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The books you usually read are mostly harmless books.
This is not a harmless book, it is a dangerous book. It can do you a lot of good, but to get to do you good it must first hurt you a lot, because it will be you and from the first lines it will force you to sacrifice parts of your personality, of your own identity, to which you are now attached, but which constitute the ballast that prevents you from flying higher.
The first painful truth is that being rich is not your right or a matter of luck, but your duty.
Feeling rich, satisfied and serene is the duty of every good citizen,
…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The books you usually read are mostly harmless books.

This is not a harmless book, it is a dangerous book. It can do you a lot of good, but to get to do you good it must first hurt you a lot, because it will be you and from the first lines it will force you to sacrifice parts of your personality, of your own identity, to which you are now attached, but which constitute the ballast that prevents you from flying higher.

The first painful truth is that being rich is not your right or a matter of luck, but your duty.

Feeling rich, satisfied and serene is the duty of every good citizen, who must set an example for his children and for the community. Righteous moral behavior can and should be associated with success in life, not poverty and hardship. Too often we see examples of honest people living a disadvantaged life, thus transmitting a corrupt message to the community: if you want to be a decent person, the price to pay is the renunciation of something, in particular you have to give up success and money.

Wealth should be considered a civic duty – like going to vote – and therefore lived as such. Money must no longer represent a desire that springs from greed, anxiety or a sense of emptiness, but a duty that must be fulfilled by every good citizen for the good of all. Money must therefore be moved from the sphere of desire to the sphere of duty.

Money is only a means of achieving goals and at the same time a side effect of having achieved certain goals. If you want a lot of money, you don't have to play the lottery, online poker or look for the "method to get fast earnings", as the mediocre citizen does, but you have to set yourself big goals in your life. Those who feel the duty to set themselves a goal out of the ordinary, it is right that they earn figures out of the ordinary. If, on the other hand, your goal is money itself, wealth – assuming you get it – will bring you above all worries and fears, and the satisfactions will remain partial and temporary.

When you come to understand how useless it is to be interested in money and how important it is to first understand and then constantly pursue your mission, then you will feel obliged to increase your wealth, and you will do so with joy, because wealth will allow you to better carry out this mission. Only those who desire nothing for their ego can become the depository of large amounts of money and dispenser of the riches of the universe.