Welcome
to T Harv Eker's
Mastering the Inner Game of Wealth
T Harv Eker's claim to fame is that he took a $2,000 credit card loan,
opened "one of the first fitness stores in North America," turned it
into a chain of 10 within two and a half years and sold it in 1987
for a cool (but somewhat modest-seeming) $1.6 million.
Now the Vancouver-based entrepreneur traverses the continent with
his "Millionaire Mind Intensive Seminar," on which this debut motivational
business manual is based.
What sets it apart is Mr Eker's focus on the way people think and
feel about money and his canny, class-based analyses of broad differences
among groups. In rat-a-tat, "Let me explain" seminar-speak, Harv asks
readers to think back to their childhoods and pick apart the lessons
they passively absorbed from parents and others about money.
With such psychological nuggets as "Rich people focus on opportunities/
Poor people focus on obstacles," Eker puts a positive spin on stereotypes,
arguing that poverty begins, or rather, is allowed to continue, in
one's imagination first, with actual material life becoming a self-fulfilling
prophecy.
To that end, T Harv Eker counsels for admiration and against resentment,
for positivity, self-promotion and thinking big and against wallowing,
self-abnegation and small-mindedness. While much of the advice is self-evident,
Eker's contribution is permission to think of one's financial foibles
as a kind of mental illness—one, he says, that has a ready set of cures...
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