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How to Make One Hell of a Profit and Still Get to Heaven - The Demartini Show
Episode 1261st April 2022 • The Demartini Show • Dr John Demartini
00:00:00 00:33:19

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Do you dream of having an extraordinary and fortunate life? Dr Demartini shares some top strategies from his book 'How to Make One Hell of a Profit and Still Get to Heaven', to help you take the next step in making your financial dreams come true while shedding light on an entirely new way of looking at, understanding, and appreciating the true nature of earthly profits and heavenly wealth.

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Transcripts

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If you pay yourself last,

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you'll always have unexpected bills and you get further behind.

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If you pay yourself first, you'll end up having order, reorganizing

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the system, instead of disorder taking over.

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Many years ago, over 20 years ago,

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I was living in New York and I was walking down the street,

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Madison Avenue and I went to an Italian restaurant and all of a sudden that

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title,

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How to Make One Hell of a Profit and Still get to Heaven popped in my head and I

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quickly wrote it on an napkin and I turned it into a book.

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And the main objective of that title that

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popped in my head was that so many people had difficulty holding

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onto money and receiving it and feeling worthy of it

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and allowing themselves to build financial independence.

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Not everybody feels comfortable doing that.

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Some people immediately do and think, oh, of course, why would we not?

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But then there's some people that have difficulty with that.

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So I'd like to address that and

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share with you some ideas that can be helpful to you in transcending that

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concern if you do,

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about somehow the reception and accumulation of

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financial independence. You know, if we work our whole lives for money,

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we're like a slave to it. But if we have it work for us, we're like it's master.

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I'd much rather be a master of the money and not have it run my life than allow

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it to run my life and live day to day and survive.

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I'm not interested in survival. I'm interested in thrival.

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So you might want to take some notes on this particular topic. First,

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I wanna talk about, there's an idea in some quote,

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"religious" or "spiritual" circles that somehow spiritual and material do not

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somehow coincide.

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But a very ancient proverb says spirit without matter is expressionless,

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matter without spirit is motionless.

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And the Great Book of Wealth by Hubert Howe Bancroft, which is a classic,

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he described that that those are the two driving forces of all human behavior,

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an inspired spiritual mission, and also a material objective.

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And you know, a heaven force and earth force sometimes called.

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But they're both needed to be integrated.

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And so I'd like to show how they're really the same and there's no separation

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between them.

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So people can have a mindset that is more receptive to allowing themselves to

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have a financial life and abundance in their life. So,

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each of us have what is called personas.

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And we also have a true being. So maybe you wanna write this down,

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but we've all had moments when we've exaggerated ourselves and puffed ourselves

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up with pride and got a bit, you know,

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inflated and arrogant and self righteous and elevated in

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who we are and puff ourself up. When we do,

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we tend to project our values onto other people and expect others to live in our

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values. We've all been in a relationship somewhere,

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probably that we said, you know, you should, you ought to, you supposed to,

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you got to, you have to, you must, you need to,

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you projected expectations of your values onto other people and expected them to

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live according to what you expect.

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When you're resentful to people and put them down and see them beneath you,

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you tend to get puffed up and start to act that way and project.

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And that wakes up a narcissistic side where you believe that you're more

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important than the person that you're talking to.

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And you get a little arrogant and talk down to 'em. And when you do,

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you start to think, well,

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I deserve and they deserve to give up what they want for what I

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want. And this is a narcissistic side of the equation.

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And you try to get something for nothing,

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and you try to sacrifice others for you,

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and you want them to live in your values. And this is nonsustainable,

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eventually you get pride before the fall and you eventually get humbled and

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brought back down because people, if you do that to customers,

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you don't make any income, if you do it to employees,

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they don't wanna work for you.

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And you have to pay more and more and more to put up with that type of behavior.

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So nature then eventually humbles that back down into more of an equitable

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position. If you minimize yourself and deflate yourself,

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and you have a self-wrongeous persona, if that's a word,

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low self-esteem or an inferiority complex or minimization of self,

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and you go in the other direction and you think I need to sacrifice others,

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and I put 'em on pedestals,

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we've all been in a situation where we put people on pedestals and then didn't

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want to lose them in our life and so we end up sacrificing what was important to

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us, to be with them.

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And that minimization kind of creates an altruistic where we now are willing to

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give something for nothing. Think about it very carefully.

