The Resilient Mind - Change Yourself, Change Everything - Jim Rohn
Episode Date: May 28, 2025Jim Rohn was a renowned motivational speaker who has been widely regarded as one of the best in his field during his time. He had an incredible ability to inspire and motivate people from all walks of... life with his speeches and teachings. One of his most notable achievements was serving as a mentor to Tony Robbins, one of the most successful and well-known motivational speakers in the world today.Take action and strengthen your mind with The Resilient Mind Journal. Get your free digital copy today: Download Now Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome to the Resilient Mind podcast.
In this episode, you will be listening to Change Yourself, Change Everything with Jim Rohn.
Get access to the Resilient Mind Journal by clicking the link in the show notes.
Enjoy.
And when I get a chance to speak at a high school class or a university class, I'm always excited about it.
I'm limited in time, so I wanted to use this way to come and share my story with you and some ideas.
that might be helpful in your career for the future,
in your now busy life as a student,
and then wherever you find yourself in the years to come,
some of the things I'm going to share with you.
I want you to remember for a long, long time,
because the ideas I want to translate for you drastically affected my life.
And if I can share now and affect your life and you write me a letter
or tell me in person someday, Mr. Rohn, I listened to your video and I watched it carefully,
and sure enough, some of the
the ideas that you shared greatly affected me.
And here's what's happened to my bank account.
Here's what happened to me in school.
Here's what's happening to my future.
That'll give me great, great satisfaction.
So the man who shared with me ideas that changed my life,
I want to share with you three of those basic subjects.
When I met him, I was 25 years old.
And when I first got acquainted with him,
I used a lot of excuses as to why I wasn't doing well.
And he said, well, tell me.
me a little bit about your story and I told him, you know, I was behind on my bills,
had pennies in my pocket and nothing in the bank, but I was embarrassed about being behind on my
big mouth promises to my family. And then he gave me one little simple phrase that really
forever changed my life. And here's what he said. Mr. Rohn, if you want the future to change for you,
you've got to change. And he said, if you don't change, the next six years of your life is going to be
just like the last six.
You'll still be behind on your bills.
You'll still be behind on your promises.
But then he gave it to me in the form of a promise.
When I was 25 years old, I've remembered it all these years,
and I've shared this promise now with probably over 3 million people
in the last 30 plus years.
And it's going to be valid for you.
So listen carefully to this promise.
My teacher said to me,
young man, if you will change,
everything will change for you.
If you will get better, everything will get better for you.
What a clear message that was for me.
He said, if you'll change your philosophy, if you'll change your habits,
if you'll refine your thinking,
if you'll change and accept some new disciplines,
if you'll turn the corner, where you've been in the past,
go for a new life for the future, he said,
all kinds of remarkable things will happen for you,
if you will change.
Before I met Mr. Schoe,
if I used to cross my fingers and say,
I sure hope things will change.
I was hoping the government would change and the tax structure would change and that my boss would change and pay me more money.
I was hoping that, you know, economics would change and prices would come down.
And I was hoping that circumstances would get better.
And then I discovered from my teacher that those things are going to continue the same.
In fact, all of those things that happened to us is kind of like the wind that blows.
And the wind blows on us all.
But if you just let the wind blow, I'm telling you, it won't take you where you want to go.
All of us must use this wind to take us to the dreams we've got,
to the equities we want, to the money we want, to the income we want,
and to all the things we want our life to have.
This is where we want to go, and we've got a good wind,
but we must not leave our future just to the wind, just to the economy,
just to the structure of the way things are happening today.
Here's what we must learn to do, and that is set a good sale.
And if you'll learn to set a good sale,
and that's what my teacher taught me in those early days,
he said, Mr. Rohn, the wind is going to blow, however it's going to blow.
Politics are going to be politics, and the economy is going to be the economy,
and however it turns out, that's the way it's going to be.
What you must learn to do is not to wish for a better wind.
That's naive.
The key is to wish for the wisdom and the skills
and the learning so that you can set a better sale.
And so that's what I did at age 25.
I went to work not on the economy.
I went to work not on the community.
I didn't go to work to try to change the government.
