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- It's Only
Money
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- Filthy rich!
Money is dirty. Money is the root of all evil. Money
doesn't grow on trees. How many times have you heard
these phrases? How many others have you heard? What
lessons are you carrying around in your own baggage that
you took on sometime in your childhood?
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- The subject of
money has been coming up with my clients a lot over the
past few months. It's not a coincidence - nothing ever
is. I know if my clients are struggling with money
issues, so are many others. I took it as a sign that
money was to be my topic for this month. (It was over
three years ago I began writing and contributing
regularly to In Light Times and the topic of my first
article was also money. We've come full
circle.)
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- Too often, when
we talk about money, we hold onto either outdated beliefs
or to the beliefs of people from our past. These could be
one and the same. Unfortunately, when we get into this
mode of thinking and acting, we can also find ourselves
in a money rut; one we see no way out of. It's also true
there is always another way.
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- It wasn't so many
years ago I'd created a life for myself where money was
scarce. I quit a good paying job to become self-employed.
I had no prospects for clients who would pay me for my
services. My self-worth was directly tied to the amount
of money I had in the bank (zero) and I was at a
personal, all-time emotional low. I was living a life of
lack and truly believed this was my lot. All of this
based on beliefs I'd taken on earlier in my
life.
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- Now, years later,
I am much wiser when it comes to finances. (It didn't
matter that I'd been a CPA. I was still not money-smart.)
I was willing to take a hard look at what was true for ME
and that's what made it possible for me to turn my
financial life around. The path to financial balance,
then freedom, is one everybody can be on. I'll share a
few of the tools and lessons I learned in my "dark times"
so you can put yourself solidly on the path from the
beginning. Bear in mind, this path, like all the others I
write about, is a process and you will not change
overnight what took you a lifetime to create. Have
patience. You can do this.
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- Begin by making
an honest assessment of where you are with your money.
What do you have in the bank? How much do you earn? How
much do you spend? How much do you owe? Seldom is your
financial picture as bad as you think it is. Most often,
we avoid doing this exercise out of fear about what's
there. Like so many of our fears, they turn out to be
unfounded. More than that, though, if you don't know the
truth and are not willing to look at the clear picture,
you will never change your situation.
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- In your spending
assessment, look at what you are spending your money on.
You probably spend on things you could cut back on -
magazines, cable TV, eating out. Where can you change
your habits and begin having a reserve of cash for other
things? I have a colleague who requests his clients cut
their spending by fifty percent. Pretty dramatic AND it
does get the client's attention. If you really want to be
financially secure and independent, you have to be
willing to make some radical shifts. This is just
one.
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- Do you have a
savings account with a balance of more than $100? Do you
pay yourself first before you write the rest of your
bills? Americans are known to be the worst savers in the
world. You don't have to be like everyone else. Make a
commitment to save ten percent of everything you bring
in. No exceptions. Even if you have a check for $100,
take ten dollars of it and put it into savings. It's
amazing how quickly your bank balance will climb. The
goal, eventually, is to save fifty percent of all you
earn.
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- Of course, stop
using credit cards. They are a trap and an easy one to
fall into. An even bigger step is to stop writing checks
and use only cash in your spending. (The exceptions are
when you send a payment through the mail or if you need a
paper trail for business.) Decide how much you are going
to spend on groceries and take just that much to the
store. You will stick to your list! Have a weekly budget
for yourself of how much you are going to spend and make
ONE withdrawal per week for that amount. You will make
different buying decisions and will probably even have
some left over at the end of the week. No cheating: no
returning to the ATM when funds run low.
Plan.
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- There is so much
more to being on the path. Still, you have to start
someplace and this is the start. If you really want
financial independence and you want a healthy
relationship with money, use these four steps as your
beginning. I may not yet be financially independent. I am
well on the path and am able to sleep at night knowing
bills are paid, I won't starve and I have investments
where my money is working for me all the time. Once past
the fears, the rest was easier. Take the step. I know if
I can do it, so can you.
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- ©
Copyright
April, 2000. Laura Hess, MCC 702.252.3657
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