It's dividend time!
Real compounding growth begins now.

On Sunday night, I showed Parker her latest dividend reinvestment.
Another quarter. Another automatic purchase. Another step forward.
She glanced at the screen, nodded, and said, “Mmmhmm.”
That was it.
No wide eyes. No big reaction. No, ‘I’M RICH, B–CH!’
And for a split second, I had to check myself. It would have been easy to mistake her calm response for indifference. But that wasn’t it at all.
She wasn’t unimpressed. She was unfazed.
This wasn’t some shocking event that needed celebrating. She didn’t need to jump for joy the way I would have at her age.
She sees what’s happening. And more importantly, she understands it.
The system is doing exactly what it’s supposed to do.
The plan is working.
That muted “Mmmhmm” wasn’t dismissal but familiarity. This isn’t a novelty anymore. At 12, Parker is already treating compounding like the normal, expected outcome.
Back in October, I wrote this line almost as an aside:
“In both my Roth and my daughter Parker’s custodial account, our dividend payouts are now buying an additional share — or more — every three months. In other words, the snowball has started to roll.”
At the time, it felt like an encouraging checkpoint. Now, just a few months later, it feels like everything this journey is about.
Those automatic reinvestments are no longer small increments. They’re growing, building on themselves and supercharging my retirement account.
Dividends buy more shares, which earn more dividends, which buy even more shares. That’s compounding in action, consistently stacking ownership, quarter by quarter.
Since March 27, 2025, when my reinvested dividends first bought a full share of VTSAX, I’ve acquired 4.661 shares solely through reinvestment.
Soon, I’ll be reinvesting two shares every quarter, letting compounding do its work.
Watching Parker’s account is even more striking.
Her very first dividend in December 2022 was $43.91 — a small but exciting moment. Fast forward three years, and her Q4 dividend landed at $157.59, automatically reinvesting into 1.093 shares.
Through her subdued reaction, Parker revealed her patience and perspective. These are the types of money moves that should be second nature.
And that, I think, is the lesson she’s already absorbing: the power of consistent, patient investing.
She’s mastering money, watching a substantial figure grow on its own long before she fully understands what it means.
To date, her dividends across her Roth IRA and custodial account have totaled $1,697 — now surpassing my taxable total of $1,541.46.
Keep it up, Parker!
My lifetime dividends total in my Roth is now $4,366.85.
It’s become one of my most reliable income streams, a vehicle I still can’t believe I ignored for nearly five years.
After consolidating over the past year and committing to a new investing strategy, my Roth is as lean as it’s ever been. VTSAX now supplies the bulk of my dividends, and I’m content with letting that fund carry my momentum forward.
There’s no fanfare. No fireworks.
Only a soft, sweet tone that lingers as dividends reinvest and shares accumulate each quarter.
It says: Stick to the process. Trust the system. Be patient. Let compounding do the work.
Mmmhmm.



"Keep it up, Parker!" Is exactly right. You as well, Darnell!
Imagine how it feels when 30+ years later when your investments are earning more than you are. It is a sweet, but still kinda mind blowing, feeling.