I didn't go to work to try to change my boss or the company.
I didn't go to work to try to change circumstances.
I went to work to try to change myself.
And I picked up that promise.
My teacher shared with me.
that if I would change, my income would change.
If I would change, my bank account would change.
If I would change, my future would change.
And sure enough, his promise came true for me.
The first six years of my economic life, I wound up broke.
Those pennies in my pocket, nothing in the bank behind on my promises.
The second six years of my economic life, I wound up rich.
But interestingly enough, the second six years of my economic life,
the government was about the same and the economy was about the same.
You know, the companies were about the same.
What they paid was the same.
Circumstances around me were the same.
You know, my negative relatives were the same.
But I was not the same.
That's how my life changed.
And that's how things started working for me,
changing my life all those years ago.
So that's what I wanted to share with you to begin with,
this beginning of what Mr. Schof shared with me
that if I wanted my life to change,
this was what I was going to have to do.
And so he broke it down.
into three subjects that really made an impact on my life and I want to share those with you.
The first subject he called personal development and the second subject he called setting goals
and the third was how to become financially independent. And I'd like to give you just a few
clues from those three major subjects that that so dramatically affected my life and let's get started.
first one is personal development. Now, in illustrating personal development, Mr. Schof, my teacher,
started with money. You know, money's not the only place to start in talking personal
development, but it's where he started, so let me share the thoughts he shared with me back then,
let me share them with you. Here's the best lesson I can give you on economics. It's very
simple. We get paid for bringing value to the marketplace. That's about as simple as I can put economics.
We get paid for bringing value to the marketplace. Now, it takes time to bring value to the marketplace.
However, we do not get paid for time. So we cross that out. Mistakenly, the man says, I'm making about $20 for an hour. Not true.
If that was true, you could just stay home, right, and have them send your money.
So that's not true.
We don't get paid for time.
We get paid for value brought to the marketplace.
Now, since that's true, here's one of the key questions of my talk to you today.
Is it possible to become twice as valuable to the marketplace and make twice as much money in the same time?
Is that possible?
The answer is yes.
Could you become three times as valuable as you might be right?
now to the marketplace and make three times as much money in the same time and the
answer is yes five times ten times of course now there's some key questions to ask
here why would the marketplace pay someone only five dollars an hour very simple
answer they're not very valuable to the marketplace now we must underline to the
marketplace this person might be a very valuable brother yes member the family valuable yes
Yes, valuable member of the church, of course.
Valuable citizen of the country?
Yes.
Valuable in the sight of God, no doubt.
We're all of equal value in the sight of God.
But if you're not very valuable to the marketplace, you don't get much money.
You say, well, it shouldn't be that way.
Well, then you've got to start your own country.
You know, this one's been in process for 200 years and this is the best we've been able to come up with so far.
But here's the key.
You don't have to stay.
here. Now there was a big debate in Congress last year that this $5 was not enough,
should be six, should be six, should be six, should be six, but we don't need legislation.
Six is already on this ladder. The next step up. You know, if you work for McDonald's,
they'll pay you $5 an hour to take out the trash. If you whistle while you take out
the trash, they'll pay you $6 an hour. So we don't need that legislation. You just need to
take lessons on how to whistle. Have a good attitude. Now, as you begin to climb this
latter, why would the marketplace pay some people $50 an hour?
Answer, evidently, they must be more valuable to the marketplace, 10 times more valuable.
And is that possible for someone to be 10 times more valuable and earn $50 an hour instead
of five?
And the answer is yes.
Now, why would the marketplace pay some people $500 an hour?
Evidently, this person must be much more valuable to the marketplace.
That's what's important to understand to the marketplace.
And would the marketplace pay one person $80 million for one year's work?
And the answer is, of course.
If you helped a company make a billion dollars, would they pay you $80 million?
I'm telling you, it is possible.
It's possible for all of this to come true for all of you, no matter where you.
you start as a student in school, just getting started out there in the workplace, this is all possible
for you. Now, Mr. Schof gave me the clue on how to climb this ladder as high as I wanted to climb.
Now, we're talking primarily economics here. There's a lot of other ways to become valuable to your
family, valuable to your friends, valuable to the community, valuable to the team, right?
valuable to the team effort, valuable to the concert.
