Personal Finance Information

Improving Your Financial Position


If you want money you need to learn how to control it. You need to improve your financial education and build your discipline. I am going to reveal to you how you can do both. Let me ask you a very simple question. Do you want money? Of course you do!

Everybody wants money. You might think my next questions are even sillier, but I'll ask them anyway. Would you like to have money all the time? Do you really want money?

You see what I am asking you, by adding the word "really," is do you actually want the money itself or do you want the freedom it can buy you? Ahh. Now you see what I am getting at. What you really want is the freedom that the money represents. What you really want is freedom.

Access to money allows lots of freedom.

What would be the point of being a millionaire or even a billionaire if you were serving a prison sentence for the rest of your life? Your loss of freedom would render your prime use for that money next to useless.

So, how do we get money? There are many ways. We can work for it, receive commissions, receive royalties and we can accrue it from things like interest and investments. We can even steal it, much as I dislike even mentioning such an option.

In reality there are only two basic ways of accumulating money:

1 - we can work for it ourselves by exchanging time and effort,

2 - our existing money can be put to work to replicate itself.

For most people, it is not how much they earn, it is how much they are able to keep. That is the single most important difference between becoming wealthy and staying poor. Spending more than we earn is the recipe to certain financial disaster. Yet most people do just that.

The answer to becoming wealthy is financial education and discipline.

There are many ways to educate yourself better in the ways of handling money. However, by far, the easiest is to gather the knowledge through the wisdom contained in appropriate books. In my opinion, there is no better general resource than George Classon's timeless classic, "The Richest Man in Babylon". I highly recommend it.

I know from experience that those who desperately need the knowledge this excellent book contains will never read it - even if it were placed in front of them every day for a month. That is why they are poor. They think poor and do nothing to change it. What is in their wallet or purse is a direct result of what is in their head, or, more correctly, what is not in their head.

The poorest people are the people who spend the greatest amount of money on trash. They would never think to buy knowledge or invest in their greatest asset - their brain!

There is another very powerful thing that you can do to prepare yourself to handle money wisely. If you want to have money, I suggest a good place to start is with your own discipline. This is another area where poor people fall well short.

If you want to elevate your self esteem and improve your discipline both at the same time, try the following. It will ensure that you have money all the time:

Go to your bank. Withdraw the biggest single denominational note you can (say $100). Put the note in your wallet or purse then, and here comes the most important part, DO NOT SPEND IT!

Nothing will give you greater self esteem and nothing will build financial discipline stronger than doing this.

I have been walking around with three $100 notes in my wallet now for over a month. I refuse to spend them. I go into shops, I look at things I want, I think, "Gee, I'd really like that!" then I turn around and walk out. How much money do you think I have saved by not giving in to impulse buying?

My $300 gives me a great lift. It gives me tremendous self esteem to know that I can afford to buy lots of things if I want. I am in control of that money. It is not controlling me. I am exercising my discipline not to spend it.

I have other money in my wallet. It's just that the $300 is what I call my "quarantine money." The other money is my budget money.

If you want money you need to learn how to control it. You need to improve your financial education and build your discipline. I have just revealed to you how you can do both. Now that you know, will you do anything about it? Hmm.

[If you like this article and would like to use it on your own website or ezine you may do so ONLY if the article is not changed in any way and the final paragraph: "About the author", with all links intact, is included.]

About the author: Gary Simpson is the author of eight books covering a diverse range of subjects such as self esteem, affirmations, self defense, finance and much more. His articles appear all over the web. Gary's email address is budo@iinet.net.au. Click here to go to his Motivation & Self Esteem for Success website where you can receive his "Zenspirational Thoughts" plus an immediate FREE copy of his highly acclaimed, life-changing e-book "The Power of Choice."


MORE RESOURCES:

Interactive Investor

Tesco near to buy out of personal finance partner
Reuters - 4 hours ago
L: Quote, Profile, Research) stake in their personal finance joint venture, sources familiar with the matter said. Britain's second biggest bank put its ...
City relief as Royal Bank close to £1bn deal with Tesco The Herald
RBS on course for £1bn boost with sale of stake in Tesco Telegraph.co.uk
RBS capital in focus amid insurance sale doubts guardian.co.uk
all 26 news articles


RBS exit from Tesco Personal Finance imminent
Financial Times, UK - 2 hours ago
By Jane Croft and Elizabeth Rigby Royal Bank of Scotland could announce the sale of its stake in Tesco Personal Finance to the supermarket giant as early as ...


Reuters

PersonalFinance: Self-help guide for consumers
Reuters - Jul 24, 2008
(Linda Stern is a freelance writer. Any opinions in the column are solely those of Ms. Stern. You can e-mail her at lindastern@aol.com. ...
Mutual Funds & Personal Finance Investor's Business Daily (subscription)
The week's top Personal Finance stories MarketWatch
Despite IndyMac's fall, banks worthy of trust Cherry Hill Courier Post
Forbes
all 258 news articles


More Personal Finance Daily stories
MarketWatch - Jul 24, 2008
Minimum Wage. It's hard to say anything positive about that. I'm a lose for words. Sure enough: leave it to MarketWatch to use any data for socialist ...


Ben Popken On "To The Point" (And A Debate Over Personal Finance ...
The Consumerist, NY - 1 hour ago
Here's the clip of the To The Point radio program I was on yesterday. There was a bunch of people on, you can hear me at 23:30 talking about the Grocery ...


Mutual Funds & Personal Finance
Investor's Business Daily (subscription) - Jul 24, 2008
BY JESSE EMSPAK If your fund account balance hasn't climbed as much as you'd hoped in 10 years, you're probably not alone. Investors haven't had a lot to ...


Telegraph.co.uk

Time to collect profits from International Personal Finance
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Jul 23, 2008
There is a lesson to be taken from the sterling results produced by the emerging markets doorstep lender International Personal Finance: leave sub-prime to ...
Crunch fails to shake demand for IPF loans Financial Times
International Personal Finance opens the door to Ukraine growth Telegraph.co.uk
all 3 news articles


Have a Personal Finance Question?
Chicago Sun-Times, United States - Jul 23, 2008
By Terry Savage on July 23, 2008 9:31 AM | Permalink | Comments (31) | TrackBacks (0) If you'd like me to answer your personal finance question, please send ...


Thursday tips round-up: International Personal Finance, BT, Spectris
ShareCast, UK - Jul 23, 2008
LONDON (SHARECAST) - International Personal Finance's results were flattered by foreign exchange benefits in the half but the lender is growing and is ...
Thursday Papers: tips and comment Reuters
all 4 news articles


More Personal Finance Daily stories
MarketWatch - Jul 22, 2008
Ahhh! The whole problem is that a "free market" would not support the risks that banks took on the guarantee that the Fed/Treasurey/Fannie/Freddie provided ...

Personal-Finance - Google News

home | site map
© 2006