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Re: First, its cool that you are thinking about th (archive)

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Posted by eleison on October 16, 2001 at 16:29:54:

In Reply to: First, its cool that you are thinking about this.. posted by BillE on October 16, 2001 at 15:17:39:


Thanks for your message. I was talking to several people here where I work - AON/combined insurance (not sure if I should mention the company name here, but what the heck, i.e., people could just check the freaking ip address:).


In any case, the book: "Think and Grow Rich" by Napolean Hill, I found out is a really famous book. Actually, I also found out that the founder, W. Clement Stone, of this compay (it is one of the largest insurance company in the states), used to give it to his new employers. I will definitely have to check it out.



Thank God, not all Marriages are an "economic black hole" :-) I agree with everything you say - especially the part about the "masses." Thanks for your posting. I will definitely maul over your advices. The hardest thing for me, I think, is to avoided getting "fooled" - I guess I will have to work on that.





I always try to get my clients to think long term wealth building thoughts..usually (99% of the time) they dont get it...regardless of what they earn or do for a living. SO, hats off to you.
I have been married for 10 years this year...I am 31. My wife is my best friend and business partner. She and I have created our lived together. I couldnt of done it without her. A good woman will make or brake you. In the book "Think and Grow Rich" Napolean Hill reports that the worlds wealthiest, most successful men were married early and stayed married to the same woman all of their lives. I was lucky (maybe) and ignored all of the folks who told me that I was too young. They were all full shit...it was usually these same sorts that told me the road to wealth was to get an advanced degree, and work for someone..all wrong. Truth is the more time that you spend in school the less probability you have of ever being wealthy. In retrospect getting married when I did allowed me the LUXURY of focusing on the business (es) we have several. I didnt spend my energies looking for (tang). I didnt hang out in bars, etc. We worked on created a shared vision. Would I do anything different...nope. Only take advice from those more successful than you. READ what others have done. Avoid conventional wisdow...it was created by people in charge, the rich and powerful in order to keep the "masses" in line so that they remain in charge. Think about what you 'think' that you want...do you really think those things will make you happy...that new coat from jCrew, the $4 coffee from Starbucks or have you been fooled into thinking that you need those things to be happy...BMW aside, of course!


I agree with all your points (esp #7) except for #2. Getting married early (assuming 20s) means you can't spend as much time on your business(es) as you could if you were single. I think marriage should come when when you stop working for your money.


When I was 27 I earned over $300K..every year it has gone up....last year when I turned 31 I earned $581K. What do I do...sell residential real estate. I know that I am rare..the average Realtor only sells 4 homes per year and earns less than $10k per year. I believe that when you honestly try to be the best, have a true heart for your clients, care about them before you think of yourself...everything else will follow. When I was 20 I read a book called "Think and grow rich" and used the pearls contained within. Read "The Millionare Next Door" and "Rich Dad Poor Dad". You will learn that 1) Most folks with a net worth over 1M own their own businesses....and have a greatest % of their net worth in their businesses. 2) Married early and never divorced 3) DIDNT spend a ton of time in school...dont have MBAs, PHDs and the like 4) Always saved and invested..paid themselves first.5) Invest heavily in real estate. A vast majority of the wealthiest families in the world have earned it via real estate. Remember the TRUE golden rule.....the one with the gold rules. 6) Count their primary home as a liability and NOT and investment.....though many have homes worth a ton..they have owned their homes many years and rarely sell. 7) Drive paid for American cars 8)Dont live the "Robin Leach" Life style.
The very definition of wealth is when your money works for you...and you no longer have to work for money. The goal shouldnt be net worth...it should be cash flow. Thats my goal. Oh Yeah, if you won your own business you can lease whatever you want and write off as much as 100% of your payments and upkeep.....thus, having your cake and eating it too.
Hi All,

I've been trolling this message board for the last few days - usually I'm on the 3 series board (I own a 330i). In any case, a while back someone said that they made a ~200k a year and YET he was disappointed with his income.

I'm 25yold and I was wondering - how the d*mn, do you get into the position of making that much money. Obviously, I am 3series owner and don't have the wisdom that m5 owners have. Maybe you guys can shed some light into this subject (or is everyone here buying their m5 and forgoing nice appartment, food, etc :-) After all according to the "million dollar mind" most well off people avoid buying such expensive cars.






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