But here's what he said to me.
In climbing this ladder economically,
all you have to do is work harder on yourself
than you do on your job.
Once I heard that, it made sense to me.
I kept hoping that everything else would change around me,
found out that if I went to work on myself,
worked on my skills, worked on my language,
if I became better than I was each year,
if I grew in skills and language and vocabulary and competence,
then I would become attractive to the marketplace.
Not very long ago.
A company called me and said, Mr. Owen,
we're expanding internationally.
We'd like to have a bit of your expertise to help us.
Would you give us a bit of your time?
We'll add some millions to your fortune.
And I said, okay.
And I thought later, isn't that interesting they would call me?
Then my second thought was, of course they'd call me.
Who else would they call?
I can get the job done.
Now, what a contrast for me,
farm boy from Idaho raised in obscurity,
parents of modest means broke when I was 25.
How come I would get a telephone call
and someone offer me a lot of money
to help them in expanding around the world?
Simple answer, evidently.
Something happened to me between age 25
and where I am today.
And I can tell you where it all started.
from my teacher Mr. Shoeff, who said to me,
we don't have to change what's going on out there.
That's the wind that's blowing.
All we have to do is change what's going on in here.
And now there are several ways to do that on personal development.
And let me give you those ways.
Here's the first one.
We must learn from personal experience.
Pretty simple.
Learn what happens to you.
Take a look back over the last few months.
Did you make some mistakes?
how could you correct those for the future?
Take a look back over the last year.
Have you done it right or done it wrong?
Let's correct it for the next year.
Learn from your personal experience.
Mr. Schof asked me when I first met him.
He said, Mr. Ron, how are you doing?
You've been out there now six years, and I said, I'm not doing very well.
He said, I suggest you not do that anymore.
What a simple swift analysis to my situation.
He said, if you keep doing it, the next six years will be like the last six.
You don't want that to happen.
Let's make the changes.
So learn from your personal experience.
Now here's number two why I came to share this video experience with you today, and that
I call it OPE, other people's experiences.
That's me, other people.
That's your teacher, other people.
That's your friends and colleagues, other people.
The people you meet that can pass along to you their experiences, what's happened to them,
The mistakes they made, how they corrected them, how they changed their health and change their bank account and change their income and change their future.
That's it.
Other people.
Now, there's two kinds of people to learn from.
One is failures.
It's too bad failures.
Don't give seminars, right?
That would be valuable.
Bring your notebook.
Have them tell you how they lost it all and threw it all away, through their health away, and threw their friendships away, and things didn't work out well.
That would be valuable.
but now then we must also learn from positive people that have done well.
They've got the health, and so we ask them, how did you become so healthy?
They've got the skills, so we ask them, how did you become this skillful?
They've got the income, so we ask them, how did you get here in such a short period of time?
So now here's what's important in personal development.
In learning from other people, we learn number one by observation.
We learn what we see, we watch people that are,
successful in what they do. In sports, we watch their disciplines. In business, we watch their
disciplines. By observation, what we can see. The reason I created this video is something that
you could see someone's experience is translated for you. Second, we learn by what we hear.
I've got some of my lectures on cassette tape, so, you know, you can take them with you
wherever you go and learn by listening. Turn your coffee. Turn your coffee.
into a mobile classroom and listen.
And then listen to the sermon on Sunday morning.
Listen to the lectures.
Listen to the teacher.
Listen to someone who's got something good to say.
And then number three is vitally important on personal development,
and that is read all the books,
all the books you can possibly read in your lifetime.
Mr. Schof got me started on my library.
I've got one of the better libraries.
Haven't read everything in it,
but I feel smarter just walking in it by library.
At least I was smart enough to buy it.
Now I got to be smart enough to read it.
Then of course I got to be smart enough to decide what's valuable and then do it.
But this one is very important, become a good reader.
Some books that helped change my life.
Mr. Schof recommended, of course, the Bible.
And my parents made sure I was a pretty good scholar by the time I was 18.
