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Robert仔研究俱乐部 ~~~~~ 明日地產王,我來當
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发表于 21-4-2009 11:20 AM
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发表于 21-4-2009 11:39 AM
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原帖由 jasonhanjk 于 21-4-2009 09:52 AM 发表 
If the Bank has misplaced the title deed, the Owner need to lodge a
police report and apply for a new title from the land office (he may
engage a lawyer to do so)and the cost of this application should be born
by the Bank. It roughly takes about 6 months to get the new title.
.
我老板屋子的卖主也是弄不见了 principal S&P with developer (title not out yet), 他的卖主也是立刻去做Police report. 然后大概一个星期,从新draft 一份principal S&P 给卖主和developer 签。过后才成功的把产业卖给我老板。。。。。
那个卖主是dato' 来的,所以可能比较快罗。。。 |
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发表于 21-4-2009 11:57 AM
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发表于 21-4-2009 12:00 PM
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原帖由 纸鹤 于 21-4-2009 01:35 AM 发表 
遗憾的是大部分生意都熬不过头三五年
到底是哪里出了问题?
行情问题? 投资者的投入程度?经营者对行业的认知?
我觉得最重要是不要把打工的心态放进生意里头
=自讨苦吃
我觉得,很多生意人,等生意上了轨道后.. 就全盘交给别人打理...结果,就算公司除了问题,也不知道..
行情不是问题- 最重要是你要比别人优秀。you want to survive in this business, you have to be competitive
投资者的投入程度 --〉很多投资者都怕辛苦,怕累,不肯放多点时间和心血在那盘生意,或者没有时间打理。。 当然是九死一生罗。。
经营者对行业的认知--〉很多经营者,看到别人赚大钱,就毫不犹豫的也要加入那个行业。问题是,他有那方面的知识吗?人家做了几十年,你刚刚起步,你有什么比别人优秀的可以让你投入这个行业。有听过幕前5分钟,幕后十年功吗?
robert理论不是不可以参考,只是那个是鬼佬理论,我们是亚洲国家,有些理论在他国是work 的,在我国是不work 的。要成功地做生意和投资,离不开很多因素,比如,government support +transparency........他国在这方面比我国强,所以他们可以很自由的投入任何行业。我国就。。。。 |
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楼主 |
发表于 21-4-2009 12:07 PM
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楼主 |
发表于 21-4-2009 12:14 PM
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原帖由 pipi88 于 21-4-2009 12:00 PM 发表 
Robert理论不是不可以参考,只是那个是鬼佬理论,我们是亚洲国家,有些理论在他国是work 的,在我国是不work 的。要成功地做生意和投资,离不开很多因素,比如,government support + transparency........他国在这方面比我国强,所以他们可以很自由的投入任何行业。我国就。。。。
富爸爸是华人。Kiyosaki 是日本人。
哪里来的鬼佬?
要致富,学会了富爸爸所教,世界每个角落都能赚到钱。
房地产业一样。
富爸爸只教了六个基本步骤。在马国也用得到。 |
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发表于 21-4-2009 12:24 PM
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原帖由 jasonhanjk 于 21-4-2009 12:14 PM 发表 
富爸爸是华人。Kiyosaki 是日本人。
哪里来的鬼佬?
要致富,学会了富爸爸所教,世界每个角落都能赚到钱。
房地产业一样。
富爸爸只教了六个基本步骤。在马国也用得到。
quoted from internet:
A fourth-generation Japanese American, Kiyosaki was born in India and raised in Hawaii . He is the son of the late educator Ralph H. Kiyosaki (1919-1991). After graduating from Hilo High School, he attended the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy in New York, graduating with the class of 1969 as a deck officer. He later served in the Marine Corps as a helicopter gunship pilot during the Vietnam War, where he was awarded the Air Medal. Kiyosaki left the Marine Corps in 1974 and got a job selling copy machines for the Xerox Corporation. In 1977, Kiyosaki started a company that brought to market the first nylon and Velcro "surfer" wallets. The company was moderately successful at first but eventually went bankrupt. In the early 1980s, Kiyosaki started a business that licensed T-shirts for Heavy metal rock bands.[2] Around 1996–1997 he launched Cashflow Technologies, Inc. which operates and owns the Rich Dad (and Cashflow) brand.
Robert Kiyosaki reveals the secrets of how the wealthiest Americans become even ... how he's invested his monies as his own wealth has grown over the years.
[ 本帖最后由 pipi88 于 21-4-2009 12:27 PM 编辑 ] |
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发表于 21-4-2009 12:36 PM
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其实,在书内提到的富爸爸,可能是虚构的,你们知道吗?
以下资料来自:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rich_Dad,_Poor_Dad
Criticism
Rich Dad Poor Dad has been criticized for having almost no concrete advice and too many anecdotal lessons. There are readers who have reported finishing the book feeling motivated and ready to begin "escaping the rat race," only to realize soon after that they have been given no idea how to proceed. It has also been said that discerning fact from fiction or anecdote is difficult in the book.
Some advice given in the book is thought to be poor or even dangerous by other investors. For example, Kiyosaki advocates focusing on a few "good investments" rather than diversifying. He also downplays the importance of traditional education. John T. Reed, an outspoken critic of Robert Kiyosaki, says, "Rich Dad, Poor Dad contains much wrong advice, much bad advice, some dangerous advice, and virtually no good advice." He also states, "Rich Dad, Poor Dad is one of the dumbest financial advice books I have ever read. It contains many factual errors and numerous extremely unlikely accounts of events that supposedly occurred."[1] Kiyosaki has provided a rebuttal to many of Reed's statements.
Some of the claims Kiyosaki makes in Rich Dad Poor Dad about his accomplishments appear to be exaggerations, fabrications or misdirection. People have speculated on the identity of his "rich dad" and whether this individual even existed, reasoning that such a man, whom Kiyosaki describes as "one of the richest men in the Islands," and his family who carry on his tradition, would have been very well known in as small a state as Hawaii. In the February 2003 issue of SmartMoney magazine, Kiyosaki backed off his claim that his "rich dad" was a real person, instead saying, "Is Harry Potter real? Why don’t you let Rich Dad be a myth, like Harry Potter?" --〉这句让我笑翻天。。
[ 本帖最后由 pipi88 于 21-4-2009 12:42 PM 编辑 ] |
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楼主 |
发表于 21-4-2009 12:52 PM
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有些人还是会认为富爸爸是虚构的。
也会有人相信他的存在。
也有些人会认为“我才懒得管这些”
Rich Dad Poor Dad has been criticized for having almost no concrete advice and too many anecdotal lessons. There are readers who have reported finishing the book feeling motivated and ready to begin "escaping the rat race," only to realize soon after that they have been given no idea how to proceed.
Rich Dad Poor Dad 的书是为了介绍 Cashflow 101 而写。
真正要学投资,就要去玩。
Cashflow inc 第一个产品就是 Cashflow 101.
[ 本帖最后由 jasonhanjk 于 21-4-2009 01:05 PM 编辑 ] |
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发表于 21-4-2009 01:04 PM
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发表于 21-4-2009 01:07 PM
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此“富”系列
书给我最宝贵的是观念--负债资产,
至于怎么样投资房产倒是模糊不清的,
投资房产的步骤可以参考一位马来人的书,还有一些本地作者的书。
写书人都尽量让内容生动化,是真人假人不是很重要,
重要的是可以从内容得到什么。 |
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楼主 |
发表于 21-4-2009 02:22 PM
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原帖由 神魔 于 21-4-2009 01:07 PM 发表 
此“富”系列
书给我最宝贵的是观念--负债资产,
至于怎么样投资房产倒是模糊不清的,
投资房产的步骤可以参考一位马来人的书,还有一些本地作者的书。
参观第一楼。
Azizi Ali 的书不错。 |
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楼主 |
发表于 21-4-2009 02:26 PM
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发表于 21-4-2009 07:51 PM
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原帖由 pipi88 于 21-4-2009 11:39 AM 发表 
我老板屋子的卖主也是弄不见了 principal S&P with developer (title not out yet),他的卖主也是立刻去做Police report. 然后大概一个星期,从新draft 一份principal S&P给卖主和developer 签。过后才成功的把产业卖给我老板
我的情况跟你老板的卖主一样
银行弄不见了 principal S&P with developer (title not out yet)
可是银行方面是不可能报警的
屋主又说不是他的责任, 也不愿意报警
没办法
因为我已开始供款了.. 所以只好认栽
今天就欠了那份 ''letter of acknowledgement''
表示双方都在知道不见了 principal S&P 的情况下进行这项交易
希望没有手尾跟....
