How Much is Enough?
How do you know how much is enough? Being able to answer this question means having a sense of “good enough” inside, which results in an internal affirmation of worth. If you equate love and self-esteem with money and power, ‘more’ will never be enough. Words: 430
In further edited excerpts from the original article* David Krueger (www.The SecretLanguageOf Money.com) goes on to say:
Much of our challenge with money stems from our difficulty to make one small distinction: what we have from who we are.
A Money Quiz
Answer the following two questions with a single, specific figure.
My current annual income is __________?
In order to insure happiness and contentment financially, with no more money problems and worries, my annual income would need to be _________.
I have given this quiz to hundreds of people. In more than 9 of 10 cases, their answers indicate that their annual income would need to be about twice the current level for them to feel happy and free from money worries. Someone who makes $50,000 a year believes it would take roughly $100,000 a year in order to be financially content; someone who makes $500,000 – five times the first person’s magical number – believes that the figure would need to be about a million a year.
In discussions with people after they take this little poll, there is a “trailing double” effect. People who have actually seen their income double over time have at the same time doubled their “happy and content” amount. In other words, once those who earned $50,000 achieve their hoped-for $100,000 goal, they then raise the bar and believe that it would now take about $200,000 to be happy.
Even when you change the numbers, the story remains the same. The story in this case is: “I need twice as much as I have to be happy.” That’s just one example of the common story threads; there are dozens of others, just as irrational, and just as hypnotically compelling.
Making peace with our moving target isn’t about learning how to aim better, or creating a fixed target that doesn’t move even after we hit it.
Creating financial targets (goals) is an important part of writing a new money story—but finding peace lies not in the target, but in the shooter. Your new money story begins with determining not what it is you want to have, but who it is you want to be.
*http://www.thesecretlanguageofmoney.com/
Editor’s Note:
- The above article consists of reformatted edited excerpts from the original for the sake of brevity, clarity and to ensure a fast and easy read. The author’s views and conclusions are unaltered.
- Permission to reprint in whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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Posted by Editor on Mar 11 2010, With 0 Reads, Filed under Personal Finance. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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