These unconscious money beliefs are keeping you from a richer life:
Growing up on a small dairy farm, one of seven kids, money was often scarce. I used to envy the"city kids" who’d vacation nearby each summer. If only my parents were"rich" like theirs.’ If only we could afford a car with air con, to eat at restaurants, designer jeans. Wind forward the clock a few years and in my first year out of college, my annual income , was more than dad's had ever been.
If the quality of our emotions determines the quality of our lives, then one could argue my dad is a far wealthier man than many whose net-worth eclipses his own. What we appreciate, appreciates. When our attention is on what is lacking, on what we"if only" need more of, we live from the space of insufficiency, inadequacy and incompleteness. We tell ourselves that we’d be happy, but forget that is exactly what we thought when we had 30% less than we do now.
NEW YORK SOCIETY FOR ETHICAL CULTURE, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES - 2018/09/24: Lynne Twist, Co-founder of Pachamama Alliance -Living from a space of sufficiency is not about how much money you have, but about how you feel about what you already have.
One way to think about money is to view it like water. As a current. It needs to move, to flow and not stagnate. When we hoard it or hold on to it, it can make us sick and separate us from ourselves, those around us and the very feelings of worthiness we yearn for most.
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