Work at Home Forum - An online community of those who work from home.
1StepSystem Work at Home Forum / 1StepSystem /

What is true wealth?

Author Message
chrisharl
Forums Member
Joined: 14 Sep 2009
Posts: 1
#1 · Posted: 14 Sep 2009 15:30


In an interview with over 500 people, true wealth will be differently by everyone! True wealth may be to have the time to do what you want, when you want and with whom you want. It may be to travel all over the world, or to not have to worry about the bills! Too many times we associate the world "wealth" with how large one's bank account is. Famous author Robert Kiyosaki states that your wealth can be calculated by how long you can financially survive after you stop working.

I was taught at an early age to focus on school and get the best grades possible, graduate from college and get a great job...and then be able to "have fun"! There's one problem with that, after I had completed everything I was taught graduating from college, pursuing my Masters degree, and working 2 jobs I did not know a single person that was "having fun"! Everyone was in "survival mode".

Looking at successful and ultra-successful people I realized that they looked at wealth completely different! That I needed to focus my energy and knowledge on maximizing my time, money and health and then I would truly be experiencing TRUE WEALTH! Is this an easy task...of course not but anything worthwhile takes commitment, perseverence, hard work and the desire to soak up knowledge like a sponge!!!

I love educating others on how they can maximize their time, money and health and most importantly learning how the masses define true wealth! How woudl you define true wealth in your words?

__________________
Chris Harl
San Antonio, TX
http://www.AreYouBrainwashed.com

"You can have anything you want in life, you just have to make the choice to change and have the right mentors to guide you!"
FreeCashMan
Forums Member
Joined: 31 Dec 2007
Posts: 1113
#2 · Posted: 15 Sep 2009 10:04 · Edited by: FreeCashMan


I think the Science of Getting Rich by Wallace D. Wattles stated it well, "Whatever may be said in praise of poverty, the fact remains it is not possible to live a really complete and successful life unless one is rich."

And poverty does not just mean being poor. Many have a job and are still poor, also known as Just Over Broke.

However big or small, do something to make your own money, your own way, and enjoy the feeling it gives.

__________________
Newbie Shield
Gold Member
Joined: 22 Sep 2007
Posts: 2226
#3 · Posted: 15 Sep 2009 10:47


Hi Chris,

For me true wealth is unshakable inner peace.

How to achieve it may be different for each individual. That applies to the financial situation of each individual as well.

True wealth isn't just a financial issue. It's also an authentic state of mind.

I'm willing to bet that Vishal, Hermas, and a few of the other deep thinkers will have something interesting to say on this matter.

~Newbie Shield~

A8ch
Gold Member
Joined: 24 Jun 2005
Posts: 937
#4 · Posted: 15 Sep 2009 17:50


Newbie Shield:
I'm willing to bet that Vishal, Hermas, and a few of the other deep thinkers will have something interesting to say on this matter.

Deep thinkers, huh? For a moment there I visualized myself a few hundred pounds heavier, sitting around in a loin cloth contemplating my navel. What a frightening image!

Newbie Shield:
For me true wealth is unshakable inner peace.

I like that concise description, NS!

There are myriad degrees of inner peace, many different pathways to finding it, and its composition is different for each of us.

chrisharl:
Too many times we associate the word "wealth" with how large one's bank account is.

I agree! We have become so conditioned by society's standards that we have developed an internal, default mechanism that causes us (even at subliminal levels) to automatically assign units of value to our neighbor's material possessions, just so that we can guage her wealth.

Then, in an instant, we apply these arbitrary values to our own similar possessions to make a comparative assessment. The palatial homes, luxury cars and swollen bank accounts are some of the trappings we recognize immediately.

But are any of those things really as important as we make them out to be?

While they do have their place in the overall scheme of things, there are other assets that are less obvious, but several times more valuable, in my opinion. They go by names such as: compassion, love, friendship, trust, honesty, discipline and so on.

