Exactly. When your living expenses are already covered, dividends stop being “income” and start becoming “fuel.” Reinvesting them means you are buying more income-producing assets without touching your salary, and over time those new shares begin to produce their own dividends.Yes ohh, If your everyday expenses are covered elsewhere, reinvesting dividends is like letting your money work quietly in the background. Each payout buys more shares, which then earn their own dividends—so your portfolio grows faster without you having to add extra cash. It’s compounding in action, quietly stacking gains over time.
That is how compounding becomes powerful, not by how much you add, but by how consistently you allow what you already have to grow on its own.