I’m only asking as your relationship with money - how you think of it in other words - is pretty important.
Is money something you worry about constantly?
Do you try to spend as little as possible so you can build up a little nest egg for that “rainy day”?
Do you worry about investing it in something that could change your life and think its probably better off earning a little interest in the bank?
Do you try to accumulate more of it by spending less, making savings, cutting back on your day to day or month to month expenses?
Are you so terrified of getting into short term debt that you deprive yourself of things you really want?
OR
Do you think of money as a resource that can be leveraged to
create more opportunities to earn more of the damn stuff?
Because that’s what all successful people, without exception do.
It’s probably the most important lesson (and the hardest to apply) that’ I’ve ever had to master.
Because I used to think of money in exactly the way I described above the word OR.
Now I think of it as a tool. I don’t spray the stuff around willy nilly (I’m Scottish - we don’t do that!) But if I see the need to spend it on something that will improve my income and prospects in the long run, I don’t hesitate.
It’s said that your income will be the exact average of the 10 most influential people in your life.
So I decided to change those 10 people in my life. Joining SFM and DEA and immersing myself in that community was an easy way to do that.
I haven’t cut my old friends and family out of my life but I have chosen to put some distance between some of them and sort of replace them with people who better serve my purpose.
So I mastermind on line and at SFM events with very successful people from the co-founders Stuart and Jay to the people who have built huge success as affiliate
partners.
That’s how I learned the money lesson. And many other lessons about success mindset and being an entrepreneur.
It’s how I finally understood that money attracts money. It really is something of a game this money
thing.
But you need to learn how to play the game well.
SFM and DEA for me was and is the wisest investment I’ve ever made in myself.
That’s why I continue to
recommend them to you and to anyone who is serious about not standing still and about moving forward.
Existing members understand this very quickly when they see what and who they have just gained access to.
New members get 30 days to absorb this at a cost of a $29.95 application fee which is fully refundable
after those 30 days.
Very few people ask for that refund.
If 30 bucks seems too “risky” then you could always register here for an application webcast with Stuart Ross
first
Cheers!