天佑啊... |
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发表于 21-4-2009 11:55 PM
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原帖由 jasonhanjk 于 21-4-2009 02:22 PM 发表 
参观第一楼。
Azizi Ali 的书不错。
我几乎看完书局有的产业投资书籍 |
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发表于 22-4-2009 11:05 AM
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发表于 24-4-2009 10:12 PM
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可以问楼主对Puchong的Zen Reisdence有何看法呢? |
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楼主 |
发表于 24-4-2009 09:48 PM
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Investing Is a Plan, Not a Product or Procedure
投资是一个计划,没有计划、就不叫投资。
I am often asked questions like, “I have $10,000 to invest. What do you
recommend I invest in?”
And my standard reply is, “Do you have a plan?”
A few months ago, I was on a radio station in San Francisco. The program was
on investing and was hosted by a very popular local stockbroker. A call came in
from a listener wanting some investment advice. “I am 42 years old, I have a good
job, but I have no money. My mother has a house with a lot of equity in it. Her
home is worth about $800,000 and she owes only $100,000 on it. She said she
would let me borrow some of the equity out so I could begin investing. What do
you think I should invest in? Should it be stocks or real estate?”
Again my reply was, “Do you have a plan?”
“I don’t need a plan,” was the reply. “I just want you to tell me what to invest
in. I want to know if you think the real estate market is better or the stock market.”
“I know that is what you want to know . . . but do you have a plan?” I again
asked as politely as possible.
“I told you I don’t need a plan,” said the caller. “I told you my mother will
give me the money. So I have money. That’s why I don’t need a plan. I’m ready to
invest. I just want to know which market you think is better, the stock market or
the real estate market. I also want to know how much of my mom’s money I
should spend on my own home. Prices are going up so fast here in the Bay Area
that I don’t want to wait any longer.”
Deciding to take another tack, I asked, “If you’re 42 years old and have a good
job, why is that you have no money? And if you lose your mother’s equity money
from her home, can she continue to afford the home with the added debt? And if
you lose your job or the market crashes, can you continue to afford a new house if
you can’t sell it for what you paid for it?”
To an estimated 400,000 listeners came his answer. “That is none of your
business. I thought you were an investor. You don’t need to dig into my private
life to give me tips on investing. And leave my mother out of this. All I want is
investment advice, not personal advice.”
Investment Advice Is Personal Advice
One of the most important lessons I learned from my rich dad was that
“Investing is a plan, not a product or procedure.” He went on to say, “Investing is
a very personal plan.”
During one of my lessons on investing, he asked, “Do you know why there are
so many different types of cars and trucks?”
I thought about the question for a while, finally replying, “I guess because
there are so many different types of people and people have different needs. A
single person may not need a large nine-passenger station wagon but a family with
five kids would need one. And a farmer would rather have a pickup truck than a
two-seater sports car.”
“That’s correct,” said rich dad. “And that is why investment products are often
called ‘investment vehicles.’”
“They’re called ‘vehicles’?” I repeated. “Why investment vehicles?”
“Because that is all they are,” said rich dad. “There are many different
investment products, or vehicles, because there are many different people with
many different needs, just as a family with five children has different needs than a
single person or a farmer.”
“But why the word ‘vehicles’?” I again asked.
“Because all a vehicle does is get you from point A to point B,” said rich dad.
“An investment product or vehicle simply takes you from where you are
financially to where you want to be, sometime in the future, financially.”
“And that is why investing is a plan,” I said nodding my head quietly. I was
beginning to understand.
