RICH DAD AND POOR DAD:(par7)/this help to you how be rich/im trying to be rich with every possibility/dont be poor man
Today I often wonder what will soon happen when we have millions of people who need financial and medical assistance. they will be dependent upon their families or the government for financial support. What will happen when Medicare and Social Security run out of money? How will a nation survive if teaching children about money continues to be left to parents—most of whom will be, or already are, poor? Because I had two in influential fathers, I learned from both of them. I had to think about each dad’s advice, and in doing so, I gained valuable insight into the power and effect of one’s thoughts on one’s life. For example, one dad had a habit of saying, “I can’t a afford it.” e other dad forbade those words to be used. He insisted I ask, “How can I a afford it?” One is a statement, and the other is a question. One lets you o the hook, and the other forces you to think. My soon-to-be-rich dad would explain that by automatically saying the words “I can’t a afford it,” your brain stops working. By asking the question “How can I a afford it?” your brain is put to work. He did not mean that you should buy everything you want. He was fanatical about exercising your mind, the most powerful computer in the world. He’d say, “My brain gets stronger every day because I exercise it. e stronger it gets, the more money I can make.” He believed that automatically saying “I can’t afford it” was a sign of mental laziness.