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When you have been in a situation where you're around somebody, that's very,

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very highly admired,

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you'll give up some of the things that are normally important to you to,

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to fit in with them. And at the other time, if you resent them,

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you try to get them to fit into you. So here now, when you minimize yourself,

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you'll tend to sacrifice for others and you'll tend to give something for

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nothing, kind of an altruistic side. So I've said for years,

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that altruism is compensation for shame and guilt of the past and self

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minimization and a hidden agenda of the future, which is some sort of a reward.

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And narcissism is compensation for pride and self-righteous of the past,

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and again, a hidden agenda of the future,

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which ends up being philanthropy to give back. So nature is automatically,

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if it's trying to get something for nothing or give something for nothing is

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non-sustainable. But if you actually have equity,

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that means that you and they are equal. You're not superior, not inferior,

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just equal to them. And you respect them. And you respect you,

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you create what is called a sustainable fair exchange.

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And a fair, equitable exchange in a relationship means you do a service,

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they pay a reward and it's comparable to the service,

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and it's not more or less than what that service deserves in both your and their

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eyes.

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And now you have a fair exchange and you both want to go back to the drawing

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table and continue your business. And all transactions,

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whether it be business related or social related, friendships,

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or whether it be loved ones, family or spouses,

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everybody's keeping an inventory,

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there's a thing called equity theory that actually

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describes this innate knowing for a fair exchange.

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We have an intuition that's trying to get fair exchange and trying to allow us,

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because if we puff ourselves up or beat ourselves up, minimize ourselves,

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we're not being ourselves. And we wanna be our true to ourselves.

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We wanna be loved for who we are,

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and we're not being who we are when we exaggerate or minimize ourselves.

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And we're not allowing them to be who they are if they're exaggerating,

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minimizing themselves.

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So nobody wants to do business when they don't be able to be themselves.

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So that's why narcissistic or altruistic polarities eventually create

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a non-sustainable dynamic.

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And what's interesting is you've even heard cliches like;

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it's more blessed to give them to receive, well,

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if it's more blessed to give than receive the person giving is blessed,

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but the person receiving doesn't get to give and so they're cursed.

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Neither one of those are true. What's true is the fair exchange,

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sustainable fair exchange, where you're doing something, et cetera.

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And the reason why people feel good about giving is because they feel shame and

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guilt, and it feels less shame and guilt when they're giving

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than when they're taking. And when they're narcissistic,

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it's the other way around,

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they feel good if all of a sudden people give back because they feel that they

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deserve it. So these are two polarities, the self righteous, the self wrongeous,

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the build, the destroy, the inflated, the deflated itself,

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that creates a non-sustainable fair exchange. And that's not equanimity.

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That's not equity. That's not authenticity.

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When we're authentic and we're actually in a state where we have fair exchange

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and true love, not looking down on people with resentment,

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not looking up at people with infatuation,

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but looking across from people with caring. This one's careless,

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this one's careful, walking on eggshells, this is caring,

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which keeps the rings on the finger.

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In that caring state we have the most sustainable fair exchange,

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and that is our authentic, loving, inspired state.

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That's our spiritual state.

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That's why the mastery of fair exchange,

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economically have the same roots. In fact, morality,

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comes from axiology,

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the study of values and worth and morality actually impacts spiritual

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constructs as well as economic constructs.

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So there is absolutely no separation in the way I teach it.

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There's no separation between mastering wealth building,

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which means wellbeing, whole being. In fact,

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you'll see that the wellbeing of an individual and the overall, you know,

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consciousness of the individual is enhanced by socioeconomic development.

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If you look at the countries that are socioeconomically developed,

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there's more order and organization there, more opportunities there,

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and if there's lower socioeconomics,

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then there's less opportunities and more crime and more prejudice and things of

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this nature typically. So you end up having a really,

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a reward for mastering your life. And when it comes to business,

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if you go and do something that fulfills people's values,

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I was speaking at a church, oh, 20 years ago maybe,

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and there was a minister there and we had a chat before I went up and spoke

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and we started talking and I said you know, is your congregation growing?

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He says, been kind of flat for a number years. I said, well,

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it means you're not inspired.

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You're not really filled with that spirit as you will. You're not inspired.

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And he goes, well, that's true. And then I said, you gotta have a cause,

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something that's inspiring, something that's meaningful, something engaging,

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you know, something you wanna build that inspires people to do something.

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And we decided right there before I went up there to do that,

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to come up with something that would be meaningful,

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cuz he wanted to go and upgrade the church itself and so we announced it and we

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actually raised funds that day and got people inspired by it.

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Because if you give something that's a value to people,

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people wanna participate in economic exchange.