“Investing is like planning a trip, let’s say from Hawaii to New York.
Obviously, you know that for the first leg of your trip, a bicycle or car will not do.
That means you will need a boat or a plane to get across the ocean,” said rich dad.
“And once I reach land, I can walk, ride a bike, travel by car, train, bus, or fly
to New York,” I added. “All are different vehicles.”
Rich dad nodded his head. “And one is not necessarily better than the other. If
you have a lot of time and really want to see the country, then walking or riding a
bike would be the best. Not only that, you will be much healthier at the end of the
trip. But if you need to be in New York tomorrow, then obviously flying from
Hawaii to New York is your best and only choice if you want tomake it on time.”
“So many people focus on a product, let’s say stocks, and then a procedure,
let’s say trading, but they don’t really have a plan. Is that what you are saying?” I
asked.
Rich dad nodded. “Most people are trying to make money by what they think
is investing. But trading is not investing.”
“What is it, if it is not investing?” I asked.
“It’s trading,” said rich dad. “And trading is a procedure or technique. A
person trading stocks is not much different than a person who buys a house, fixes
it up, and sells it for a higher profit. One trades stocks; the other trades real estate.
It’s still trading. In reality, trading is centuries old. Camels carried exotic wares
across the desert to consumers in Europe. So a retailer is also a trader in a sense.
And trading is a profession. But it is not what I call investing.”
“And to you, investing is a plan, a plan to get you from where you are to
where you want to be,” I said, doing my best to understand rich dad’s distinctions.
Rich dad nodded and said, “I know it’s picky and seems a minor detail. Yet, I
want to do my best to reduce the confusion around this subject of investing. Every
day, I meet people who think they’re investing, but financially they’re going
nowhere. They might as well be pushing a wheelbarrow in a circle.”
It Takes More Than One Vehicle
In the previous chapter, I listed a few of the different types of investment
products and procedures available. More are being created every day because so
many people have so many different needs. When people are not clear on their
own personal financial plans, all these different products and procedures become
overwhelming and confusing.
Rich dad used the wheelbarrow as his vehicle of choice when describing many
investors. “Too many so-called investors get attached to one investment product
and one investment procedure. For example, a person may invest only in stocks or
a person may invest only in real estate. The person becomes attached to the vehicle
and then fails to see all the other investment vehicles and procedures available.
The person becomes an expert at that one wheelbarrow and pushes it in a circle
forever.”
One day when he was laughing about investors and their wheelbarrows, I had
to ask for further clarification. His response was, “Some people become experts at
one type of product and one procedure. That is what I mean by becoming attached
to the wheelbarrow. The wheelbarrow works; it hauls a lot of cash around, but it is
still a wheelbarrow. A true investor does not become attached to the vehicles or
the procedures. A true investor has a plan and has multiple options as to
investment vehicles and procedures. All a true investor wants to do is get from
point A to point B safely and within a desired time frame. That person doesn’t
want to own or push the wheelbarrow.”
Still confused, I asked for greater clarification. “Look,” he said, becoming a
little frustrated, “if I want to go from Hawaii to New York, I have a choice of
many vehicles. I don’t really want to own them. I just want to use them. When I
climb on a 747, I don’t want to fly it. I don’t want to fall in love with it. I just want
to get from where I am to where I am going. When I land at Kennedy Airport, I
want to use the taxi to get from the airport to my hotel. Once I arrive at the hotel,
the porter uses a handcart to move my bags from the curb to the room. I don’t want
to own or push that handcart.”
“So what is the difference?” I asked.
“Many people who think they are investors get attached to the investment
vehicle. They think they have to like stocks or like real estate to use them as
investment vehicles. So they look for investments they like and fail to put together
a plan. These are the investors who wind up traveling in circles, never getting from
financial point A to financial point B.”
“So you don’t necessarily fall in love with the 747 you fly on, just as you
don’t necessarily fall in love with your stocks, bonds, mutual funds, or office
buildings. They are all simply vehicles,” I stated, “vehicles to take you to where
you want to go.”
