Jan
24
Sabotaging Prosperity with Self-Talk About the Meaning of Money
January 24, 2010 | Leave a Comment
Posted by: Kathleen Daniel
During my ritual beginning-of-the-year cleansing of files, bookmarks and the like, I came across this short reflection about money called: Are You a Reverse Money Snob? from the Barefoot Executive’s site for At Home Professionals. Its musings on our attitudes towards wealth seem germane as we continue evaluating the meaning and role of money in our lives.
“We developed our attitude toward wealthy people from the messages we received while growing up and we all have some bias toward wealth or the lack of it. Women tend to be almost twice a biased against the wealthy as are men, believing they are greedy, snobby, selfish, and self-centered. I’ve heard this myself when talking with women who praise themselves for being able to survive on so little and feel superior because of it. Because they view the wealthy with such disdain, they will never allow themselves to become one of them – they are reverse snobs.
Your ability to become wealthy depends largely on your view of wealthy people. If you see them as inherently frivolous, unhappy, and lacking in values, you are not likely to allow yourself to become one of them. You might console yourself in your misery by feeling that you are somehow “above” those people. Its false flattery and a trap that will keep you perpetually mired in debt and lack. Don’t fall for it.
Choose wealth.
You will not become a different person simply because you become wealthy. If you are stingy now, you will be stingy then. If you are generous now, you will be generous then – probably more so. And if you live a life of moral righteousness, what on earth makes you think that your morals can just be bought with money? If you are morally upstanding now, you will continue to be so when you are wealthy. But then, you will also be a more visible model for others to follow.
If you have allowed yourself to be an under-earner and under-achiever, making far less than you are worth simply because it alleviated any guilt you might feel for being wealthy, you are also a reverse snob.
You have given yourself permission to feel superior by being poor. This is simply ridiculous.
Do you think you were brought into this world to be average or content with mediocrity? You are blessed with the ability and the opportunity to prosper so that you could go out and do more good in the world. Live up to your life. Would you want any less for your own children?
Now go be a millionaire!”
{{ P.S. If that’s what you really want!}}
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