Sunday, September 19, 2010

Do You Want to Gain Financial Wealth and Spiritual Abundance at the Same Time?

http://trulyrichclub.com/



My name is Bo Sanchez.

For twenty years, I was a poor missionary.

It helped that I was single then. I had no babies that needed diapers or a wife to romance on dates or a house mortgage to pay. So poor was okay.

I didn’t need money. I was happy preaching, writing, and doing ministry work among the poor. I really thought that to love the poor, I had to become poor.

I also used to think that to be close to God, I had to be poor too. I had this subconscious belief that money was evil.

But over ten years ago, I began to change my beliefs. (Which by the way is where all radical changes start. As the Bible says, “By your faith, it shall be done unto you.”)

Today, I’m a Truly Rich missionary.

I chose to become an entrepreneur. I now run businesses, invest in real estate properties, and invest in stocks and other paper assets. As of this writing, I have 16 income streams flowing to my life.

Yes, I’m still a missionary. I still preach, write, and work among the poor, lifting them out of poverty. And the impact of my ministry has multiplied a hundred times more.

But in case you’re asking, I don’t drive a luxury car or own a mansion. Oh yes, I can now afford to buy them. But as a personal choice, I’ve decided to remain simple in my lifestyle. Why? Not because it’s wrong to own them. I repeat: It’s a personal choice. But I believe that the ultimate purpose of wealth is to love others. And I’ve made a choice to use a lot of my wealth to make this world a better place.

I’m Truly Rich because of two reasons: My passive income is much more than my monthly expenses—and so I’m able to tithe to God and give sacrificially for the ministry and the poor.

And that’s what I want you to experience.

Friend, I want to stop talking about me and start talking about you. I want you to enjoy the same blessing in your life. And the key is to change your beliefs and thinking…

http://trulyrichclub.com/

To Change Your Beliefs & Get Your 7 Free Blessings!

How could something as simple as GodWhispers change your life?

Here’s why: Your beliefs are very powerful.

Your beliefs are so powerful, they determine your whole destiny.

And from my experience, two of the most important beliefs that determine your destiny are beliefs about who you are and who God is.

These two crucial beliefs—(1) who you think you are and (2) who you think God is—will shape your entire future. Trust me, your happiness and success in life depends on these two beliefs!

And that’s where GodWhispers come in. If you read GodWhispers daily, over time, I’m convinced it can change these two crucial beliefs.

How do I know?

Let me tell you my story…
Where My Distorted Beliefs Come From

When I was a child, I was sexually molested.

Though a victim, I blamed myself.

I found myself hating myself. I felt dirty. I felt ugly.

As the years went by, I developed a sexual addiction that messed up my life for many, many years. But worse than that, I developed a shame-based personality.

For years, I would wake up every morning feeling a deep sadness in my heart. At first, I didn’t know why I felt so much despair in me. It was only much later that I discovered what it was: I realized I was ashamed about who I was. I was ashamed that I was alive. I was ashamed that I even existed!

I was desperate for people to like me—so I would bend over backwards to get people to like me. If people didn’t like me, I panicked. I felt I was dying inside.

My sexual addiction was simply a hunger for love. And not being able to get that love, I chose a substitute—which was sexual fantasies and pornography. They were my anaesthesia to deaden the pain inside.

The funny thing was that early on, when I was 12 years old, I came to a personal relationship with God. But somehow, my addictions and my deep-seated shame continued and even worsened. I didn’t know why I wasn’t being healed.

Years later, I realized why: My image of God had to be healed first.

You see, once upon a time, I thought that God was a judgmental God. I thought that when God looked at me, all He saw were my sins and my weaknesses.

I began to heal when I began to change my beliefs about God.

How? I bombarded my mind with the correct image of God. (How I wish I had someone else sending me GodWhispers then!)

I learned that beliefs don’t change overnight. Changing one’s beliefs means creating new neural pathways in our brain.

Let me explain how this works.

http://godwhispersclub.com/index1.php

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

7 Spending Tips From Frugal Billionaires

Carlos Slim Helu (Carlos Slim)
Carlos Slim Helu (Carlos Slim), a telecom tycoon and billionaire with well-known frugal tendencies, has a net worth of $60.6 billion, according to Forbes. Assuming no changes in his net worth, he could spend $1,150 a minute for the next 100 years before he ran out of money. To put this in perspective, he could spend in 13 minutes what a minimum-wage earner brings home after an entire year of the daily grind.
Carlos Slim Helu (Carlos Slim), a telecom tycoon and billionaire with well-known frugal tendencies, has a net worth of $60.6 billion, according to Forbes. Assuming no changes in his net worth, he could spend $1,150 a minute for the next 100 years before he ran out of money. To put this in perspective, he could spend in 13 minutes what a minimum-wage earner brings home after an entire year of the daily grind.