Rich dad nodded. “I appreciate those vehicles, I trust that people take care of
those vehicles, I just don’t get attached to the vehicles . . . nor do I necessarily
want to own or spend my time driving them.”
“What happens when people get attached to their investment vehicles?” I
asked.
“They think that their investment vehicle is the only vehicle, or it is the best
vehicle. I know people who invest only in stocks as well as people who invest only
in mutual funds or real estate. That is what I mean by getting attached to the
wheelbarrow. There is not anything necessarily wrong with that type of thinking.
It’s just that they often focus on the vehicle rather than their plan. So even though
they may make a lot of money buying, holding, and selling investment products,
that money may not take them to where they want to go.”
“So I need a plan,” I said. “And my plan will then determine the different
types of investment vehicles I will need.”
Rich dad nodded, saying, “In fact, don’t invest until you have a plan. Always
remember that investing is a plan . . . not a product or procedure. That is a very
important lesson.”
Mental Attitude Quiz
Before a person builds a house, he or she usually calls in an architect to draw
up the plans. Could you imagine what could happen if someone just called in
some people and began to build a house without a plan? Well, that is what
happens to many people’s financial houses.
Rich dad guided me in writing out financial plans. It was not necessarily an
easy process, nor did it make sense at first. But after a while, I became very
clear on where I was financially, and where I wanted to go. Once I knew that,
the planning process became easier. In other words, for me, the hardest part
was figuring out what I wanted. So the mental attitude questions are:
Are you willing to invest the time to find out where you are
financially today and where you want to be financially, and are you
willing to spell out how you plan to get there? In addition, always
remember that a plan is not really a plan until it is in writing and you
can show it to someone else.
Yes ____ No ____
1.
Are you willing to meet with at least one professional financial
advisor and find out how his or her services may help you with your
long term investment plans?
Yes ____ No ____
2.
You may want to meet with two or three financial advisors just to find out the
differences in their approach to financial planning.
[ 本帖最后由 jasonhanjk 于 24-4-2009 09:50 PM 编辑 ] |
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楼主 |
发表于 24-4-2009 09:53 PM
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Decide Now What You Want to Be When You Grow Up
In Investor Lesson #1, which was the importance of choice, there were three
financial core value choices offered. They were:
1. To be secure
2. To be comfortable
3. To be rich
These are very important personal choices and should not be taken lightly.
In 1973, when I returned from the Vietnam War, I was faced with these
choices. When rich dad discussed my option of taking a job with the airlines as a
pilot, he said, “A job with the airlines may not be that secure. I suspect that they
will be having a rough time in the next few years. Yet, if you keep your record
clean, you might find job security in that profession…if that is what you really
want.”
He then asked me if I wanted to get my job back with Standard Oil of
California, a job I held for only five months . . . the five months before I went to
flight school for the Marine Corps. “Didn’t you receive a letter saying that
Standard Oil would take you back as an employee once your military duty was
over?”
“They said they would be happy to have me reapply,” I replied. “But they
guaranteed nothing.”
“But wouldn’t that be a good company to work for? Wasn’t the pay pretty
good?” asked rich dad.
“Very good,” I said. “It was an excellent company to work for, but I don’t
want to go back. I want to move on.”
“And what do you want most?” asked rich dad as he pointed to the three
choices. “Do you want security, comfort, or to be rich the most?”
From deep inside me, the answer was a loud “To be rich.” It had not changed
in years, although that desire and core value was pushed down quite a bit in my
family, a family where job and financial security was the highest priority and rich
people were considered evil, uneducated, and greedy. I grew up in a family where
money was not discussed at the table because it was an unclean subject, a subject
not worthy of intellectual discussion. But now that I was 25 years old, I could let
my personal truth out. I knew the priority of core values of security and comfort
were not first on my list. To be rich was core value number one for me.
My rich dad then had me list my core financial priorities. My list went in this
order:
1. To be rich
2. To be comfortable
3. To be secure
Rich dad looked at my list and said, “OK. Step one is to write out a financial
plan to be financially secure.”
