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The 5 Types of Wealth: Why Successful Dentists Still Feel Like Something Is Missing

by PracticeCFO | May 31, 2026

There is a specific kind of conversation that Wes Read, CPA, CFP, and founder of Practice CFO, has had dozens of times with dental practice owner clients.

The numbers are good. Collections are up. The overhead is under control. The retirement account is funded. The loan is paid down. Every financial metric they came in hoping to improve has improved.

And yet.

"I see clients hitting their financial goals, but they're often still feeling like something is missing," says Wes, host of the Dental Boardroom podcast. "When I read The 5 Types of Wealth, I thought — wow, this really captures what I'm experiencing anecdotally in a lot of my clients."

The book is by Sahil Bloom, a former Stanford-educated hedge fund manager who left Wall Street to spend years researching what actually constitutes a wealthy life. His answer disrupts the most basic assumption most high earners carry: that financial success and a wealthy life are the same thing.

They are not.

The Scoreboard Has Been Wrong

Dentists are among the most disciplined goal-achievers in any profession. They spent years mastering a demanding curriculum, passed rigorous board exams, survived the economics of early practice ownership, and built businesses that generate real, substantial income.

They are excellent at the game they were taught to play.

The problem, as Sahil Bloom frames it, is that the game was defined by someone else. The scoreboard — the one that measures income, production, collections, practice value — was handed to most dentists at the beginning of their careers as the definition of success. And most dentists have been playing by those rules ever since.

"The world has staged a set of beliefs that we sort of grow into as we grow up that defines the story of success — defines the scoreboard," says Wes. "What Sahil Bloom did was say, 'I'm going to scrap all that. I'm going to go back to the whiteboard, erase it, and just start asking questions.'"

The result of Bloom's multi-year inquiry — hundreds of books, conversations with people from every walk of life, from Fortune 100 CEOs to factory workers to stay-at-home parents to ski bums — was a framework for measuring wealth that goes well beyond the balance sheet.

He calls it the five types of wealth.

The Five Types

Time Wealth is ownership of your own schedule. It's the ability to spend your hours on what matters to you, rather than what's urgent to everyone else. For dental practice owners, this is often the most depleted of the five. The practice is a voracious consumer of time — patient care, team management, administrative decisions, financial oversight. Most practice owners are time poor in a way that their income would suggest they shouldn't be.

Social Wealth is the quality and depth of your relationships. Not your network — your people. The ones who know you, not just your professional reputation. The ones who would sit in the front row. Research consistently shows that the quality of close relationships is the strongest single predictor of long-term happiness and even physical health. Yet for most high-achieving dentists, relationships get the hours that are left over after everything else.

Mental Wealth is psychological and emotional health — resilience, clarity, freedom from chronic anxiety and burnout. Dental practice ownership is mentally demanding in ways that don't fully show up in clinical training. The practice owner is the bottleneck for most operational decisions, the absorber of team stress, the face of patient complaints, and the bearer of the financial risk. Sustained mental wealth requires intentional investment. Most practice owners treat it as a luxury rather than a priority.

Physical Wealth is health and physical vitality. This one carries particular urgency for dentists. "Disability across dentists is extremely high," says Wes — a consequence of the physical demands of the profession: leaning over patients, arms elevated, neck bent forward, hours of precise manual work. Physical wealth is not just about quality of life. For a practice owner whose income depends on their physical ability to produce, it is a core business asset. Letting it atrophy is not just a personal cost. It is a financial risk.

Financial Wealth is what most dentists think of when they hear the word wealth: income, net worth, savings, practice value, retirement assets. This is the dimension where disciplined, high-collecting practice owners who moderate their personal spending tend to score highest. It is real and it matters. But it is one dimension of five, and optimizing exclusively for it while the other four erode is not what anyone would design deliberately.

Where Most Dentists Actually Score

Wes has worked with dental practice owners across the country for nearly two decades. The pattern he sees is consistent.

"Most successful dentists that I've worked with are really strong on the financial wealth scale, especially those who are really producing well, are highly coachable, and live on a disciplined spending plan," says Wes. "Those doctors tend to be a ten out of ten in their financial wealth."

And then the other four.

"They often tend to be a lot lower on the scale when it comes to time wealth. And where people fall on social wealth, mental wealth, physical wealth tends to be all over the place."

