T. Harv Eker's book The Millionaire Mind
reveals as much about the poor, the envious, and the unsuccessful as it does about millionaires.
It is a politically incorrect book, because -- gasp -- it treats the poor and unsuccessful with something other than hushed reverence.
He's obviously not saying all poor people are losers, or that
people never have rotten things happen that set them back financially.
But he says -- and I have seen this in my own extended family, believe me -- that as a general rule, the poor have no idea why the rich are rich.
The same kind of people who sabotage themselves and who never get anywhere tend to
have a juvenile view of the rich -- e.g., they got to where they are through sheer luck or some special advantage.
The possibility that they might be rich because they worked extremely hard, often defied the conventional wisdom, and took some initiative instead of assuming that starting businesses and taking the bull by the horns was something other people do, is not
considered.
I know a guy whose entire plan for solving his chronic money problems was to win the lottery. I'm not kidding.
Since he thinks other people got to where they are through luck, it's no surprise that luck is the only way forward he can see for himself.
The most prosperous and successful people are almost always accused of being "lucky" by their friends, families, colleagues, and anyone else. But those people didn’t see the years of hard work, the careful preparation, and all the other intangible things that went into their success.
All they saw was the so-called overnight
success.
And then called it "lucky."
In a way, they are right.
They are lucky.
But it’s not random
luck.
It was controlled luck.
It was simply being smart enough and diligent enough to prepare themselves as best they could while working hard at putting themselves in the path of opportunity.
And so it
is with you, amigo.
Don't wait for the lottery. Take matters into your own hands.
The guy who answers my own questions offers pretty much the most thorough training program I've ever seen -- everything you need to know, from newbie to advanced, from tech issues to big-picture
strategy.
For a very limited window, he's letting you access everything for 5 days for a mere $1.
After 5 days, you'll know if this is for you or not.
He's honest, thorough, extremely
responsive, and yes, brilliant.
For those of you telling me you're brand new and don't know where to start, here you go: you start at ground zero, and he walks you through everything.
He takes newbies through the stuff you need to know to start pulling in a modest -- but for some people,
life-changing -- $100 per day.
When something like this comes along for one dollar, the universe is saying "Duh."
Listen to the universe: