8 Secrets of the Truly Rich

8 Secrets of the Truly Rich

This Book Is about changing Your Inner Software
I’ve met many Filipinos who have been programmed to be poor. Their very self-definition shouts to the universe, “I’m poor and I’ll always be poor.” This twisted core identity, plus insane religious beliefs about money, are like invisible prison bars that keep many Filipinos locked in poverty. My mission is to free you from that prison. For over 25 years, I’ve been working among the poor, living in their homes and helping them get out of poverty. I’ve found out that no matter how much money people receive, unless they change their inner program, nothing happens. They will indeed remain poor forever. Friend, do you have a money problem? Read carefully: 90 percent of your money problems are mind problems. People are not poor because they have no money. That’s merely the result, not the cause of poverty. Filipinos are poor because of a lethal combination of three giant monsters of poverty. First, we really don’t want to be rich. As shocking as this may sound, it’s true. Externally, we seem to want to be rich, but internally, we’re deeply conflicted in our unconscious desires. Because our distorted core beliefs about ourselves, plus our crazy religious beliefs about money, chain us to the prison of poverty. Second, we’re financially stupid. (That’s putting it mildly.) We don’t know how money works. And we don’t know how money grows. So we lose whatever little we have. Because what we know about money comes from friends and relatives who don’t have money themselves—and so, they teach us from their ignorance. And school never taught us how money worked either because teachers didn’t know.

Third, we insist on walking, instead of riding, vehicles towards wealth. Even if there are hundreds—no thousands—of vehicles around us. In the pages of this book, I will explain what these vehicles are. Friend, do you want to gain material and spiritual wealth at the same time? Then, read on as if you were a drowning person, and this...

Similar Essays