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And I told people at that church that time, I said,

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if you're poor it's because you're not caring about humanity.

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And they responded like, what? And I said,

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if you really care about human beings,

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you're gonna go outta your way to find out what the needs are of those human

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beings and find out who's got the solutions to those

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deliver it either directly with your own skills or indirectly by brokering and

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bringing people together and taking a portion cuz you deserve to be able to help

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them and get a portion of that. In the process of doing that.

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You realize that if you really care about human beings to fill the values of

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other human beings, and you fill it effectively,

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more efficiently than effectively than somebody else and you deliver what

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they're needing is, you're contributing and you're rewarded. You know,

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I ask people in many, many countries around the world,

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how many of you ever use Microsoft windows?

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And every hand in every country I've been in every hand goes up,

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somewhere in their life they've used Microsoft windows. And I said,

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maybe that's why he is a billionaire.

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Maybe he's created a product that has served vast numbers of people.

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And if we actually go out of our way and do something that serves vast numbers

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of people, we get vast opportunities to receive economics.

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Economics is a measurement of fair exchange. The way I look at it,

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it's basically a measurement of,

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are you doing something that's meaningful and it serves people's values and it's

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in a fair thing. If they do,

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they want to continue to do business with you if they don't, why would they,

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why would somebody want to continue to do business with you

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if you try to get something for nothing, or if they feel uncomfortable,

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cuz you're trying to give something for nothing?

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People may try to take advantage of a free system, but then they feel guilty.

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And anytime they feel, you know, a cocky or guilty or whatever,

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they automatically don't, they have a feeling on uncomfortableness.

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We want fair exchange, study equity theory, go look it up,

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and you'll see that in business transactions,

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everybody has an intuition to do that.

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And when they're living by their highest values,

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they're most objective and that fair exchange is most refined.

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And if they're living by lower values, things that are not inspiring to them,

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they're in the amygdala and they tend to subjectively bias things and skew

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things and they throw things outta balance.

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And then they don't know what fair exchange is.

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And they start getting self righteous or minimizing themselves.

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The more we're living by our highest values, the more authentic we are,

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and the more we end up having more fair exchange.

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Whenever we're trying to live by lower priorities,

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we end up skewing our perceptions and we end up undermining our fair exchange in

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the process. Now,

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I found out also that many people are waiting to see if there's

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extra money at the end of the month, before they save and invest money.

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And I learned literally 39, 40 years ago that that's not going to work.

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There's a thing called entropy in life.

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Entropy is the tendency to go from order to disorder,

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and in your financial situation it follows that law.

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And if you don't bring order to your finances, disorder takes it over.

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If you don't invest money,

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as you get it into an asset that goes up in value,

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therefore working for you, passively,

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you're going to actively have to work all the time.

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And you're going to have unexpected bills show up to erode the possibility

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of saving.

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And so that's why the old proverb that the wealthy always paid themselves first

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or the poorer always pay themselves last. If you pay yourself last,

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you'll always have unexpected bills and you get further behind.

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If you pay yourself first,

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you'll end up having order reorganizing the system instead of

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disorder taking over. You know, it's like the same principle in time management.

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If you don't fill your day with high priority actions that inspire you,

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it fills up with low priority distractions that don't.

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If you don't put your money, whenever you get it,

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into something that goes up in value,

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it will automatically be attracting situations that make it go down in value.

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That's why people that devalue themselves typically buy things that go down in

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value and people that value themselves, buy things that go up in value.

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And if you don't know what an asset and a liability or what a depreciation thing

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is, that's worth knowing because every time you take money and you put it into

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something that goes up in value,

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it's now working for you and you're now it's master.

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And every time you buy something that goes down in value, now you're it slave.

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And what people do is they,

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when they're not engaged and inspired and fulfilled in what they're doing in

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their life, they tend to go into their amygdala,

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the amygdala wants immediate gratification instead of long term vision,

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then they go and buy other people's brands that are overpriced to make 'em feel

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temporarily better. They go and buy that, they've separated pain from pleasure,

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cuz they now used a credit card and they got the immediate gratification,

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and then 30 days later they get pain.

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And the banks love to separate that pleasure and pain because the more you

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separate pleasure and pain,

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the more addicted you are to getting the quick pleasure and the more frustrated

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you are by the pain 30 days later.

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But the wise individual doesn't go and buy immediate gratification.

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They go build a brand around their own life by serving people.

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And then when they do,

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then people wanna buy their brand and then they put their monies into something

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that's an asset that grows up in value.

