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What Habits do Financially Successful People Have?
Many of my young adult (and adult!) students have the wrong idea about what
it means to become financially mature. When I ask young adults in my seminars
to define how to know whether or not a person has reached financial maturity,
their top three answers are:
When you get your first paying job,
When you have graduated from college, or
When you get married.
Being financially mature has nothing to do with these life events. Instead,
it has everything to do with your mindset regarding the making, keeping, and
spending of money. Your money.
A financially mature person (this means you!) will habitually exhibit five
key behaviors. Together these traits will make you content now, and capable
of real financial independence for the rest of your life. The five habits that
all financially mature individuals possess are:
You save. You save because you understand the power of compound interest. A small
amount of money set aside now and allowed to grow will produce a large bonus down the
road. Take 5% to 10% of each pay and pay yourself first. Put that money in the bank and do
everything possible to live on the rest of your income. Touch this money only in emergency
situations.
You mind your money matters. You make your own money rather than using the "First Local Bank of Mom and Dad"
as your preferred banking institution. Mom and Dad are not your personal ATM. Adult responsibility requires
adult decision making. Part of making your own way in this world is to rely on yourself for self support when
it comes to financial matters.
You do your own work. You are your own best financial advisor. Sure, you take advice from others, but deep down
you know that you have to do your own research about how best to handle your hard-earned cash. Don't take the word
of someone else. Study it for yourself and make decisions based on hard evidence and not speculation or hearsay.
You keep going. Every day you need to make decisions about your money, and some of them will be flat out wrong.
Need to hear that again? You will make mistakes with your money; to not do so is impossible! But you will make the
effort to correct them, and to not repeat them. Making mistakes is how we learn. By trying a short cut to riches and
getting burned, you learn not to make that same error again! Don't avoid making a decision just because you're afraid
of making a bad one. All financial decisions come with some degree of risk. The key is to watch what happens after you
make a decision, and learn. Resilience in the face of mistakes is maturity.
Keep it simple. You understand way down deep the old adage that "less is more." By knowing exactly what you want out of
life, you will choose to spend your cash only on those needs and wants that bring you true pleasure. Don?t continually
waste your money on items that will eventually just end up on the scrap heap. In this case, such simple pleasures mean
more happiness and all obtained for a lot less money!
These steps are the beginning to a lifetime journey on how to efficiently handle your money as it comes to you. By working
for your own cash, you allow yourself the freedom to make necessary mistakes that will teach you the skills required for
becoming financially mature.
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