That's been so beneficial for me drawing from those illustrations,
reading about those stories, people who made it and people who didn't make it and what the difference was.
and then other books that helped to really change my life.
One called Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill.
And then a book that helped me become financially independent
by the time I was 31.
And that book is called The Richest Man in Babylon
by George Clayson.
And I'm going to share a little bit of that book with you
when I get to financial independence today, our third subject.
But I started reading the books,
attending the classes,
making sure that I got in front of people that had something good to say.
And then I started keeping a journal.
One of the major things my teacher taught me was to keep a journal.
He said, don't trust your memory.
If you hear something good, just make a little note and write it down.
Now, at first I took notes on pieces of paper and torn off corners and backs of old envelopes.
And it didn't serve me well, you know, thrown in a drawer.
Then I learned to keep a journal.
bound copy of all my notes. So I would suggest you do the same. Things that impress you, a poem
that impresses you. When you attend a class, some of the ideas that impressed you, jot them down.
You read something in a magazine, right? Some ideas. Take those out, put them in your journal.
Keep a good journal the rest of your life. This will serve you well. My journals make up a significant
portion of my own library. And if you saw my library and saw my journals, I tell you what you'd have to say,
This is the library and these are the journals of a very serious student.
No wonder Mr. Rohn is invited to lecture and speak on his experiences around the world.
So I want the same thing to happen to you.
Value captured that you can resort to later, go back over it and review it and let it become valuable to you.
So that's my first subject, personal development.
Work harder on yourself than you do on your job.
Develop the skills.
Learn the lessons.
Take the classes.
Absorb all that is being taught to you these days.
And then later on, of course, you can sort it out,
what's valuable for you and how to refine it
for your business and for your life and for your future.
But the main thing is to get it
and start this process of personal change, personal development.
And let me say it one more time, if you will change.
Everything will change for you.
You'll never be the same.
You'll keep growing.
As you look back on a few months,
look back on a few years,
you won't believe the progress you can make.
Economically, your relationship with your family, your friends,
and whether you're in sports or economics or whatever,
I'm telling you,
that whole process of committing yourself
for personal change, personal value,
can really make your life unique and worthwhile.
Now let's cover the second subject on setting goals.
Mr. Schult gave me some tips on setting goals
that changed my life forever,
and I want to cheer those with you.
you. So let's talk about setting goals and I also want to tie it to personal development and you'll
see how I'm going to do it as I progress here. Setting goals. We need to take a look into the future.
There are four things to consider in terms of attitude. One is how you feel about the past.
Best advice I can give you on that is treat the past as a school. Let it teach you the mistakes you've
made, the things that went wrong, the things that didn't work, don't use the past as a burden to
carry and don't use the past as a club to beat yourself to death, past losses, past failures, past
mistakes. But let the past be a school, tough school maybe. We've all been through some tough stuff.
So if you feel good about the past, draw from it for experience and let it teach you. Then next is how
you feel about the future. We've got to have the future well designed. The future is called the
promise. And here's what we teach in our leadership series. The promise of the future can be an
awesome force for your own future. The promise of the future, designing the future. There's two
ways to face the future. One is with apprehension and the other is with anticipation. I promise
you, in my travels around the world, most people face the future with apprehension. And here's
why they don't have it well designed. They've sort of left that up to someone.
else to fix.
But here's the best way to face the future with anticipation.
And you can face the future with anticipation
if the future is clear, if the future is well designed.
And I would like to have you consider some thoughts
with me that help me to really change my future
by giving it some thought and some consideration.
And here it is.
In setting goals, it's very simple.
Number one, decide what you want.
You just take a little time.
You sit down and say, what do I want?
What kind of skills do I want?
What kind of income do I want for the future?
What would I like, where would I like to go, places I'd like to visit,
habits I'd like to acquire, skills I'd like to have.
You just take a little time to think about what you want.
Economics, friendships, people you'd like to meet, places you'd like to go,
you just take some time.
And then I suggest when you've thought about
what you want for the future, make a list.
Just jot it all down.
It's really a very simple process.
And then here's number three.
Keep all the old lists.
I'm telling you this served me so well
keeping my old list of goals.