I think true wealth resides at a place deep within us. It is more an ATTITUDE than it is a THING. It is silent, powerful and invisible. Since it cannot be seen to be measured or understood, the only frames of reference we have are its external manifestations.

Therefore, we ought to give prominence to those assets of wealth that cannot be devalued by changing economic downturns or by some entry in a balance sheet. Those intangibles are the assets that determine our character. That's a reflection of our true wealth!

Hermas

__________________
Vishal P. Rao
Administrator
Joined: 23 Jun 2005
Posts: 1354
#5 · Posted: 16 Sep 2009 02:52 · Edited by: Vishal P. Rao


A8ch:
Deep thinkers, huh? For a moment there I visualized myself a few hundred pounds heavier, sitting around in a loin cloth contemplating my navel. What a frightening image!



I believe both Hermas and NS said it very nicely.

But I guess one thing that no one mentioned in Contentment. In my opinion, there is nothing greater quality to own than Contentment. You can have tons of wealth but if you are not contented, you can never be at ease and you can never experience real happiness. You'll always be hopping from one goal to another. I believe success cannot be measured by how much wealth you own but by the degree of Contentment you have.

__________________
mountainmom5
Gold Member
Joined: 30 Aug 2007
Posts: 3097
#6 · Posted: 16 Sep 2009 11:00


A8ch:
Deep thinkers, huh? For a moment there I visualized myself a few hundred pounds heavier, sitting around in a loin cloth contemplating my navel. What a frightening image!

HAHA - I needed that chuckle this morning - thanks!

Vishal P. Rao:
You can have tons of wealth but if you are not contented, you can never be at ease and you can never experience real happiness. You'll always be hopping from one goal to another. I believe success cannot be measured by how much wealth you own but by the degree of Contentment you have.

Beautiful!



Ahhhh... now I can go can my stinky fish that my guys caught last night *salmon season is open* .... I am so blessed and the reminder about contentment plus the other great thoughts here made me feel much more willing to go handle those smelly critters...

Thanks for starting this thread *for me* this morning, Chris.

__________________
joanpeterson
Forums Member
Joined: 29 Jul 2009
Posts: 149
#7 · Posted: 17 Sep 2009 00:41


As someone who has battled cancer and multiple sclerosis, I have to say a part of wealth is one's health.

bbray95
Forums Member
Joined: 23 Sep 2010
Posts: 42
#8 · Posted: 4 Oct 2010 17:01


It's gotta be the freedom of not having a boss driving you crazy all day! LOL At least to me.

__________________
fixaprob
Forums Member
Joined: 1 Apr 2010
Posts: 68
#9 · Posted: 4 Oct 2010 23:02


Well there are many answer to this question but i feel diseases free health and happiness of life is true wealth..

__________________
mbasa
Forums Member
Joined: 2 Jun 2010
Posts: 98
#10 · Posted: 24 May 2011 06:11


bbray95

Well said, from where I am right now wealth is the ability to sustain my life financially without working for someone else. it does not matter if I am still on the same income range-that would just be the beginning. My time with family is priceless.

__________________
houseofelijah
Forums Member
Joined: 9 Jun 2011
Posts: 3
#11 · Posted: 9 Jun 2011 05:27


I agree with fixapro, and it does not hurt to have all your needs met.

__________________
[url]http://danijohnsonwealth.com[url]
[urlhttp://millionairesocietybabe.com[url]
Your Reply
   :) ;) :-( ... Disable smilies

» Username  » Password 
Only registered users are allowed to post here. Please enter your login/password details upon posting a message, or sign up first.
Messages not conforming to the forum rules will not be approved or, deleted without any explanation.
Please do not post email addresses. If essential, obfuscate them (user [at] domain.com or something like that).
Please do not apply BOLD to entire post.
Please do not post Titles in all CAPS.
 


Page loading time (secs): 0.034

Custom Search
Member Ranking · Terms of Use · Privacy Policy · About Us · Contact Us · Support Us · Friends

© 2004-2011 Work at Home Forum. All rights reserved.