You can go broke much quicker than you can get rich, unless
you win the lottery or inherit a fortune from your rich uncle. Rich doesn’t mean wealth. What do you consider to be rich? How about wealthy?
If you investigated the topic of becoming wealthy, you’d
find that wealth actually is accumulated over a lifetime of saving. The reason rich people get richer and poor
people get poorer is that the rich keep doing what make them rich, and the poor
keep doing the things that made them poor.
You can do something about being broke, but it’s not so easy to fix
being poor.
You can repair being broke by working hard, saving some of
what you earn, repeating the process over and over for a period of time. You finally won’t be broke anymore, but you
may still be poor. The poor will spend
any amount they have, no matter how small or large, preventing them from
accumulating wealth. Try giving a poor
person a savings bond, cash or similar thing for their birthday, and see what
they do with it. It’ll all be spent before
sundown. Others will put the bond away
for it to grow and will save all or part of the cash.
If you were fairly deep in debt and inherited a large sum of
money, would you pay off your debts and save the balance or go out on a
spending spree and buy things that will
Continue to leave you in debt.
Forget the lottery or a windfall from your family. Start now, today, this minute saving some of
the money you bring home. You say you
can’t save, that you owe all you earn.
If this is true, you’re poor and broke.
Saving a few dollars is better than none at all. After you see what a few dollars a week add
up to in a few months, you’ll be inspired to save more and buy less.
To properly save, you must start early and save often. Take advantage of time. Don’t contribute to your investments every
six months or once a year. Invest
regularly, at least once a month, if not once a week. You must be diligent. Don’t loosen up and reduce your savings. You must invest through thick and thin, hard
times and good times. Find a way to pay
for unexpected expenses, but keep on track with your savings.
The truth is that you will or will not achieve wealth. You can find all the excuses in the world for
not saving, but to achieve wealth you must get past your problems and excuses
and just do it.
The next time you redeem a coupon for a dollar off, put that
dollar into a jar, a drawer or your savings account. Take advantage of it. You’ll save more than you imagine. Save all coins, just spend paper money. When you get paid, and before you pay your
bills, pay yourself a few dollars.
Those of us old enough remember the black and white movies
in which the Lone Ranger fell into quicksand, only to see Silver (his horse)
toss him a rope and pull him from his potential doom. Even Roy Rogers, Tarzan and others fell into
this pit of wet sand that would have pulled them under if not for the horse, a
friend, a tree bent over the pit, or other items of rescue appeared to be there
at the last moment.
Sometimes, they were up to their noses when rescue
came. The odds are great that you never
fell into quicksand, but there’s another type of doom that can pull you
under. That type is financial quicksand.
Most of you may be closer than you think to the
quicksand. You walk around it every day
of your lives. Some of you have fallen
into it and were rescued. Some went
under, never to recover.
In 1961, I was in New York and went on a bus tour of the
city. I was especially sad to see skid
row where people lay on the sidewalks and in back alleys, without food, a home,
or even a dime on them. The tour guide
explained that some of those people were teachers, professional people, and
others who had lost everything through financial disaster of some kind.
I’ve always wondered how someone could get to this point in
life. Today I see a multitude of people
on the edge of financial disaster. The
quicksand pit is very near, and some of them already have both legs in it.
When money trouble comes, it seems to come in clusters. The television breaks down, the washer quits,
the stove won’t heat, the computer dies, and other things happen at the same
time. You may feel like the end of the
world has come.
You can’t bring in a priest to exorcise the debts.