1. Keep Your Home Simple
Bill Gates
Billionaires can afford to live in the most exclusive mansions imaginable -- and many do, including Bill Gates' sprawling 66,000 square foot, $147.5 million dollar mansion in Medina, Wash. -- yet frugal billionaires like Warren Buffett choose to keep it simple. Buffett still lives in the five-bedroom house in Omaha that he purchased in 1957 for $31,500. Likewise, Carlos Slim has lived in the same house for more than 40 years.






2. Use Self-Powered or Public Transportation
John Caudwell,
David Cheriton
Thrifty billionaires including John Caudwell, David Cheriton and Chuck Feeney prefer to walk, bike or use public transportation when getting around town. Certainly these wealthy individuals could afford to take a helicopter to their lunch meetings, or ride in chauffeur-driven Bentleys, but they choose to get a little exercise and take advantage of public transportation instead. Good for the bank account and great for the environment.

3. Buy Your Clothes off the Rack
While some people, regardless of their net value, place a huge emphasis on wearing designer clothes and shoes, some frugal billionaires decide it's simply not worth the effort, or expense. You can find David Cheriton, the Stanford professor who matched Google founders  

Sergey Brin and Larry Page to the venture capitalists at Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers (resulting
Sergey Brin and Larry Page
in a large reward of Google stock), wearing jeans and a t-shirt.

Ingvar Kamprad
Ingvar Kamprad, the founder of the furniture company Ikea, avoids wearing suits, and John Caudwell, mobile phone mogul, buys his clothes off the rack instead of spending his wealth on designer clothes.

4. Keep your Scissors Sharp
The average haircut costs about $45, but people can and do spend up to $800 per cut and style. Multiply that by 8.6 (to account for a cut every six weeks) and it adds up to $7,200 per year, not including tips. These billionaires can certainly afford the most stylish haircuts, buy many cannot be bothered by the time it takes or the high price tag for the posh salons. Billionaires like John Caudwell and David Cheriton opt for cutting their own hair at home.

[Stock Picks From the World's Greatest Investors]

5. Drive a Regular Car
Larry Ellison (co-founder and CEO of Oracle
While billionaires like Larry Ellison (c o-founder and CEO of Oracle Corporation) enjoy spending millions on cars, boats and planes, others remain low key with their vehicles of choice. Jim Walton (of the Wal-Mart clan) drives a 15-year-old pickup truck. Azim Premji, an Indian business tycoon, reportedly drives a Toyota Corolla. And Ingvar Kamprad of Ikea drives a 10-year-old Volvo. The idea is to buy a dependable car, and drive it into the ground. No need for a different car each day of the week for these frugal billionaires.

6. Skip Luxury Items
It may surprise some of us, but the world's wealthiest person, Carlos Slim (the one who could spend more than a thousand dollars a minute and not run out of money for one hundred years) does not own a yacht or a plane. (Reducing the amount you spend is the easiest way to make your money grow.)

Many other billionaires have chosen to skip these luxury items.  

Warren Buffett also avoids these lavish material items, stating, "Most toys are just a pain in the neck."
Warren Buffett

What We Can Learn
Some of the world's billionaires have frugal tendencies. Perhaps this thrifty nature even helped them make some of their money. Regardless, they have chosen to avoid some unnecessary spending (at least on their scale) and the 6,864,605,142 non-billionaires out there can follow suit, eliminating excessive, keep-up-with-the-Jones style spending. No matter what a person's income bracket is, most can usually find a way to cut back on frivolous spending, just like a few frugal billionaires.

http://finance.yahoo.com/banking-budgeting/article/110550/tips-from-frugal-billionaires?mod=bb-budgeting

Subscribe to Biztalk and Jobs via Email
Become a fan Biztalk and Jobs in Facebook
Follow me on Twitter
Blog Links:
Health and Wellness
The Leader
ACTRESS @ CELEBRITIES PHOTOS
Young and Adult Sexual Reprouctive Health
Organic Farming