When my clients tell me that Money Mastery is the best thing to come
into their life, I just have to share their comments with everyone else:
Bruce E. (Utah):
I have to tell you that the Money Mastery® program
has been the best thing to come into my financial life. I’d been
living month-to-month, blind. I didn’t know where my money was going
and had no plan to get out of debt. It was really frustrating. Now I have total control every month and it’s so easy to keep track of my spending.
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This e-mail expression is just another reason why I continue coaching!
Bob & Dorina C. (New York):
Thanks to the Money Mastery® system, we now are following the right
path to a much more secure financial future. We have learned a great
deal about ourselves financially as well as emotionally thanks to you.
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Peter and I know the Money Mastery Principles bless people's lives.
But when we hear just how it helps our clients, I can't resist
sharing. I have used only the first name to protect privacy.
Birk P. (Nebraska)
All of my married life I have spent month after month just barely
getting by. My wife and I have come a long way over the years and we
now have a family of seven with a moderately comfortable lifestyle.
Yet it seems that every month the money is just a little too tight.
The credit cards are always tempting us with another big ticket
purchase.
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Here's another e-mail from my coaching client, Alice F. (California):
Since joining the Money Mastery
program and with your mentoring, I’m now focused on my finances. When
I first started with the program, you told me to open a savings
account. I remember thinking, “I’m putting all extra monies on the
credit card bills,” which at the time, I thought was more important.
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Peter and I get these kinds of e-mails all the time, where our clients
share their experience in applying the 10 Principles of the Money
Mastery® program and how it has changed their life. To protect
privacy, I have only included the first name and initial of the last
name:
From Agnes B. (Iowa)
As a homeowner living paycheck-to-paycheck, only home repairs that
were deemed an emergency were fixed in a timely manner (and only after
every home remedy was exhausted). I have been maneuvering for years
around buckets under leaking sinks and bathtubs where water flows from
the shower and tub faucets, simultaneously.
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Many of my clients come to me totally perplexed by the state of their finances. Where do I begin to help them sort things out? With the way they spend money, or their budget.
Then I quote them the following saying by Charles Dickens, which is, I
think, one of the smartest things ever said about money:
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When settling debt on a home or credit card, you need to know the rules.
Just because you are able to pay less to a lender, they can still send
you a tax form indicating the difference in what you owed and the
actual settled amount and declare it to be 1099 income. This
difference is taxable!
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I stumbled on an article the other day from the New York Times on Fannie Mae and began reading it. Suddenly
in the middle of it I realized I was reading a reprint of an article by
Steven Holmes from 1999. I couldn’t help but be chilled by some of
what I read about the financial problems the mortgage industry
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I read Peter's blog with interest and thought I'd add my own take on the American millionaire mindset....
Did you know that the average wealthy American has $1.4 million in
assets, and $275,000 in debts, for a net worth of $1.1 million?
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vFew people today consider hanging on to a house or a job for two or
three decades…but that’s exactly how some of the nation’s millionaires
became so wealthy. They bought a house 30 years previous and hung onto
it until it appreciated into a half a million dollar asset, then sold
it.
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