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If you buy stock and buy companies and you help productivity in this society

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and you help companies go and reach more people with more services,

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you get rewarded by capital gains and you get also dividends

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and you get, you know, a passive growth of income.

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But if you keep buying something like a pair of shoes or something,

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unless it's absolutely an essential and it helps you grow your business,

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it immediately goes down in value.

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Every time you buy something that goes down in value, well,

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you're working against you. You're gonna be working as a slave. And if you do,

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you're gonna pay the most taxes. And if you go and invest,

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you're gonna pay less taxes.

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The world and the governments actually reward people to save so the

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government doesn't have to rescue people later on.

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So in the process of doing it,

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if you save and invest your money and start having your money work for you,

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you become its master.

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And people who feel self depreciated and they feel guilty and shamed,

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have difficulty investing and saving. They don't feel worthy.

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And so as a result of that,

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they go out and buy stuff that temporarily gives 'em a brand and they go, oh,

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I'm showing off a brand to other people that don't really care to make 'em

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temporary feel good and a day later they forgot about it,

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but they've now got the bill that comes in and they go and get themselves

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further in debt. And I think that that's basically a slavery.

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We are slave to money if we buy things that go down in value,

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we're a master of money if we buy things that go up in value.

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I didn't understand that until I turned about 27 years old and I realized that,

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wow, when I asked certain questions to my life and started asking,

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how am I spending my money?

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If you've never stopped and really looked at where your money's going,

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and really look, is this really priority? Is this really important?

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Is this really the thing that's going to get me ahead?

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Or is this gonna keep me entrapped? And you'll be surprised.

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A lot of the stuff that you buy are immediate gratifying depreciables,

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consumables that go down in value and half of your life is paying off debt.

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And that's not, you don't have to live that way, it's a choice.

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And what's interesting, the more you do, the longer that continues,

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the more likely you're losing the time of compound interest,

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the more it's working against you.

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But if you start buying assets at a young age and start letting it compound,

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compound interest works for you.

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And it's much wiser to have compound interest work for you than compound

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interest work against you. Credit card debt is insane.

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I haven't had a credit card in 39 years. I don't waste my time on those things,

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because what they do is you're paying ridiculous.

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Unless you pay it off on time at the beginning of the month, then it's fine.

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You're leveraging and using it and organizing it.

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But don't let it accumulate interest and do it.

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The average person stores about 10% of their gross income per year on a credit

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card debt, at 20% or month or more. And that's insane.

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So the wise thing to do is to actually take a portion of whatever you earn and

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put it into something that goes up in value. And when you manage money wisely,

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you receive more money to manage and value yourself.

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If you're feeling guilty or shame about something, find out whatever you did,

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find out how it served the people, because you are unconscious of the upsides,

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that's why you're beating yourself up. And if you beat yourself up,

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you'll tend to go into an altruistic giving away and then you'll try to feel

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better about yourself by buying consumables and you'll trap yourself.

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Write down whatever you've done, that you think you're ashamed or guilt about,

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find out how it served you and other people and release yourself of those

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illusions. In my Breakthrough Experience program, the program I do,

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I have people every week and they come in with those kind of things and I show

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'em exactly what to do to dissolve it. And it's like,

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a big relief off their back.

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And then they realize 'I'm worthy.' And when they feel worthy,

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they start to actually start to take a portion of whatever they earn and they

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start to have it work for them, and they become its master instead of its slave.

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And then they start buying things that go up in value and then they go, my God,

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this is not that difficult, this is very simple.

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And they start to invest in things that help inspire and help produce

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productivity in society, instead of debts. You know,

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I think our government sometimes is not realizing that getting further in debt

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and putting some sort of a socialization process on that and just expecting

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somebody to get something for nothing, not gonna work,

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eventually you pay a price.

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But actually being productive and doing something that serves people in a

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sustainable fair exchange with a true self worth that you're inspired by that

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you can't wait to get up in the morning and be of service to do,

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that is amazing fulfillment levels in life.

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And I'm a firm believer that you deserve to be able to do what you love every

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day.

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If you're not prioritizing your day and doing what's most important and learning

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how to delegate and give job opportunities to other people and extract surplus

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labor value outta them and let them help get jobs and you get extra

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money for taking the risk and rewards of that, and then serving more people,

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you're passing up a gold mine. There's an abundance of wealth out there.

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It's just simply taking the time to master your life,

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master your decisions and priorities,

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and give yourself permission to go out and participate in service.

