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What Is Enough? The Money Psychology That Keeps Dentists Either Broke or Burned Out

by PracticeCFO | May 30, 2026

At a party on Shelter Island, the author Kurt Vonnegut told his friend Joseph Heller — who wrote Catch-22 — that the hedge fund manager hosting them had made more money in a single day than Catch-22 had earned in its entire history.

Heller's response: "Yes, but I have something he will never have — enough."

That story comes from a short book by Jack Bogle, the founder of Vanguard and the pioneer of index fund investing. The book is simply called Enough. And Bogle's central argument is one that dental practice owners rarely encounter in the context of their professional financial lives: that the definition of enough is both more flexible and more important than almost any other financial question you will ever answer.

For dentists, this question sits at the center of everything. How much do you need from your practice to live well today? How much do you need to set aside for the future? When is reinvesting in the practice the right move — and when is it a way of avoiding the harder question of what you actually want your life to look like?

Most dental practice owners never answer it deliberately. And they pay for that in one of two very specific ways.

The Research on Money and Happiness

Before getting into the practical frameworks, it's worth spending a moment on the underlying research — because it reframes the entire conversation.

Money contributes to happiness. That much is not in dispute. But the relationship between money and happiness is not linear. It follows a curve with a distinct inflection point.

In the early income phase — up to roughly $150,000 per year — additional income produces significant gains in reported happiness. This makes intuitive sense. When money is tight, financial stress pervades every other area of life. Covering a mortgage, managing student loan payments, keeping food on the table, avoiding the anxiety of an unexpected expense — solving those problems delivers real, meaningful quality-of-life improvements.

But above that threshold, the marginal happiness gain from each additional dollar drops sharply. The third bedroom in the house produces less happiness than the house itself. The nicer car produces less than the reliable car. The luxury vacation produces less than the first vacation.

"Money creates happiness — or I should say, it contributes to happiness — at significant marginal gains in the early income phase," says Wes, host of the Dental Boardroom podcast. "But once you sort of get past that point, the unit of happiness you get from every new dollar above that goes way down."

This is not an argument for earning less. It's an argument for being intentional about what the money is actually for — because the research suggests that relationships, not income, are the primary driver of long-term happiness. Your core family circle, your close friends, and a community of some kind contribute far more to life satisfaction than the income level above a comfortable baseline.

The problem is that "enough" rarely stays fixed. Once the basic needs are met, the target shifts. It becomes comparative. What does the colleague in the next city earn? What does their house look like? The millionth dollar doesn't add meaningfully to happiness, but the fear of falling behind can make it feel essential.

"Too commonly," says Wes, "the dollar starts to own us, and enough becomes a moving target — like a game. It's not about enough for what I need. It's enough comparative to what I see other people make. You will literally have billionaires worth hundreds of billions competing against each other to get — who's going to be the first trillionaire? No matter what level of income you're at, you can still fill that need for more."

Recognizing this tendency is the first step in escaping it.

The Two Failure Modes

Inside dental practices, the failure to define "enough" shows up in two very different and equally destructive patterns.

Failure Mode 1: Taking too much out.

When personal spending is high — financed by distributions from the practice — the practice is perpetually undercapitalized. There's never enough cash reserve. Equipment that breaks can't be replaced immediately. A slow month creates genuine fear. The marketing budget gets cut at exactly the moment it should stay stable. Hiring slows. Growth stalls.

"I have plenty of doctors whose personal spending is sucking all the oxygen out of their practice," says Wes.

This pattern often involves lifestyle inflation that tracks income closely — the house gets bigger as the practice grows, the car gets upgraded, the vacations get more expensive. None of that is inherently wrong. But when it means the practice is always running lean on working capital, every business decision gets filtered through personal financial anxiety. And that anxiety produces poor decisions.

Failure Mode 2: Taking too little out.

This one sounds less dangerous. The dentist is disciplined, frugal, an extreme deferrer of gratification. Everything goes back into the practice. Revenue grows. The practice scales. From the outside, it looks like success.

But there's a critical problem with this pattern that only becomes visible years later.

"I have some doctors who are like, 'I'm gonna build an empire. I'm gonna keep reinvesting and reinvesting and revenues keep going up,'" says Wes. "And they get to a $4 million, $5 million practice — and their profit margin is 18%."

A practice doing $4 million at 18% profit produces $720,000 in owner earnings. A practice doing $1.5 million at 45% profit produces $675,000. The smaller practice generates nearly the same owner income with a fraction of the overhead, the staffing complexity, the management burden, and the stress.

