“Wouldn’t everyone want to learn
that?” I asked.
“No,” said rich dad,
“simply because it’s easier to learn to work for money, especially if fear is
your primary emotion when the subject of money is discussed.”
“I don’t understand,” I said with
a frown.
“Don’t worry about that for now. Just know that it’s
fear that keeps most people working at a job: the fear of not paying their
bills, the fear of being fired, the fear of not having enough money, and the
fear of starting over. That’s the price of studying to learn a profession or
trade, and then working for money. Most people become a slave to money— and
then get angry at their boss.”
“Learning to have money work for you is a completely
different course of study?” I asked.
“Absolutely,” rich dad answered.
“Absolutely.”
We sat in silence on that beautiful Hawaiian
Saturday morning. My friends had just started their Little League baseball
game, but for some reason I was now thankful I had decided to work for 10 cents
an hour. I sensed that I was about to learn something my friends wouldn’t learn
in school.
“Ready to learn?” asked rich dad.
“Absolutely,” I said with a grin.
“I have kept my promise. I’ve been teaching you from
afar,” my rich dad said. “At nine years old, you’ve gotten a taste of what it
feels like to work for money. Just multiply your last month by fifty years and
you will have an idea of what most people spend their life doing.”
“I don’t understand,” I said.
“How did you feel waiting in line to see me, once to
get hired and once to ask for more money?”
“Terrible,” I said.
“If you choose to work for money, that is what life
will be like,” said rich dad.
“And how did you feel when Mrs. Martin dropped three
dimes in your hand for three hours of work?”
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