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- The road to financial freedom is to
have great health so that you are in good shape
to learn.
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2 - An open mindset to start learning
and practicing what you have learned. |
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3 - Investing your time in your
financial & health education so that you
are in control of your life to create wealth to
enjoy a better life.
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4 - Enjoy the wealth that you have
created because you have been taking care of
your health.
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Choose To Be Rich
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Steps
To Empower Your Child
The mentors are, Robert & Kim Kiyosaki, Sharon
Lechter and Diane Kennedy, all self-made millionaires.
Robert and Sharon are co-authors of the best selling
"Rich Dad: Poor Dad" series. Kim Kiyosaki is
one of the co-founders of Cash Flow Technologies and
is a passionate advocate for educating women about
money. Diane Kennedy is a specialized accountant. Here
are some practical insights into how the rich handle
their money and some of the ways they pass their good
money skills on to their children:
1) MONEY IS JUST AN IDEA
Robert Kiyosaki believes that ideas create wealth.
"The single most powerful asset we all have is
our mind. If it is trained well it can create enormous
wealth in what seems to be an instant."Encourage
your child's creative ideas. Help them to explore
them, define them, and when appropriate, develop a
plan of action to make their ideas come alive.
2) ATTRACTING MONEY
Robert, Like Napoleon Hill, author of "Think and
Grow Rich," believes that what you think about is
what you become. He believes in the law of attraction.
Which means, if you are thinking you do not have
enough money, then "not enough" is just what
you'll attract. If you want to attract more dollars
into your life then you have to become friends with
money. You have to feel good about money, and one of
the best ways to attract MORE into your life, is to
feel good about what you already have.
3) FEEL GRATEFUL FOR WHAT YOU ALREADY HAVE
People often tell themselves that if they only had
more money, or a bigger house, or a better car,
everything would be ok. But these mentors ask "If
you're not happy with what you have NOW, how can you
be sure you will be happy with what you have
LATER?" They suggest that you practice noticing
how rich you are right now and how lucky you are to be
able to spend so much time with your children. Take
your focus off of what you DON'T have and think about
what you DO have.
4) SET FINANCIAL GOALS WITH YOUR CHILDREN
According to Sharon Lechter, "By setting
financial goals with your children and helping them
determine a financial plan to achieve those goals, you
instill the formula for success. The self-esteem that
is built when they achieve those goals is priceless.
Teach your children to say, "How can I?"
instead of "I can't." For example, if your
child wants a new bike, help him/her develop a plan to
think of ways to earn money. Help assess your child's
progress along the way and make adjustments to the
goal as needed. Then, have your child purchase the
bike as his/her ultimate reward for completion of the
plan.
5) TEACH YOUR CHILDREN TO USE CREDIT CARDS
WISELY
Make sure your children know how to use a credit card
BEFORE they leave home! According to Sharon Lechter,
"children are bombarded with 'just charge it'
messages every day. Parents need to complete the
picture for their children by exposing them to the
other side of credit. Have them pay the bills with
you, explain the multiplying impact of the interest
charged on the balance due." As Diane Kennedy
puts it, "If you went into a store to buy an
item, would you naturally go to the bin marked PRICES
INCREASED 20%!? Of course not, but that is what the
consumer does when they buy on time with a credit
card." These mentors also remind us that credit
cards can help make money. Diane uses an airline
credit card to earn free trips, and Sharon uses her
credit card to make her accounting easier. The trick,
they say, is to make sure you pay off the balance each
month.
6) ALLOWANCES: TO GIVE OR NOT TO GIVE
Sharon Lechter believes that if you give your children
an allowance, it is vitally important how the
allowance is set up. "Will the children view the
allowance as an 'entitlement' or as earned
compensation for completion of agreed upon tasks or
responsibilities? For instance, consider the
difference between these two statements, 'John, since
you are 12 now, you are old enough for an allowance.
Every Friday I will give you an allowance of $10 to
spend however you would like.' Or, 'John, you are busy
with your homework and sports activities every night
and we want to acknowledge your efforts and encourage
you. While you are busy with these activities, we will
give you an allowance of $10 per week for spending
money.'"Robert Kiyosaki believes that if you give
a child an allowance, you are training them to be an
employee and if you pay them for jobs, you are
training them to be self-employed. He further believes
that the best financial training you can give your
child is to help them develop their entrepreneurial
spirit.Diane Kennedy, relates from her accounting
experience that many of the nation's wealthy
legitimately employ their children (ages 8 and up) and
pay them a tax deductible salary. Diane's father
taught her to do the bookkeeping for his numerous
businesses when she was 12 years old. This became a
tremendous advantage for her later in her life. She
learned very quickly how to read and understand
financial statements. She used her knowledge to buy
her first home when she was 20 and her second (an
investment) when she was 22.
7) TEACH YOUR CHILDREN THE POWER OF PASSIVE
INCOME
"What you do from 9-5 is your job. What you do
with your paycheck is your business." This is the
heart of Robert Kiyosaki's Rich Dad: Poor Dad
philosophy. The earlier your children understand the
difference between working for others and working for
themselves, the better chance for financial success
they will have.Homeschool.com recommends the board
game "Cash Flow for Kids" (see reference
below) because it shows children that they can either
spend all their money on doo-dads (things they think
must have!) or they can use their money to bring in
more money. Passive income is money that comes to you
without you physically having to go to work for it.
Examples of passive income include royalties on books
or songs you've written, rental income from apartments
you own, or interest payments you receive from money
you have loaned to others. The goal of "Cash Flow
For Kids" is to become financially free. The
winner is considered "free" when their
passive income is more than their expenses. Imagine
what your children could accomplish in real life if
they were financially free. They might become actors,
artists or writers, without starving. They could
follow their passions in life instead of working at a
job they hate just to make ends meet.
8) THE THREE LITTLE PIGGY-BANKS
These financial mentors suggest using a
three-piggy-bank approach with children. One bank is
for giving, one is for savings and one is for
spending.
GIVING
When your child has some money, automatically put 10%
into the giving bank and then divide the rest into the
savings and spending banks. The benefit of the giving
bank is that by giving to others the child is reminded
of how fortunate they are.
SAVINGS
Next, "match" the amount your child puts
into the savings bank since this will increase their
savings more quickly and reward their efforts. When
your child's savings bank gets large enough, you can
transfer it to a real bank account where your child
can see the power of interest payments. When this
account gets even larger, you might again
"match" your child's funds and help them
invest in a small piece of property or perhaps some
child-friendly stocks
SPENDING
Don't underestimate the benefits of the spending bank.
After all, how can a child understand
"worth" if they don't have the freedom to
make a few bad purchases?Ensuring that your child has
strong financial skills is critical to his/her future
success. The advice from the mentors in this
newsletter will help you start your child on the right
path, however the first step of developing strong
financial skills is developing strong math skills.
Without strong math skills, how will your child read a
profit and loss statement, know how to calculate
interest, balance a monthly budget or know when
someone could be cheating them? Strong math skills go
hand in hand with financial intelligence.
By homeschool.com
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