With The Right Attitude, Real Estate Can Make You Rich
submitted: Sep 2nd 2008 |
by: AlexandriaP.Anderson |
Total views: 1 |
Word Count: 602 |
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What is the difference between people who get rich and people who don't? It is a very simple question that many people simply forget to ask. The first time you are truly confronted with this question, you will probably reach for an easy answer, such as, "Being born into a rich family" or "Getting lucky with the lotto" or even "Having a good career that pays a lot of money." And you might indeed be considered lucky if any of those things had happened to you.
The bad news for those lucky people is that being in those circumstances is no guarantee of wealth. In fact, according to Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Dad book series, it isn't about how much money you bring in, but how much money you keep that determines how wealthy you are.
Kiyosaki's father, the so-called "Poor Dad," is a great example of a well educated man blessed with a great career who was nonetheless poor, because he couldn't seem to keep any of the money he was earning.
Fortunately for you, the circumstances of your life, such as the family into which you are born or the salary you receive at your job, are not what will determine whether or not you become rich. Being wealthy depends on internal factors, not external circumstances.
Whether you ever become rich or not is determined, in large part, by nothing more than how you think.
Kiyosaki's "Rich Dad" demonstrated the effects that one's personality and attitude have on the way in which one earns and handles money using a graph called the Cash Flow Quadrant. This graph is split into four quadrants, labeled 'E,' 'S,' 'B,' and 'I'-- "employee," "self-employed," "businessmen," and "investor," respectively. Not only do these four categories show how a person earns his or her money, claims Kiyosaki, but they shed light on the way in which different individuals view the world.
The quadrant into which an individual falls isn't determined simply by the luck of the draw; on the contrary, a person's perspective on money and the world, and their resultant decisions are the key.
"The four people in the four quadrants are four totally different people," Kiyosaki says in his book "Cash Flow Quadrant." "The four people found in the four different quadrants are different mentally as well as emotionally."
What's more, Kiyosaki says, it is that emotional difference that determines to which quadrant a person is drawn. And, he says, you can always tell which quadrant a person is coming from simply by listening to what they say. If you hear a person talking primarily about their benefits and job security, then that person is coming from Kiyosaki's E or employee quadrant. He also goes on to say that it is perfectly all right to live your life in the E quadrant if security is indeed the most important thing to you. But, he adds, the E quadrant is the most difficult quadrant from which to become rich.
This may seem a little bit daunting at first, but in reality you should feel encouraged-- since being rich really isn't the result of blind luck, that means that all you have to do to become rich is change the way in which you think of money.
If you want to be rich, you should invest, and buying properties is a great place to start. Investing in real estate, in fact, was the very path Robert Kiyosaki's "Rich Dad" took to become rich. So, start thinking rich-- quit working for your money, and start letting the money you earn work for you, building your wealth.
About the Author
About the Author: Alexandria P. Anderson is a MN Real Estate agent that helps people to find and purchase Minnesota Town Homes and other properties in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul.
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