musk food challenge' and lived off $2 a day for a month



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