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You know, when I stop and think about it,

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the most important moments of your life are when you're actually doing some sort

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of contribution, making a difference and having a fair exchange.

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It's a very fulfilling life.

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But trying to get something for nothing doesn't work and try to give something

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for nothing. Even if you're doing charities,

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it's wise not to rob people of dignity, accountability, responsibility,

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and productivity.

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It's wise to make sure you do something that actually helps them evolve and

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develop and become independent, but not dependent. Cuz that's not it,

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there's a science of giving money away in charities. And if you don't do it,

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I write for a magazine called Jet Set magazine,

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I wrote a big thing on philanthropy in there that was well received because a

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lot of people just assume giving is somehow good,

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but giving to some organization,

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you wanna make sure that what you're giving to is actually doing what you hope

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it's going to do and trace it down and find out where every dollar goes and find

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out what's actually occurring.

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I found some charities are actually spending most of the money that they're

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receiving in telemarketing costs in order to get the money.

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And they're not actually doing some of the things that's going on.

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And when they do, then they're rescuing people,

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instead of actually helping build independence and self-sufficiency to build

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culture.

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So you wanna make sure that you not only are taking in money and investing

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money,

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but also when you're contributing it philanthropically that you do it wisely,

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and care about people, cuz robbing them of dignity, accountability, responsibly,

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and productivity is not caring.

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But giving them an inspiration and an incentive and catalyzing a growth

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possibility where they can go out and do something to raise more opportunities

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for other people and more jobs, more fulfillment,

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more services and help the economy, everyone wins that way.

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So you learning that and you exemplifying that's the greatest teacher for other

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people. You want to train your children on that, go and do it.

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Don't say something and then not do it, go do it.

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And you don't have to say anything and they follow it.

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If you go out and do something extraordinary with your

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go become financially, you know,

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profoundly contributive and end up having your money work for you,

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then by God you show them what's possible in the world.

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And there's nothing stopping it.

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I was a street kid when I was a young boy and I know what it's like to be,

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you know,

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going and get salting crackers and ketchup for dinner or find food on a plate.

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I know what it's like to be on the streets.

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I also know what it's like to live in luxury on a yacht.

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And the reason being is because I learned that if I serve ever greater numbers

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of people, I always say there's six things I found of very wealthy people;

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care enough about humanity to go out and serve ever greater numbers of people,

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and build a business that does that in an efficient and effective way,

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manage the business effectively and efficiently so there's profits.

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So that way you can give a higher quality employee income and also savings to

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the customer and profits to yourself.

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And then you go out and save a ever progressive portion of those profits,

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and make sure you keep investing it into back into the company and also back

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into cash reserves and basically start to seed investments,

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and then invest in ever greater degrees of leverage where you're putting money

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into something of other companies that help,

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companies that you know will be of real value to people,

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not gambling type of things,

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but actually non-zero sum game productive asset accumulation that

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helps people in business. And then also accumulating the finances,

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purpose of it is not for luxury, not for debauchery,

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but for actually philanthropic contribution and directing

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exemplifying what's possible for a human being and inspiring other people to

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wanna follow in the steps. And then going and do something,

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some cause that inspires you, some philanthropic cause. Cause if not,

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you'll pay most of the taxes to the government and they may socially rescue

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people instead of actually going out and contributing to something that's truly

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a value to the individuals and makes them accountable and grow and become

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independent.

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So you wanna make sure that you actually have a cause greater than your yourself

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to get beyond yourself. When you do, you'll end up having a drive. You know,

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every time you add another dollar to your wealth,

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the value of the additional dollars go down.

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If you don't have a cause going up to counterbalance it,

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you'll typically plateau. And the plateau is where you'll stop and stagnate.

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You want to have something that's inspiring to you

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a more on the bucket list of who you could be of service to.

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It's very inspiring.

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I always say money with meaning and purpose leads to philanthropy,

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but money without meaning and purpose tends to lead to debauchery.

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And then when you see people that are more debaucherous and blowing money and

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just squandering money, you end up people that don't have meaning in life.

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And I think that that's,

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it's given some people the impression that wealth is somehow evil or something.

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I don't see that at all. I've seen,

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I know some very wealthy billionaires that are very, very empowered and very,

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very philanthropic and constantly doing what they can to try to,

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what is the most significant thing they could do to make the biggest difference

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in the world, and they're thinking about that daily.

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And because they've served vast numbers of people effectively and efficiently,

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they drew in the wealth into their life and then now serving people in vast

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numbers. There are people out there that are doing that full time and it's quite

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inspiring to watch what's capable.

