
Money is an idea.
It's whatever your own reality is telling you that it is.
If you think money is fun to acquire and you love talking about how to get better at it, then that's the role it plays in your life.
That's entirely up to you to choose.
*Continuing on the previous insight it's again a question of your own context.
If handling money in a productive way is important to you, then financial abundance is a logical and natural goal to achieve.
Everyone has the potential to make a shift in their relationship towards money.
Money does not make you rich.
Being rich, poor or middle-class is a question of mind-set.
A perfect example of this is when somebody acquires a great sum of unexpected money.
*This is closely linked to the lesson above.
The person would only get further in debt and have an even poorer mind-set, I would suffer from having my money jeopardized and our relationship might
suffer in the end even though the initial intention is of a good nature - to help a friend in need.
*The poor, the middle class, the rich, the government, the church, the old, the young, all the companies, everyone has money problems.
It's just a question of which problem you rather have - the problem of no money, or the problem of too much money.
Having more money in contrast to having less money is usually much less urgent and problematic to deal with.
The lack of money is the root of all evil.
Think crimes, riots, insecurity, emotional instability, selling drugs and weapons, poor health care, ignorance due to poor education and much more.
*Money alone does not dictate happiness or unhappiness.
However, unexpectedly not having any money would make me unhappy and unexpectedly getting more money would make me happy.
Therefore, it's pointless to generalize rich people as unhappy or even relatively unhappy compared to their wealth and make this notion stop you from becoming rich.
*Having a lot of money or having very little money does not relate to what kind of values a person has.
It has the power to reveal a person's true nature and intentions once the bets are getting higher.
Accordingly, a truly good-natured person might not show their worth either until the money sums are getting really significant.
The more money you get, the more money you end up giving.
It does not matter how much money you make during your lifetime, every single penny will be passed on to others sooner or later.
Eventually it will all go into other people's pockets, but that's not as important as the lessons you can give in life or lessons you can give on how to handle money.
Money comes to those who know how to handle it.
The better your education about money is, the more it will flood into your life.
It's up to you how financially literate and intelligent you want to become.
*You can generate income both from trading your time and effort for it as well as not trading your time and effort for it.
But, you can do both until you've reached the point where you don't have to work for money.
It's also important to note that people who are financially free don't automatically equate as being either productive or unproductive towards society.
*Sometimes I stumble upon the concept that freedom and security are each others opposites.
There's the freedom of doing what you want as well as the financial security of not being concerned of how to get along and stretch your pennies.
More money does not mean you have to work harder.
It's the 'working for money' model of reality that enforces the notion that in order to get more money, you have to work harder.
One step past this is to start skewing that proportional scale to a greater leverage, but the ultimate step is acknowledging that generating income might not need any form of labor or effort at all.
Money is infinite, not limited.
More money to you does not mean less money to others.
Destroying things of value is what eats up wealth while creating assets is what feeds more wealth.
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