The dentist who is a ten on financial wealth and a three on time wealth has built something real — but not the complete picture of a wealthy life. The gap between what they've built and what they feel shows up in exactly the way Wes describes: hitting the numbers, and still sensing that something is missing.

That gap is not a character flaw. It's a measurement problem. When the only thing you track is financial performance, the other four dimensions of wealth get neglected by default — not by choice, but by the absence of any system to notice the drift.

The Physical Wealth Risk Is Unique to Dentistry

Of the five types, physical wealth deserves particular emphasis for dental practice owners — not because it ranks lowest, but because the consequences of neglecting it are most directly financial as well as personal.

The physical demands of clinical dentistry accumulate. Musculoskeletal issues — in the neck, shoulders, back, and hands — are a known occupational hazard. Disability rates in the profession reflect this. And a dentist who can no longer practice clinically is not just facing a health challenge. They're facing the potential loss of the income engine that funds every other dimension of their life.

"You cannot allow physical wealth to atrophy," says Wes. "These five categories of wealth have a relationship across them, and physical wealth is an asset that you need."

Physical health, for a dental practice owner, is not a lifestyle preference. It is infrastructure.

The Mental Wealth Cost Nobody Talks About

Mental wealth is less visible than physical health and less measurable than financial health, which is exactly why it tends to be underinvested.

The dental practice owner is, by definition, responsible for everything. Clinical outcomes, team performance, patient experience, financial results, marketing effectiveness, operational systems — all of it ultimately lands at their desk. The mental load is not just heavy. It's continuous. There is rarely a full day off, even when the schedule says otherwise.

"As a dental practice owner, you tend to be a bottleneck for most things — clinically, operationally, financially," says Wes. "That takes a strain on the mind. And so mental wealth — this concept of how wealthy you are psychologically and emotionally — is absolutely fundamental to having a good, rewarding life."

Mental wealth is also, in a practical sense, what protects the quality of clinical judgment. A dentist running on chronic stress and cognitive depletion makes different decisions in the chair than a dentist who is rested, clear, and mentally resourced. Patient care is not separate from mental health. They are connected.

The Identity Problem That Waits at the End

There is a particular challenge that lies downstream for practice owners who spend decades optimizing exclusively for financial wealth — and it doesn't arrive until the end of the road.

"The dental industry is full of high earners who hit their numbers at a modest age, and yet sometimes they get there, and they hit financial independence, and they don't know who they are without the practice," says Wes.

He tells the story of his very first client — an allergist who had spent his career deeply invested in his patients and his practice, who sold and retired with Wes's help, and then found himself struggling to reorient his identity into something new. The practice had given him purpose, structure, relationships, and a daily sense of meaning. Without it, the question of who he was became genuinely difficult to answer.

This is not an unusual story. It is a pattern. And the five types of wealth framework is, in part, a prophylactic against it — because a dentist who has invested across all five dimensions throughout their career doesn't arrive at the end with only financial wealth remaining. They arrive with a full life.

What Getting This Right Actually Looks Like

Sahil Bloom's framework isn't designed to make anyone feel guilty for building a financially successful practice. Financial wealth is real, it matters, and it creates options that nothing else can.

The framework is designed to expand the definition of what you're building toward.

A dentist who runs a disciplined practice, actively manages their health, protects deep relationships, invests in their psychological wellbeing, and owns meaningful time in their schedule is not a less successful dentist. They're a more wealthy one — by the definition that actually corresponds to a life well-lived.

"The practice is just a gateway or a mechanism to achieve personal financial health," says Wes. "And personal financial health is itself just a gateway to the life well-lived — rewarded and full of all the fulfillment we're all looking for."

The five types of wealth are the map to that life.

Financial wealth funds it. The other four are what it actually consists of.

Three Questions to Start the Audit

Wes closes the episode with three questions worth sitting with — not answering quickly, but genuinely considering.

One: When was the last time you actually defined what wealth means to you? Not what your profession defines as success. Not what your income level implies. In your own words.

Two: If you took an honest inventory of all five types of wealth today — time, social, mental, physical, financial — which one would score the lowest? And how long has it been running low?

Three: What's the deliberate decision you've been putting off because the default is easier? The visit you keep saying you'll schedule. The commitment to physical health you keep planning to start. The relationship you keep meaning to invest in.

Those three questions, answered honestly, are the beginning of building toward all five.

Listen to Episode 157 of The Dental Boardroom Podcast:https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/157-30-dinners-left-why-money-isnt-wealth/id1518344747?i=1000766303144

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