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The
9 Steps to Financial Freedom
Practical and Spiritual Steps So You Can Stop Worrying
By Suze Orman
Published by Three Rivers Press
December 2000; $13.95US/$21.00CAN; 0-609-80186-4
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The personal
finance classic that started a revolution -- now fully revised
and updated -- in paperback for the first time! |

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Suze Orman has transformed the concept
of personal finance for millions by teaching us how to gain control of
our money -- so that money does not control us. She goes beyond the
nuts and bolts of managing money to explore the psychological, even
spiritual power money has in our lives. The 9 Steps to Financial
Freedom is the first personal finance book that gives you not only
the knowledge of how to handle money, but also the will to break
through all the barriers that hold you back. Combining real-life
recommendations with the motivation to overcome financial anxieties,
Suze Orman offers the keys to providing for yourself and your family,
including:
- seeing how your past holds the key
to your financial future
- facing your fears and creating new
truths
- trusting yourself more than you
trust others
- being open to receiving all that you
are meant to have
- understanding the lessons of the
money cycle
The 9 Steps to Financial Freedom
is useful advice and inspiration from the leading voice in personal
finance. As Orman shows, managing money is far more than a matter of
balancing your checkbook or picking the right investments. It's about
redefining financial freedom -- and realizing that you are worth far
more than your money.
Author
Suze Orman is a Certified Financial Planner® professional and
a bestselling author of personal finance books. The 9 Steps to
Financial Freedom was on the New York Times bestseller list
for eleven months and was also a USA Today, Wall Street
Journal, and BusinessWeek bestseller.
Excerpt
What Do You Want From Your Money?
What do you want from your money?
College tuition for your kids? A bigger house and a new car? Security
when you retire?
Wouldn't it be great simply to have
enough money so you don't have to worry?
The "enough money" part of
that equation is easy. By the time you finish this book you will
understand everything you need to know about managing and protecting
your money and making it grow. The "so you don't have to
worry" part is much more complex. It actually has nothing to do
with how much money you have or how little. You can balance your
checkbook until you're blue in the face, you can move money every day
between your mutual funds, you can double your life insurance, you can
buy lottery tickets -- and none of it will do you any good until you
get beyond the worry and fear. The fear of money, the fear of not
having enough, the fear of having enough, the fear of taking action,
the fear of inaction.
There isn't a part of our lives that
money doesn't touch -- it affects our relationships, the way we go
about our everyday activities, our ability to make dreams reality,
everything. Most of us, I think, have a core of anxiety that we carry
around with us, though we may not admit it to ourselves. That is part
of money's power over us.
From years as a financial planner I
have learned that true financial freedom doesn't depend on how much
money you have. Financial freedom is when you have power over your
fears and anxieties instead of the other way around. That's why, in
this book, we'll address first the fears, then the finances.
Whatever their circumstances -- in
debt, working, downsized, afraid of becoming downsized, retired,
having just inherited money, having just lost money -- my clients
invariably arrive with a handful of financial papers and a heart full
of anxieties. Like most Certified Financial Planner® professionals, I
started my practice to help other people with their money, but as time
went on, I realized that it was far more than their money (or lack of
it) that needed attention. Today new clients arrive expecting me to
ask to see their papers. Instead I ask them first to share their
fears.
It's never too soon to begin, and it's
never too late, no matter how the bottom-line numbers read today on
your particular handful of financial papers. This book presents a
nine-step process that will take you back into the past, when your
attitudes about money were born and began to grow. It will help you
face the present honestly and clear the way for you to create a future
you will love.
I know it works. As you read this book
you will meet others who have taken the steps toward financial freedom
-- and finally made possible the lives they dreamed about.
You will also see that if I could do it
against all odds, so can you. When I was very young I had already
learned that the reason my parents seemed so unhappy wasn't that they
didn't love each other; it was that they never had quite enough money
even to pay the bills. In our house money meant tension, worry, and
sorrow. When I was about thirteen my dad owned his own business, a
tiny chicken shack where he sold take-out chicken, ribs, hamburgers,
hot dogs, and fries. One day the oil that the chicken was fried in
caught fire. In a few minutes the whole place exploded in flames. My
dad bolted from the store before the flames could engulf him. This was
when my mom and I happened to arrive on the scene, and we all stood
outside watching the fire burn away my dad's business.
