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The Secret Language of Money
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| Guest post by: David Krueger |
Article Overview: Everyone has a money story-a money autobiography with a plot, storylines, conflicts, and strivings. Every important relationship, including money, has its own history, develops its own story, and evolves its own language. Even though we talk about money regularly, think about it daily, we may not know how to clearly and simply tell our money stories to our selves to see what needs to change.
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Free Download - The Secret Language of Money By David Krueger |
The Secret Language of Money
At a
number of business seminars and presentations, I passed out an index card and
asked each person in the audience to write anonymously a single answer to each
of three questions. The three questions are:
1. To me
money means _________.
2. My
current annual income is _______________.
3. In
order to insure happiness and contentment financially, with no more money
problems and worries, my annual income would need to be __________.
The
answers to these three simple questions reveal how much more we attribute to
money than it being a medium of exchange. Money has a range of emotional
meanings hitchhiking on it: love, security, control, power, worth, freedom,
success, status.
In over
90% of the hundreds of people I have polled, their annual income would need to
be roughly double its current amount for them to feel happy, content, without
money problems and worries. This is as true as for someone who makes $50,000 a
year, and believes it would take roughly $100,000 a year in order to be
financially content as it is for someone who makes $500,000 and believes that
it would take roughly a million a year. And, in discussions after this brief
poll, those who actually experienced their income doubling also doubled their
"happy and content" amount: for someone who had made $50,000 and
believed that it would take around $100,000 to be happy, when they had achieved
$100,000 annually, they then thought it would take about twice that amount to
be content and worry-free about money.
Money
was always intended to be a symbol, so it is a ready stand-in as a screen onto
which we project personal meanings of what we idealize, want, yet fear we don't
have enough of, don't deserve, or can never have. Particular emotions, such as
fear and greed, may predominate in the money arena. Strategies and game plans
may be abandoned at times of excess stimulation - when things are going
particularly bad or especially good - and bad investment decisions prevail.
Money's
symbolism is uniquely subjective, though society adds metaphors of its own. Some
of the meanings are outside the realm of logic, reason, and intellect. The
issue of money may quickly spark ambition, insecurity, envy, fear, jealousy,
complication, guilt, or any number of emotional reactions. If someone is
competitive, insecure, or prone to fantasize and worry, money is always a
reliable and tangible focus, a yardstick of many measures.
Many
emotional and relationship issues can manifest vividly in the financial arena,
focusing on money as the answer, the problem, or both. Money may be the common
language of success phobia, impulsivity, and even fear of autonomy, such as
creating financial crises from which to be rescued. Money symptoms include
compulsions such as gambling, shopping, hoarding. Money may become the currency
of addictions such as work, financial risk-taking, money acquisition, or
impulsive spending.
While we
often make decisions on an emotional basis, the particular meanings and
significance of money has a built-in readiness to be an emotional trip wire for
meanings and decisions that are repetitive and limiting.
The more
money represents unfulfilled needs or wants, the more promise it holds of
happiness. The perpetual hope that more money will provide happiness sharply
focuses what "enough" is. Someone who assumes that more money would
bring more security or freedom may find that more money paradoxically brings a
lessened sense of security and freedom. Or, if we could have just the right
amount of money, then we could do exactly what we really want to do and have
what we want. The "right amount" may be a specific figure, but if it
is a floating figure defined by "more" it is perpetually elusive. But
this illusion may not have to be confronted as long as the amount extends
beyond the realized, and about double is a safe lead.
Understanding
and changing money problems and patterns requires understanding your money
story as part of a life story that you are creating each day. The beginning of
evaluation of that story is to recognize that you are the author of that story.
Whatever you think, feel, and do are active creations for ownership moment by
moment.
Being
loyal to a game plan and reaching a goal assumes having a game plan and
attainable goals. First, construct a map to figure out where you are and where
you want to go. Without a map, there cannot be a plan to get there; without
knowing where you want to go, any map will do. Next, figure out how to get
there. Primary problems with those who do not succeed include not knowing where
they are, where they are going, not having a plan to get there, or getting
distracted from their plan to get there. Having a map (attainable goals and
measurable results) allows you to filter noise, to discern the route to where
you want to go, and to recognize what is tangential or a detour in getting
there.
Your
life is the manifestation of your beliefs. Changing your mind changes your
brain and life, as beliefs, goals, and visions drive action. Your experiences
are always consistent with your assumptions: enhance the ones that work, and
change the ones that don't work.
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Article Tags: money autobiography, money psychology, neuroeconomics, secret language
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About the Author: David Krueger RSS for David's articles - Visit David's website David Krueger, M.D. is an Executive Mentor Coach, and CEO of MentorPath, an executive coaching firm to help professionals and executives write the next chapter of their life or business stories. His approach integrates the insights of psychology, neuroscience, and professional coaching to help clients move to new levels of mastery. Author of fifteen trade and professional books on success, wellness, money, and self-development, and seventy-five scientific papers, his coaching and writing focus on the art and science of success strategies: mind over matters. Dr. Krueger formerly practiced and taught Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis and was Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Baylor College of Medicine. He founded and served as CEO for two healthcare corporations, co-founded a third startup that went from venture capital to merger/acquisition. www.MentorPath.com www.NewLifeStoryCoaching.com dkrueger@mentorpath.com 281.397.9001 Click here to visit David's website POSSIBILITY THINKING 18 Career Enhancement Caveats 18 STRATEGIES TO AVOID CHANGE INSTALL NEW BRAIN PARADIGMS INVERSE WISDOM |
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