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But what we do is we have these misinterpretations,

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usually people that don't know how to do that, and aren't living that way,

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typically want to judge people who are,

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and they've misinterpreted it and then you get that and that's you're now

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mentorship and you get those ideas and you end up thinking that somehow wealth

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is not good and that's not true. Wealth meant wellbeing.

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If you go look up the word, it comes from the word weal, it means wellbeing,

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whole being, integrated being, authentic being.

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That's why people that have a higher level of wealth have a higher level of you

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know, impact on the world. They have a higher health status.

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They have more influence. So I'm a firm believer that you wanna master finances.

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I have no desire to go and be disempowered in any area.

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I say that you've got an intellect you wanna empower and wake up amazing

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creative genius in your life.

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You wanna build a build business that serves numbers of people,

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cuz it's fulfilling to watch the difference and receive

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around the world, being of service.

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And build your wealth and then have amazing relationship dynamic where you're

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actually going and seeing the world and experiencing the world.

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I've asked millions of people,

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how many of you wanna see the world and go to every country?

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And most people put their hands up. Most people would love to see the world,

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not just on TV, but actually go and visit cultures.

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And the more cultures you've seen,

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the more variation of values and the more unconditionally loving you'll be.

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If you sit in one little spot and you think these are the rules of the game,

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and that's just one belief system,

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you'd be more biased and racial and more limited and tribal.

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But if you get to see the world,

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you get to see a more universal scheme about life and all the variations.

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And if you socially connect and you make a difference in people's life,

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people wanna be around you.

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At your death you don't wanna have nobody show up at your death and say, well,

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I don't know who that person was. You wanna say,

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I made a contribution and left a mark in the world. And physically,

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the higher the wealth, the higher the health status you'll have.

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And spirituality, why not be inspired? I know a very wealthy billionaire,

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very inspired by his life and just feels that he's contributing and feel

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grateful for life. His gratitude quotient is extremely high.

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So there's absolutely no reason why you can't have a fortune in your life and

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have inspiration in your life at the same time.

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I believe that spirit and matter do not have to be separated.

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And that's why I wrote, you know,

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How to Make One hell of a Profit and Still Get to Heaven,

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cause I really believe that gratitude,

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when you're appreciative and you're grateful for your life you get more to be

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appreciative to. And when you're doing a service in fair exchange,

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you're gonna have people grateful, you're going to be grateful.

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And that tend to catalyzes new opportunities in business and social and

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ultimately in wealth. So I just wanted to share for 20, 30 minutes here,

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some ideas on How to Make One Hell of a Profit and Still Get to Heaven and just

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some ideas that might make you think differently about finance,

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because you deserve to be living abundantly and living with a prosperous

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consciousness and be out and serve vast numbers. Get up in the morning and say,

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I wanna make a difference in the world and serve vast numbers of people.

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Watch what happens to your life. And also in addition to what I've just shared,

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I have a free on-demand masterclass,

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How to Be Financially Fulfilled Doing What You Love, why not do what you love,

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absolutely inspired? Most people have Monday morning blues, Wednesday hump days,

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thank God it's Friday's, and week freaking ends. Why not do what you love?

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Why not have financial fulfillment doing what you love?

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That's what I teach in the Breakthrough Experience almost all the programs I do,

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cuz that way you're not having a go to do work and then having to escape by a

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break, escape by a vacation, escape by retirement,

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to get away from something that's drudgery,

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to go and spend all your money and wipe that out on those things that give you

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immediate gratification,

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why not do what you love and love what you do and get inspired by it and get

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fulfilled and paid for it?

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I'm a firm believer that the quality of your life's based on the quality of the

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questions you ask, if you ask questions,

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how do I get handsomely and beautifully paid to do what I love and being of

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service to people around the world?

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The doors of opportunity are there I promise you.

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I've taken thousands of people through it,

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the Breakthrough Experience and I'm absolutely certain you can do the same if

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you just start down the alley and start down the working on that mission.

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So this is my little presentation.

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Please take advantage of this masterclass on how to have financial fulfillment,

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doing what you love. I hope you enjoyed this little presentation.

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I look forward to seeing you next week and just make sure that you give yourself

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permission to do something extraordinary and give yourself permission to reward

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yourself and have sustainable fair exchange.

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It really truly does make a difference and spirit and matter do not have to be

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separated. They're one and the same thing at the level of the soul,

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nothing is missing at the level of soul. There's plenty of abundance.

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