May. 29 at 7:57 PM
Elon Musk once said that as a teenager after moving to North America, he tested living on about
$1 a day for food.
Before Tesla
$TSLA and SpaceX made him wealthy, he told “StarTalk Radio” this was to prove he could survive failure without losing basic stability.
His logic was simple: if he could live in a small apartment with a computer and about
$30 a month for food, big risks felt more manageable.
He mainly ate cheap bulk foods like hot dogs, oranges, pasta, green peppers, and sauce.
He admitted, “You get tired of hot dogs and oranges.”
Adjusted for inflation,
$1 in the early 1990s is over
$2 today, and likely
$3–
$6 in real grocery terms now.
The point wasn’t the diet, but the mindset.
It created a psychological safety net that he could survive even if ideas failed.
That mindset later shaped Tesla’s crisis survival and SpaceX’s early failures.