All of a sudden my dad realized that he
had left his money in the metal cash register inside the building, and
I watched in disbelief as he ran back into the inferno, in the split
second before anyone could stop him. He tried and tried to open the
metal register, but the intense heat had already sealed the drawer
shut. Knowing that every penny he had was locked in front of him,
about to go up into flames, he literally picked up the scalding metal
box and carried it outside. When he threw the register on the ground,
the skin on his arms and chest came with it.
He had escaped the fire safely once,
untouched. Then he voluntarily risked his life and was severely
injured. The money was that important. That was when I learned that
money is obviously more important than life itself.
From that point on, earning money, lots
of money, not only became what drove me professionally, but also
became my emotional priority. Money became, for me, not the means to a
life rich in all kinds of ways; money became my singular goal.
Years later this kid from the South
Side of Chicago was a broker with a huge investment firm. I was rich,
richer than I could have imagined. And I realized I was profoundly
unhappy; the money hadn't bought or brought me happiness. So if money
wasn't the key to happiness, what was? It was then that I began a
quest, which has taken me deep into the meaning of life -- and the
meaning of money.
I don't know if I have discovered the
meaning of life, but I have learned a great deal about what money can
and cannot do. And it can do a lot. Your money will work for you, and
you will always have enough -- more than enough -- when you give it
energy, time, and understanding. I have come to think that money is
very much like a person, and it will respond when you treat it as you
would a cherished friend -- never fearing it, pushing it away,
pretending it doesn't exist, or turning away from its needs, never
clutching it so hard that it hurts. Sometimes it's fatter, sometimes
it's skinnier, sometimes it doesn't feel so good and needs special
nurturing. But if you tend it like the living entity it is, then it
will flourish, grow, take care of you for as long as you need it, and
look after the loved ones you leave behind.
Most of us already know at least some
of the steps we could take to free ourselves from money anxieties --
we could manage our debt better, arrange for our children's education,
strategically plan now for later, protect what we've saved, save more.
Yet most of us are paralyzed, too, when it comes to actually taking
these steps, however wise they seem, however much we think we really
want to take control.
What good will it do you to know what
you should do, if you can't do it?
The
Nine Steps to Financial Freedom: A Preview
The first steps of this book take you
back to discover why you don't do the things you know you should do
and bring you beyond that -- to where you can take action. These steps
will free you to open up a dialogue about money with your parents,
your children, and, most important, yourself. The next three steps are
the laws of managing money. These laws are must-do's. They cover
everything from wills and trusts and what insurance you need (and
don't need) to new ways to think about debt and your 401(k) or
retirement plan to how to invest and what to invest in. They teach you
why you must trust yourself more than you trust anyone else with your
money.
The goal of these particular steps is
to make you as independent from financial advisers as possible. Over
the years, I have learned that it is in my clients' best interest for
them to take control over their money, not to relinquish it, even to
me. If, later on, they choose to entrust their money to someone else,
with these steps they would no longer be able to be taken advantage of
by an unscrupulous adviser -- or by their unwillingness to face up to
the facts and figures of their own finances. Once you take these
steps, you will discover the exhilaration that comes from wanting to
deal with your money, not just having to deal with it.
The last three steps take you beyond
the realm of finances, to the wealth that money can't buy.
When it comes to money, freedom starts
to happen when what you do, think, and say are
one. You'll never be free if you say that you have more than enough,
then act as if and think you don't. You'll never be free if you think
you don't have enough, then act as if and say you do. You will have
enough when you believe you will and take the actions to express that
belief. And you'll have more than enough when you realize that you can
be rich at any income because you are more than your money, you are
more than your job or title, than the car you drive or the clothing
you wear. Your own power and worth are not judged by what money can
sell and what money can buy; true freedom cannot be bought or sold at
any price. True freedom, true wealth, is that which can never be lost.
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Copyright ©
2000 Suze Orman
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