I look back now 10, 20 years ago
at goals I set, lists I made,
and I smile now because here's what I thought
was so important, you know, 20 years ago.
now some of those things aren't even on my list.
I've got a new list.
I've grown.
I've changed.
I've matured.
But I give you that advice.
Decide what you want.
Number two, write it down.
Number three, keep the old lists.
And then here's number four.
When you get something that's on one of these lists,
check it off.
Part of the fun of having a list is checking it off.
And then if you can add some drama to checking it off,
see, that's what really helps.
I set a goal to go to Spain many, many years ago.
And when I finally made my first trip to Spain,
I had that journal with me that had that list in it.
And while I had my journal on my lap,
waiting for the wheels to touch down in Madrid,
I waited until the wheels touched the runway,
and I checked it off, just adding a little drama.
So part of the fun of having a list is checking it off.
Now, here's what's important about the list
and designing your future.
If the future gets clear, the price.
gets easier.
Because you've got to remember, for every promise, there's a price to pay.
Everybody's got to pay the price.
Everybody's got to do the deal.
Everybody's got to do the disciplines.
Everybody has to pay.
But here's what I've discovered.
If the promise is clear and powerful, the price is easy to pay.
The price is some classes.
The price is a few books.
The price is a few disciplines.
The price is finding something that's a few.
They'll make your life better, make you grow, make you change, make you develop.
So the first part of the key is to design the promise.
Then what is the price to pay?
I'm telling you, the price will be easy.
Anybody in my audience can pay it, no matter where you are, where you come from.
Color doesn't matter, religion doesn't matter, where you grew up doesn't matter,
circumstances don't matter, I'm telling you, if you'll make the promise of the future clear for yourself,
the things you want, the places you want to go, the things you want to have, the person you want to become,
skills you want, the homes you want, the future you want, the friends you want, all of the values
of life that you could possibly want. If you'll make that clear, make those lists and be serious
about it. I promise you it's an easy price to pay. Anybody can pay it. And the best advice I can
give you is, if I can do it, you can do it. Farm boy from Idaho raised in obscurity. I changed my life,
turned it upside down, turned it all around, found economics, found future, found promise,
If I can do it, you can do it.
So, start setting your goals and see if you can't get a better excitement going for the things
you want to accomplish for the future.
Now here's my third subject, and that's called financial independence.
Oh, by the way, before I get to financial independence, let me cover one more point.
One of the major reasons for setting goals is for what they make of you in achieving them.
My teacher advised me when I first got started at age 25.
He said, Jim, why don't you set a goal to become a millionaire?
He said, it's got a nice ring to it.
You know, enough zeros to impress your accountant.
And he said, I'm here to help you.
You're only 25 years old.
You've been to one year of college.
You've got a beautiful family.
Every reason to do it.
Why don't you set a goal to become a millionaire?
And he said, here's why.
And I thought, he doesn't need.
to teach me why wouldn't it be nice to have a million dollars he said no then you'll miss it he said
here's why for what it will make of you to achieve it i'm telling you that statement changed my life
set the kind of goals that will make something of you to achieve them he said now once you've
become a millionaire what's important is not the money i thought that's kind of strange teaching
he said honest it isn't important he said you could just give the money away now i did better than
that, I lost it all.
By the time I was 31, I was a millionaire.
By the time I was 33, I was broke.
And I'll tell you a little bit about that story later.
But when I lost all my money, guess what?
I found out Mr. Schof was right.
What was valuable was not the money.
What was valuable was what I became to earn the money.
The skills I had, the knowledge I had about the marketplace,
the values that I had going for me,
they were more valuable than the money.
And here's an important statement to remember.
It's not what you get that makes.
you valuable. It's what you become. So part of the key here is to set the kind of goals that
will make something of you. Don't set them too low so that you don't have to grow and you
don't have to read and you don't have to try and you don't have to stretch. Don't set them too low.
And then don't sell out. Don't go for something that's going to cost you your virtue or cost you
your values or sell out your principles. There's a good middle road here to follow. Goals that
will inspire, goals that will help you grow, change, develop, and become better than you are.
Okay. Now let's talk about financial independence. How to become rich by 40, 35 if you're
extra bright, much sooner if you find an opportunity like I did. Let me show you how I did it.
