Thought I'd post a comment from one of my clients on his experience with the Money Mastery program:
Brian S. (Texas):
The Money Mastery program has really benefited us. It has opened our eyes as to where we are spending our money and on what we are spending it on. For the first time in our lives, we have extra money at the end of the month.
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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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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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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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There’s nothing more disturbing to me that watching some of my clients
feel obligated to take care of every financial need their child has.
I’m not surprised by this behavior, however, because I think it stems
from a cultural expectation that began with the Baby Boomer generation
around the end of World War II. It’s my belief that young couples who
began having childrenv
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In today’s economy, the need to make more money is paramount. But most
people I talk to feel trapped in their W-2 jobs, either having taken a
pay cut, dissatisfied with the amount they make and knowing that salary
increases are unlikely,
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I have had several clients ask me what I think about the Healthcare
Reform Act and how it will affect all the work I do with them to help
get their finances under control.
They get very distressed after working with me on applying Money Mastery principles and changing their whole life around
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