“What?” I asked. “I just told you I wanted to be rich. Why should I bother
with a plan to be secure?”
Rich dad laughed. “Just as I thought,” he said. “The world is filled with guys
like you who only want to be rich. The problem is, most guys like you don’t make
it because you don’t understand being secure, or being comfortable financially.
While a few people like you do make it, the reality is, the road to wealth is littered
with wrecked lives . . . wrecked lives of reckless people…people just like you.”
I sat there ready to scream. All my life, I had lived with my poor dad, a man
who valued security above all. Now, I’m finally old enough to be outside of my
poor dad’s values and now my rich dad is saying the same thing. I was ready to
scream. I was ready to get rich, not be secure.
It was three weeks before I could talk to rich dad again. I was very upset.
Everything I had done my best to get away from he put back in my face. Finally I
calmed down and called him for another lesson.
“Are you ready to listen?” rich dad asked when we met again.
I nodded, saying, “I’m ready but not really willing.”
“Step one,” rich dad started. “Call my financial advisor. Say, ‘I want a written
financial plan for lifetime financial security.’”
“OK,” I said.
“Step two,” said rich dad. “After you have a written plan for basic financial
security, call me and we’ll go over it. Lesson is over. Goodbye.”
It was a month before I called him. I had my plan and I showed it to him.
“Good” was all he said. “Are you going to follow it?”
“I don’t think so,” I said. “It’s just too boring and automatic.”
“That is what it is supposed to be,” said rich dad. “It’s supposed to be
mechanical, automatic, and boring. But I can’t make you follow it, although I do
recommend you do.”
I was calming down as I said, “Now what?”
“Now you find your own advisor and you write a plan on how to be
financially comfortable,” said rich dad.
“You mean a long-term financial plan that is little bit more aggressive?” I
asked.
“That is correct,” said rich dad.
“That is more exciting,” I said. “That one I can get into.”
“Good,” said rich dad. “Call me when you have that one ready.”
It was four months before I could meet with rich dad again. This plan was not
that easy…or as easy as I thought it would be. I checked in by phone with rich dad
every so often, but the plan was still taking longer than I wanted. Yet the process
was extremely valuable because I learned a tremendous amount talking to different
financial advisors. I was gaining a better understanding of the concepts rich dad
was trying to teach me. The lesson I learned was that unless I am clear, it is hard
for the advisor to be clear and able to help me.
Finally, I was able to meet with rich dad and show him my plan. “Good” was
all he said for a while. He sat there looking at the plan and then asked, “So what
did you learn about yourself?”
“I learned that it is not that easy to really define what it is I want from my life
because today we have so many choices . . . and so many of them look exciting.”
“Very good,” he said. “And that is why so many people today go from job to
job or from business to business . . . but never really get to where they want to go
financially. So they often spend their most precious asset, their time, and wander
through life without much of a plan. They might be happy doing what they are
doing, but they really do not know what they are missing out on.”
“Exactly,” I agreed. “This time, instead of just being secure, I really had to
think what I wanted to do with my life . . . and surprisingly, I had to explore ideas
that would never have occurred to me before.”
“Like what?” asked rich dad.
“Well, if I really wanted to be comfortable with my life, then I had to think
about what I wanted to have in my life. Things like travel to far away lands, fancy
cars, expensive vacations, nice clothes, big houses, etc. I really had to expand my
thoughts into the future and find out what I wanted for my life.”
“And what did you find out?” asked rich dad.
“I found out that security was so easy because I was planning on being secure
only. I did not know what true comfort meant. So security was easy, defining
comfort was more difficult, and I now cannot wait to define what rich means and
how I plan to achieve great wealth.”
“That’s good,” said rich dad. “Very good.” He then continued on by saying,
“So many people have been conditioned to ‘live below their means’ or ‘save for a
rainy day’ that they never know what could be possible for their lives. So people
splurge, get into debt by taking the annual vacation or buying a nice car, then feel
guilty. They never take the time to figure out what could be financially possible if
only they had a good financial plan . . . and that is a waste.”