Financial independence. First of all, I like the phrase financial independence. Some people are a
bit concerned about using the word becoming rich or becoming wealthy. And I can understand that.
I struggled a little bit with this. Is it okay to go for becoming rich, go for becoming wealthy?
And maybe that's a bit too strong the word or strong a term. So here's what I've come up with
that I think is comfortable for me, and that is how to become financially independent.
I think it's every person's heritage here, especially in America, to become financially independent.
Now, let me give you my definition of financial independence.
Financial independence is the ability to live from the income of your own personal resources.
Financial independence.
Now it depends on how you want to live.
If you need $2,000, $3,000 a month, if you need $4,000 a month, if you need $10,000 a month,
some people may need, you know, $100,000 a month.
But whatever you would need to live and you could earn that living from the income of your own personal
resources, that's what I call financial freedom, financial independence.
And let me show you how to acquire it.
If you start at age 15, between ages 15 and 35 is 20 years, and in my personal opinion, based
on my own studies and my own experience, 20 years, in my opinion, is enough time to become
financially independent.
If you're not, you don't live in the wrong country, probably.
what's happened is you have the wrong plan.
And it's easy to be a nice person with the wrong plan.
I found that when I was 25 years old.
I was broke at age 25,
and I was a nice guy.
You would have liked me.
But I'm telling you,
my plans up until then,
especially my financial plan, left me broke.
I totally changed it the next six years,
and I became financially independent.
So I know what I'm talking about.
It is possible in a reasonable amount of time,
15 to 35.
Whatever.
20 years time, enough time.
You can do it in much shorter period of time
like I did if you want to,
but this is a reasonable enough time.
But here's number one.
First of all, you've got to have the right philosophy.
Philosophy is our ability to gather knowledge
and sort through it and decide what's valuable.
To develop a philosophy about life,
a philosophy about our health,
a philosophy about our family relationship,
a philosophy about economics.
And if you develop the right philosophy,
That's what helps to set this sale
so that in six years it takes you where you want to go
instead of winding up like I did
that first six years of my economics broke, no money, empty bank account.
The right philosophy.
Now let me give you a couple of philosophies to consider.
Here's the first one.
It's called the philosophy of the poor.
And here it is.
Poor people usually spend their money
and invest what's left.
That's the philosophy.
of the poor. Now here's the philosophy of the rich. Rich people invest their money and spend
what's left. And here's the startling answer. It really doesn't matter what the amount is.
What's most important is not the amount. What's really important is the philosophy.
So I would ask you to adopt this philosophy of spending after you have invested, invest
first, then spend. And I've got a little formula that I'm going to share with you.
Now, what should a child do with a dollar? I mean, there's a lot of debate going on, I'm sure,
across the country on what a child should do with the dollar. Here's one opinion, it's only a child
and it's only a dollar. What difference does it make? Well, in my opinion, it makes all the difference
in the world. A person's economic future starts with a child with a dollar. Somebody says,
oh no, you're only young once, let him spend it all. Well, when would you hope that would stop?
Somebody says, well, wait a least 50 and broke like me and you know, and then he'll learn.
Well, no, we don't want to wait that long. If I would have known earlier than age 25, I would have changed.
In high school, if I, if they would have had classes called wealth one, wealth two, I'd have taken both classes.
I would not have waited until age 25. So the earlier the better. So what should a child do with a dollar?
Here's the simple premise to begin with.
Don't spend it all.
And if a child wants to spend the whole dollar,
you got to say, hey, don't spend it all.
You know, don't spend it all.
They'll say, why not?
It's my dollar, I earned it.
You say, I know you earned it, but don't spend it all.
They'll still say, why not?
Say, let me show you why not.
So you put them in your car, take them to the other side of town
and show them where people live that spend the whole dollar.
Just drive them around.
Kids learn best by visual.
Just drive around.
and say, would you like to live here? Kid says, no. Would you like to live like these people lived?
It says no, no. Then you can't spend the whole dollar. So kids will get the message.
So, you know, take them to the other side of town and show them around unless you already live there and then just show them around.
