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Making Money Myths:
You Don't Really Need Financial Wealth And The Pursuit of Wealth Is
Evil.
By Tim Bruxvoort
When life is going well,
it's easy to convince yourself that you have no interest in creating
financial wealth. After all, you have a job that provides enough
money to cover the bills and still have a little left over to put in
savings. What more do you need?
Anyway, maybe you've even
been raised to believe that the pursuit of wealth is selfish. Or, if
you hang around enough people who believe in God, you've likely
heard someone misquote the Bible as saying, "Money is the root of
all evil."
Of course, the bible
doesn't really say that. It says, "The LOVE of money is the root of
all evil." (1 Timothy 6:10). While this article is not intended to
be a review of what religion says about making money, I have put a
couple of quotes in it for those who follow the Bible or some other
religious text. You can find similar quotes in almost any religious
text. What this article is intended to do is to dispel these money
making myths.
Love of money is evil and
it can destroy marriages, ruin families, and make your life
miserable. If your life becomes nothing but a focus on getting
wealthy to the point you are replacing the love of people with the
love of money, then money is evil. People are the ONLY good reason
to have money. Not for what possessions you can buy with it.
Money in itself is just a
thing, another possession. It's what you do with it, or how you
treat it that determines whether it's good or bad. You must learn to
be content with whatever amount of money you now have, but that
doesn't mean you can't or shouldn't work on building wealth.
In general, money will only
make you more of what you already are. It's an amplifier. If you're
a giving and caring person, more money will allow you to amplify
your giving and caring. If you're currently greedy or selfish,
having more money will just make you more greedy and selfish. If you
now frivolously spend every dime you make, even if you somehow
manage to become wealthy you won't keep your wealth.
If you follow the Bible,
Luke 16:10 says it like this: "Whoever can be trusted with very
little can also be trusted with much, and whoever is dishonest with
very little will also be dishonest with much."
That's why it's so
important to get your life in order before you become wealthy. You
need to work on your financial mental programming before you work on
financial gain. Your mind needs to be trained to think like wealthy
people think so you'll act like wealthy people act.
You also need to learn how
to share what you have with those who are in need. "For if you give,
you will get! Your gift will return to you in full and overflowing
measure, pressed down, shaken together to make room for more and
running over. Whatever measure you use to give--large or small--will
be used to measure what is given back to you." (Luke 6:38) That's
the Bible's way of saying that if you use wealth wisely, more wealth
will be provided to you. If money were evil, that wouldn't be the
case would it?
But even before you work on
training your mind for wealth, you have to believe that making large
amounts of money can be a good thing or you won't do what's required
to make it.
If you are one those who
are not convinced that having wealth is a good thing, ask yourself
how you would feel if a family member, maybe a parent or your child,
became severely ill. Would you want to see them get the best medical
care available regardless of the expense? Wouldn't you feel helpless
if you didn't have the money to help them get the best medical
attention?
Or what if you have aging
parents who need financial assistance. So many people these days are
retiring without a sufficient nest egg built up and they are forced
to live in poverty on a meager income from some government
assistance program. Would you want to see your parents live this
way?
Or what if you had a friend
or family member who was in a financial predicament? Wouldn't you
feel good if you could help him or her out? Or have you ever wished
you had the financial resources to help out a total stranger you've
seen on the news whose house burned down and their kids needed
clothes and other essential items?
Or maybe you would like to
provide meals for the needy, or help less fortunate kids, or fund
the development of an addition to your church.
Maybe you've already given
financial assistance to help those people impacted by hurricane
Katrina in the southern United States, but just think about how much
more you could have done if you were wealthy.
And if this tragedy
affected you, or a similar one were to happen to you, how much
easier would it be to cope with it if you had wealth? The people who
are being impacted the hardest don't have the financial resources to
give themselves the options that wealthy people have such as a nice
hotel room or a rental property while they are displaced from their
homes.
The charitable uses for
money are endless. But only those who have money can use it to
benefit others. While the poor can give small amounts to charitable
causes, it's wealthy people who have the greatest impact on the
world.
But don't forget yourself
in this picture. Even if you're happy now, you can't predict what
will happen in the future to change that. Your current source of
income isn't guaranteed. You could get laid off (it's happened to me
several times), or you could be injured and no longer be able to
work.
By taking time to focus on
making money now, you're essentially taking out an insurance policy
in case something happens to you later in life.
Large amounts of money take
time to make. It's difficult to build wealth when you really need
it. So by choosing to pursue financial wealth now, you're insuring
yourself against future unknowns.
While charity or or
insurance against unknowns are choices you can use wealth for,
you'll also have more choices in every area of your life.
Would you be doing the work
you're now doing if you were wealthy? Or would you be doing what
you're passionate about. Incidentally, doing what you love to do is
one of the best ways to become wealthy in the first place.
But besides picking the
career of your choice, you'll be able to provide your children with
the best educational opportunities, take your parents on that
vacation around the world that you always dreamed of, spend more
time with out of town family or friends, seize opportunities that
will advance you and your families' lives, and the list goes on and
on.
So even though you may be
living a comfortable existence now and not feel like you really need
to strive to build financial wealth, wouldn't you really rather live
the life of your dreams instead? Wouldn't you like to know you have
insurance against unknowns? Wouldn't you like to have the financial
resources to help other people? Once you learn the right way to use
it, money is definitely a good thing.
About the Author:
Tim Bruxvoort is the
Internet's Foremost Home-Based Business and Success Coach who helps
people create successful and profitable lives in their own
home-based businesses. You can visit his website at
www.homebasedriches.com
. If you are interested in discovering how you can be successful in
anything you do, go to
www.thinktorich.com for a free report.
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