Posts Tagged Motivator

Why Money Is Good

By: Brian Tracy

The way you think about money will determine how much of it you accumulate more than any other factor.  Your attitude toward money affects your emotions and your motivations.

Do You Feel That You Have Enough?
In psychology, money is what is called a “deficiency need.”  This means that it only motivates you when you feel deficient in it, when you don’t feel that you have enough.  Above a certain level, when you feel that you have enough, it is no longer a motivator.  Put another way, when you have enough money, you don’t think about it very much.  But when you have too little, you think about it all the time.

Determine Your Attitude Toward Money
The effect money has on your emotional life depends on your attitude toward it.  If you feel that you have too little, money can become an obsession for you.  It can dominate your thinking, feelings and actions. Arguments over money are a major reason for marital breakdown. Problems with money are the primary reason for business failure, the ruination of friendships and psychosomatic illnesses of all kinds.  It’s not uncommon for people to even kill themselves over money problems.

Practice the Reality Principle
The Reality Principle applies especially to matters of money.  This principle states that, “You must deal with life as it is, not as you wish it were, or could be.”  Most people live in a world of partial self-delusion, with regard to money.  They wish, hope, and pray about their financial futures while at the same time, deep in their hearts, they know their dre ams will never mat erialize.  In Lewis Carroll’s book, Alice in Wonderland, one of the characters says quite happily that he is quite capable of believing several impossible things before breakfast each day.  In the same way, many people believe quite impossible things about money and then they wonder why they are having so many financial problems.

Overcome Deep Seated Beliefs
One of the most common obstacles to achieving financial independence is a deep-seated belief that somehow money is wrong and that people who have a lot of it are inherently evil.  This belief is not based on any factual foundation.  It goes back to early childhood conditioning when the growing child is often told this because of other people’s desire to rationalize away their own financial failures.

Money Is Good
The fact is that money is good.  It takes money to buy homes, cars, clothes, food and most of the good things in life.  Money has an energy of its own and it is largely attracted to people who treat it well.  Money tends to flow toward those people who can use it in the most productive ways to produce valuable goods and services, and who can invest it to create employment and opportunities that benefit others.  At the same time, money flows away from those who use it poorly, or who spend it in non-productive ways.

Action Exercises
Here are two things you can do immediately to improve your attitude toward money:

First, be perfectly honest to yourself with regard to money and to the amount you want to acquire in life.  Pretending that you don’t care about money when you really do will only make you unhappy.

Second, begin today to think about all the wonderful things that you could have in your life if you had more money.  Then, begin to think of all the things that you could do to increase the amount you earn and the amount you keep.

Brian Tracy

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Discipline

By Zig Ziglar

Discipline is the key.   The 1828 Noah Webster Dictionary defines “discipline” this way: “To instruct or educate; to inform the mind; to prepare by instructing in correct principles and habits; as, to discipline youth for a profession, or for future usefulness.  To instruct and govern; to teach rules and practice, and accustom to order and subordination.  To advance and prepare by instruction.”  Bob Richards, the Olympic pole-vault champion, says that you will never find a champion who does not discipline himself.  Roy Smith says that discipline is “the refining fire by which talent becomes ability.”

Today, too much emphasis is placed on our rights and not enough on our responsibilities.  The world would be a wonderful place if we took our responsibilities as seriously as we do our rights.  The disciplined individual brings his own impatience and desires of the moment under control so he can enjoy the benefits of tomorrow.  That’s discipline.  R. C. Halverson says, “No man ever became great doing as he pleased; little men do as they please — little nobodies.  Great men submit themselves to the laws governing the realm of their greatness.”

Much of the music today expresses the theme “I want to be free.”  If we take the train off the tracks it’s free, but it can’t go anywhere.  Take the steering wheel out of the automobile and it’s under the control of no one - but it can’t move.  Think about it: The sailor has the freedom of the seas only when he disciplines himself to obey the compass.  Until he does that, he must keep his ship within sight of the shore.  Once he disciplines himself to follow the compass, he can go anywhere the ship will take him.  Man is the same way.  When we discipline ourselves to do the things we need to do, when we need to do them, the day will come when we can do the things we want to do, when we want to do them.  Think about it and I’ll SEE YOU AT THE TOP!

Zig Ziglar is a motivator and teacher.  He is the author of 27 books and loved by millions of people world wide for his practical wisdom and his gift of hope.

Quote
Discipline yourself to do the things you need to do when you need to do them, and the day will come when you will be able to do the things you want to do when you want to do them!   -  Zig Ziglar

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