“That is exactly what happened,” I said. “By meeting with advisors and
discussing what was possible, I learned a lot. I learned that I was really selling
myself short. In fact, I felt like I have been walking in a house with a low ceiling
for years, trying to scrimp, save, be secure, and live below my means. Now that I
have a plan of what is possible relative to being comfortable, I am now excited
about defining what the word ‘rich’ means.”
“Good,” said rich dad with a smile. “The key to staying young is to decide
what you want to be when you grow up, and then keep growing up. Nothing is
more tragic than to see people who have sold themselves short on what is possible
for their lives. They try to live frugally, scrimping and saving, and they think that
is being financially smart. In reality, it is financially limiting . . . and it shows up
in their faces and in their attitude in life the older they get. Most people spend
their lives mentally caged in financial ignorance. They begin to look like wild
lions trapped in small cages at the zoo. They just pace back and forth wondering
what happened to the life they once knew. One of the most important discoveries
people can make by taking the time to learn how to plan is to find out what is
financially possible for their lives . . . and that is priceless.
“The continual planning process also keeps me young. I am often asked why I
spend my time building more businesses, investing, and making more money. The
reason is I feel good doing it.While I make a lot of money doing what I do, I do it
because making money keeps me young and alive. You wouldn’t ask a great
painter to stop painting once he or she was successful, so why should I stop
building businesses, investing, and making more money? That is what I do, just as
painting is what artists do to keep their spirits young and alive, even though the
body ages.”
“So the reason you asked me to take the time to plan at different levels is for
me to find out what is financially possible for my life?” I asked.
“That’s it,” said rich dad. “That is why you want to plan. The more you find
out what might be possible for this tremendous gift called life, the younger at heart
you remain. People who plan only for security or who say, ‘My income will go
down when I retire’ are planning for a life of less, not a life of more. If our maker
has created a life of unlimited abundance, why should you plan on limiting
yourself to having less?”
“Maybe that is what they were taught to think,” I said.
“And that is tragic,” rich dad replied. “Very tragic.”
As rich dad and I sat there, my mind and heart drifted to my poor dad. I knew
he was hurting and struggling to start his life over again. Many times I had sat
down with him and attempted to show him a few of the things I knew about
money. However, we usually got into an argument. I think there is often that kind
of breakdown in communication when two parties communicate from two
different core values, one of security and the other of being rich. As much as I
loved my dad, the subject of money, wealth, and abundance was not a subject we
could communicate about. Finally, I decided to let him live his life and I would
focus on living mine. If he ever wanted to know about money, I would let him ask,
rather than trying to help when my help had not been requested. He never asked.
Instead of trying to help him financially, I decided to just love him for his
strengths and not get into what I thought were his weaknesses. After all, love and
respect are far more important than money.
Mental Attitude Quiz
In retrospect, my real dad had a plan only for financial security via job
security. The problem was that his plan failed when he ran for public office
against his boss. He failed to update his plan and continued to plan only for
security. Luckily, he did have his financial security needs covered by a
teacher’s pension, Social Security, and Medicare. If not for those safety nets,
he would have been in very bad financial shape. The reality was that he
planned for a world of scarcity, a world of bare minimum survival, and that is
what he got. My rich dad, on the other hand, planned for a world of financial
abundance, and that is what he achieved.
Both lifestyles require planning. Sadly, most people plan for a world of not
enough, although a parallel world of financial plenty is also possible. All it
requires is a plan.
So the mental attitude question is:
Do you have a written financial plan to be:
1. Secure? Yes_____ No_____
2. Comfortable? Yes_____ No_____
3. Rich? Yes_____ No_____
Please remember rich dad’s lesson that all three plans are important. But
security and comfort still come before being rich, even though being rich may
be your first choice. The point is that if you want to be rich, you will need all
three plans. To be comfortable, you need only two plans. And to be secure,
you need only one plan. Remember that only three out of every hundred
Americans are rich. Most fail to have more than one plan. Many don’t have
any kind of written financial plan at all.
[ 本帖最后由 jasonhanjk 于 24-4-2009 09:55 PM 编辑 ] |
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发表于 25-4-2009 12:14 AM
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