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Secrets of
the Seriously Wealthy |
Forget the film star
imagery; the "beautiful people" driving their luxury cars and lunching at the visible up-market restaurants,
trying to make themselves feel like winners.
The seriously wealthy
are different; they are disciplined and thrifty, they have developed positive, constructive habits of thought
and action (often through failure). Your fear of failure, embarrassment and ridicule holds you back, whereas
successful people have acquired the habit of courage in the face of their fears (by confronting
them).
The common denominator
of success is that successful people have formed the habit of doing the things that both low achievers and they
themselves don't like to do. The minority achieves success, but not by giving in to their innate likes and
dislikes.
Research has shown that
low achievers move into a comfort zone and resist all efforts to prod them into the direction of their dreams. High
achievers, on the other hand, consciously force themselves out of their zone of uncertainty into a zone where they
feel challenged, even uncomfortable. They know that if they persist they will eventually learn what they need to
know. They understand that "anything worth doing is worth doing poorly at first", that nobody does it perfectly at
first and that it is imperfect practice that makes perfect (not perfect practice).
The majority tend to be
reactive, not proactive. They stumble along, acquiring little in the way of saving, until they arrive at middle age
worrying about money. The average retired person, after working 40 years, can look to an income around $300 per
week. They left financial independence to chance, hoping for the best and shrugging their shoulders with
resignation when it never happened.
This is where a raft of
excuses is needed, but as Mark Twain said "there are a thousand excuses, but no reasons." There is nothing left but
to fall in love with the excuses and believe that they are true.
All economic success
comes from delayed gratification, from being able to deny yourself in the short term so that you can enjoy greater
rewards in the longer term.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Neil_Handley
About the writer
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Neil Handley graduated as a Bachelor of Economics and Accountant. After some 20 years as a stock broker Neil turned
to property development. He then acquired a controlling interest in a property development company listed on the
stock exchange and became CEO. He has been involved in developing residential subdivisions, industrial
subdivisions,shopping centres, office buildings and medium density residential dwellings in Sydney's north shore,
Northern Districts, Parramatta and Liverpool areas and on the Gold Coast, Queensland. One office building was sold
to the AMP for $25ml. Neil's company advises on building wealth via property.
Go to http://www.specialstrategies.com .
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