Our eyes met again.
“You’ve been pushing me around?”
I asked.
“Some people might say that,” smiled rich dad. “I
would say that I just gave you a taste of life.”
“What taste of life?” I asked, still angry, but now
curious and ready to learn.
“You boys are the first people who have ever asked
me to teach them how to make money. I have more than 150 employees, and not one
of them has asked me what I know about money. They ask me for a job and a
paycheck, but never to teach them about money. So most will spend the best
years of their lives working for money, not really understanding what it is
they are working for.”
I sat there listening intently.
“So when Mike told me you wanted to learn how to
make money, I decided to design a course that mirrored real life. I could talk
until I was blue in the face, but you wouldn’t hear a thing. So I decided to
let life push you around a bit so you could hear me. That’s why I only paid you
10 cents.”
“So what is the lesson I learned from working for
only 10 cents an hour?” I asked. “That you’re cheap and exploit your workers?”
Rich dad rocked back and laughed heartily. Finally
he said, “You’d best change your point of view. Stop blaming me and thinking
I’m the problem. If you think I’m the problem, then you have to change me. If
you realize that you’re the problem, then you can change yourself, learn
something, and grow wiser. Most people want everyone else in the world to change
but themselves. Let me tell you, it’s easier to change yourself than everyone
else.”
“I don’t understand,” I said.
“Don’t
blame me for your problems,” rich dad said, growing impatient. “But you only
pay me 10 cents.”
“So
what are you learning?” rich dad asked, smiling. “That you’re cheap,” I said
with a sly grin.
“See, you think I’m the problem,”
said rich dad.
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