Posts Tagged ‘debting’
End Underearning & Debting Teleclass
If underearning and/or chronic are problems for you, you’ll want to attend this information-packed teleclass on May 26 at 3:pm EST, Noon Pacific, 8 pm GMT.
This interactive teleclass for those who are serious about improving their financial condition.
Read about the class at
http://EndUnderearning.com
Here’s a fact: Even in this economy, you can overcome patterns of your past and move into a prosperous financial position if you:
- Understand what the payoff for staying in a “poor me” position is for you.
- Are willing to put into practice some guaranteed real-world solutions that I’ll be teaching
- Learn to develop realistic income-producing strategies
- Get to know and appreciate your unique talents
- Use the techniques you’ll learn on May 26
All the information you need to decide if this class is right for you is at
http://EndUnderearning.com
There’s an Early-Bird special you won’t want to miss!
I hope you’ll join me. Listen via phone, Webcast, or download the replay.
The Connection between Anger, Underearning, and Debting
In my book Build Your Money Muscles, I identify the five main feelings that are expressed most often through money. They include abandonment/aloneness, shame, deprivation, a sense of being trapped, and anger, which we will look at today.
Anger is a very valid emotion. Yet in many cultures people are discouraged from expressing anger in a healthy way. As a result, anger is often repressed and turned inward. Your negative self-talk can be anger directed inwards.
Anger expressed through finances shows up in a number of ways. Borrowing money without paying it back, nonpayment of taxes, late bill paying, and compulsive spending can all be expressions of anger. (Think, “I’ll show you!”) Underearning and debting are two of the most common ways that anger finds itself in finances. Read the rest of this entry »
Debting As Penance
I had one of those AHAs the other day and want to share it with you.First, let me say that I have been looking at our emotions and money from a more global perspective–trying to see what we all share and how we create our financial situation–as a group.
For example, right now, many people are suffering financially. Although each person or family has their own story, there is also a group dynamic. After hearing the words terror, killing, bombings, etc. on a daily basis, many are acting out their fear of dying through a fear of dying financially. Thus the mortgage meltdown, stock market plunge, and rising food prices.
These things don’t just happen, they are created by the group consciousness.
A credit crises of monstrous proportions is also looming as credit tightens and consumers are stretched beyond their means. So, I asked myself, what does this group debting represent.
Read the rest of this entry »



