"The doctor of the future will give no medicine but will interest his patients in the care of the human frame, in diet, and in the cause and prevention of disease. "-Thomas Edison

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Financial Freedom....Start The Process


Money can have such an amazing hold on us.  How is it that we can afford to pay $1.48 for a pop a day, which totals $44.40 a month, but we can’t pay for a massage to ease stress and tension.  We can spend that $45 on pop that rots are teeth and our gut, but we can’t “afford” a gym membership that is nearly half that expense a month! So many of us spend $2.57 on a bottle of kitchen cleaner when we could make eight times that amount for $2.00 all on our own with materials that are less harmful to us.

     Like so much of life, our financial freedom is in a great deal of our control.  Also, like life, when you are in the thick of it, it is hard to see the true possibilities and realities of the situation.  There are so many ways you can cut expenses to help give you a little cushion each month, but it takes some effort to sit down and organize the possibilities; and it takes will power to follow through with it. 

     There are a couple of solid ways to get some advice to help you through the process towards financial freedom.  “Financial Peace University” is a good program that helps walk you through making change.  However, many of you are looking for some more direct one on one attention and you are ready to get more serious with your plans…check out a Financial Architect near you.  It is very possible that they don’t cost you a dime, but they sure save you A LOT  of dimes!

Making change can be like ripping of a Band-Aid or it can be a progressive move towards a place you want to be.  The point is just begin the process

Keep A Fresh Perspective...Who Knows What You Could Miss!


Many years ago, a large American shoe company sent two sales representatives out to different parts of the Australian outback to see if they could drum up some business among the Aborigines. Some time later, the company received telegrams from both agents.
The first said, "No business here . . . natives don't wear shoes."
The second one said, "Great opportunity
here . . . natives don't wear shoes!"
(John M. Capozzi)