More importantly, the empire builder who reinvested everything for 20 years also missed 20 years of compound growth on personal investments. The dollars that went back into the practice instead of into a retirement account didn't just fail to compound — they often produced diminishing returns as the practice matured and the marginal ROI on each new practice dollar shrank.

"They regret that they didn't take chips off the table," says Wes. "Singles and doubles. Take that money out."

The problem also shows up operationally. Megan Shelton, founder of Shelton Solutions and a fractional COO for dental practices, sees the personal underpay pattern manifest directly in clinical performance.

"When you don't know how much you need at home to support your family or your mortgage, you bring that personal financial anxiety into your business," says Megan. "And now you're making business decisions based on personal home finance issues."

A doctor who is quietly stressed about money at home doesn't show up differently just at the kitchen table. They show up differently in the operatory. They accept cases they shouldn't. They avoid conversations they need to have with patients. They make hiring and investment decisions driven by anxiety rather than strategy.

Getting personal finances right isn't separate from building a great practice. It's a prerequisite for it.

Defining Your Floor: The Budget Conversation Nobody Wants to Have

The solution to both failure modes starts with the same exercise — one that most dentists find boring and most successful practice owners eventually describe as transformational.

A budget. For both your personal life and your practice.

Not a spreadsheet that lives on your computer and gets updated once. A real, deliberate accounting of what your life costs — mortgage, loans, insurance, childcare, groceries, utilities, transportation, the things that keep your life functioning — resulting in a single monthly number.

"I operate my business like a business, and I operate my house like a business," says Megan. "I have a budget for both, and I understand the roles of every person showing up and what we need to survive."

That monthly number becomes your personal financial floor — the minimum the practice must distribute to you each month, non-negotiably, before any reinvestment decision gets made. It's not a ceiling on your lifestyle. It's a foundation.

"If Michael, you say $12,000 — we shake on that number," says Wes. "Because then we deposit $6,000 twice a month into your personal account from your business. If your business isn't generating enough to do this, we have a problem. So this is where I start."

Once that floor is defined and funded automatically, two things happen.

First, the practice has a clear obligation it must meet — which makes every revenue and overhead decision more concrete. You're not managing abstract financials anymore. You're managing a system that needs to produce a specific output.

Second, personal financial anxiety drops significantly. When your mortgage and your student loans and your family's basic needs are covered by a defined, automatic distribution, you stop making practice decisions under financial duress. The practice budget decisions can be made on their merits.

The Sleep Insurance Layer

Above the personal floor sits the second definition of "enough" — this one for the practice itself.

How much cash should the practice hold in its business account at all times? The formal term is working capital. The practical term is sleep insurance.

"If there's one thing that causes doctors to lose sleep, it's having a very low cash balance in their business checking account," says Wes.

The target is roughly 75% to 100% of average monthly collections. If a practice collects $150,000 a month, the sleep insurance target is $112,000 to $150,000 sitting in the business account as a permanent reserve.

Until that reserve is built, every surplus dollar goes there. Not to equipment. Not to marketing. Not to a retirement account. The sleep insurance comes first because without it, every business decision is made in a context of scarcity — and scarcity thinking is the enemy of good capital allocation.

Once the reserve is in place, the surplus conversations can begin from a foundation of genuine security.

What Happens When You Get This Right

Defining enough — personally and for the practice — isn't a constraint on ambition. It's the precondition for executing on it clearly.

When a dentist knows their personal floor, funds it automatically, maintains their sleep insurance, and only then allocates surplus capital based on ROI and bottleneck analysis, something shifts. The financial anxiety that was leaking into every conversation with the team, every patient interaction, every vendor negotiation — it stops.

Decisions get made on merit. Equipment gets evaluated on ROI, not excitement. Marketing gets measured, not just hoped for. The retirement account gets funded early, when compounding has decades to work, instead of late, when the window is closing.

"The question is: what do you need to be happy in your life today, and what do you need to save for the future?" says Wes. "Once you know that, then you can start saying — what do I need to get out of my practice to give me that kind of life? And once I know that, I have the roadmap of how that dollar is going to flow."

The billionaire on Shelter Island didn't have enough because he'd never defined it. The goal was always the next dollar, not the life the dollars were supposed to fund.

Most dental practice owners have more than enough to build a genuinely wealthy, fulfilling life. The question is whether they've decided what that looks like — before the practice decides for them.

Listen to Episode 156 of The Dental Boardroom Podcasthttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/156-build-the-practice-or-build-the-life/id1518344747?i=1000765680109

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