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Why Do So Many People Fail to Accumulate
Wealth?
By Anthony Robbins
They never clearly define what "wealth" means to them.
Exactly what would it take for you to feel financially
abundant? Take a few moments to
consider this question. As you do so, be as concrete and
specific as possible. Consider just what it would take to make
you feel financially secure. Vague, catch-all responses like
"Wealth means I could buy anything I want!" are not
acceptable. On the other hand, "Wealth means my home is paid
for, I am debt-free, and all my monthly bills are taken care
of by money generated from my investments," is getting much
closer to the idea here. This latter circumstance is a
tangible, calculable condition - you could spend some time
looking at your expenses, crunching numbers, and seeing
exactly what it would take to get to that point. And it is one
that, given time, you would have a realistic chance of
achieving.
They make "wealth" a moving target.
Of course life is all about change. It is a general human
trait that no matter what we have, we almost always want a bit
more. But our motivation to reach toward a specific goal
quickly fades when we get close to it, and then, for whatever
reason, decide that that goal isn't really enough. This
doesn't mean you should quit striving and accumulating and
growing. Rather, there must be a point at which you can pour
yourself a cold one and say, At last, I have succeeded.
"No one wants to play a game where the minute you shoot the
ball, they move the target," Robbins says. "You have to be
able to win."
They define "wealth" in ways that make it seem impossible to
achieve.
"If you're thinking you need ten million dollars, but you
don't make more than fifty thousand dollars per year, that
sounds pretty impossible," Robbins lectures. "But the truth of
the matter is that you probably don't need ten million dollars
to achieve the lifestyle you want." This is why you must
clearly define your goals and compute exactly what it will
take to make them a reality.
Let's say you started with a goal of acquiring enough
investment income to pay for, say,
your monthly water / utility bill of $35. If your investment
temperament were of the right sort, you could pretty easily
track down a REIT or oil & gas trust that pays a yearly
divided yield of, for example, eight percent. (Of course, the
value of your investment principal is subject to market
fluctuation, and the company could always lower its dividend
rate, but those risks are for another story.)
Given that yield of 8%, the dividends from an investment of
$5,250 (not earth-shattering by any stretch) would pay you the
necessary $35 per month.
At that point, you are no longer working to pay the water
bill; your money is.
People make their goals so big, they don't believe they can
ever achieve it, and they simply don't start.
An extension of #3 above.
They fail to make wealth an absolute "must."
According to Robbins, every person gets what he or she MUST
have. Too often, matters of personal wealth are relegated to
the level of SHOULD. "Write down a paragraph about why you
MUST be wealthy, why you MUST have abundance, and what it will
for do for you and your family," Robbins tells people. "Don't
write why you'd like to be wealthy; write why you HAVE to be
wealthy."
They do not develop a realistic plan.
Pretty self-explanatory, really.
They get a plan, then fail to follow through.
Having a plan isn't enough. Take some action, no matter how
small, toward your goals. And take it immediately.
They listen to experts and give experts the responsibility for
making it work, rather than bearing that responsibility
themselves.
We're back to that old tenet: No one will care about your
money as much as you do. You
can look to others for advice, but you must look to yourself
for understanding, implementation, and responsibility.
They give up when they face major financial challenges.
Bad times and failures are going to happen. You, your
character, your resiliency, and
your abilities are all going to be tested. Sometimes, though,
losses must simply be absorbed.
"The people that succeed are not the ones that never failed,"
says Robbins. "They're the ones that fell down and jumped back
up as fast as humanly possible."
They fail to conduct their lives as if they were a business.
There's a word that gets attached to businesses that post
losses year after year after year: bankrupt.
It's the same with your personal finances. When all is said
and done, when all the bills and groceries and taxes have been
paid, you must eventually bring in more money
than you send out. Crunch the numbers, track your incomes and
expenses, and resign yourself to posting profits in your
personal life. Then work on making those profits grow.
They allow other people's pessimism or optimism to affect the
intelligent implementation of plans.
People who are wealthy are those who have gone against the
grain; i.e., they were buying when others were selling,
selling when others were buying, or creating something that
fulfilled an untapped need or niche. Generally speaking, in
most any situation, if you run with the crowd, you're going to
get trampled. You must think, and act,
independently.
They never get quality coaching.
Find someone who is already where you want to be - or is well
on the way to that point - and glean everything you can from
them. There is no teacher like experience, and there are no
teachers like the experienced.
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