Anyway, don't spend the whole dollar. Now let me give you my best view of what to do with the dollar.
And I promise you if you started at age 15, now if you're over 15, right, you're, you're
still got plenty of time. You still got 20 years. You know, if you're 30, you're still got 20 years.
I mean, you know, you still got plenty of time to start what I'm about to share with you.
What to do with a dollar. Here's my first bit of advice. Never spend more than 70 cents.
Never spend more than 70 cents. Now, you've got to pick some number, and the number you pick
is going to be determined by your philosophy. It's going to be determined by what you've been taught.
through your experience teaching yourself.
When I first met my teacher, Mr. Schof,
I was at about 110% of each dollar.
You know, I'm down at budget finance,
hawking my furniture and my car one more time.
And then I learned a whole better formula for financial independence.
Number one, don't spend more than 70 cents.
Now, kids say to me, well, okay,
what do I do with the other 30 cents?
And here's what I teach them.
10 cents for charity, charity or church, or helping people that can't help themselves.
10 cents to support worthy projects, projects that you feel good about, 10 cents out of every dollar.
It's called being generous with part of what you've taken out of society.
Now, in my opinion, nothing teaches us character better than generosity.
No class, no teacher, no book.
Teach his character better than generosity.
And the best time to start is when the amounts are small.
And I know if kids learn these lessons, well,
they'll give a dime out of a dollar,
help people that can't help themselves, support worthy projects.
Or if you belong to a church, they teach tithe, peace of.
That's very important.
Now, because when the amounts get larger,
sometimes it's a little more difficult.
You know, giving 100,000 out of a minimum.
million, someone says, oh, if I had a million, I'd give 100,000. I'm not sure. That's a lot of money.
So the time to start is when the amounts are small. Ten cents out of the dollar.
Okay, next ten cents. I call active capital.
Active capital means do something to make a profit. Active capital.
Set aside a portion of your income. Wages are okay, but I'm telling you, wages will make you a living.
profits will make you a fortune.
So set aside part of your income as capital called active capital.
Any kind of project you can possibly think of, you can possibly come up with.
I'm going to write a new book, I think, for kids.
I think the title is going to be.
Of course, kids should pay taxes.
It's kind of an interesting title.
In California, kids do pay taxes.
When a child walks into 7-Eleven, buy something that costs a dollar,
the proprietor says, give me seven more pennies.
And the child says,
what's these seven pennies for?
And the proprietor says, that's the taxes.
Kid says, well, hey, I'm only eight years old.
The proprietor says, congratulations.
You're my youngest taxpayer.
Give me the money.
So in California where I live, kids do pay taxes.
Big question is, should they?
And my book will answer that question.
Of course, kids should pay taxes.
Nothing is for free.
If you want to ride your bicycle on the sidewalk,
instead of in the mud,
you've got to pay the seven pennies.
Nothing is free, so we all have to pay.
So 10 cents out of your living, out of the money you earn, set aside for capital.
Capital to try your best to show a profit.
And in my book's going to be all kinds of ways kids can make money, right?
Two bicycles, one to ride, one to rent.
I mean, you know, it doesn't take long to figure out some enterprise that'll start making a profit.
Then you must jot this down if you're taking notes.
profits are better than wages.
One, you can't usually start wages until you're about 16, 15, 16,
but you can make a profit long before you're eligible to start earning wages.
And then there's no limit to profits, and they can double and triple and quadruple.
You know, there's no limit.
It's incredible how fast profits can grow.
So profits are better than wages.
Wages make you a living.
Profits make you a fortune.
Now, the third 10 cents is vitally important.
I call it passive capital.
Capital, you let somebody else use.
A financial institution?
Stocks and bonds, mutual funds, whatever.
Let someone else use it.
You furnish the money.
They use it to make a profit,
but they pay you for the use of it called interest.
And here's one of the things
that'll make you financially independent fairly quickly,
and that's called compound interest.
And this is how you get it.
letting someone else use a portion of over money, your substance.
They show the profit, they pay you interest.
And this passive capital, I'm telling you, over a sustained period of time,
if you'll develop this little 10, 10, 10, 10, and 70,
especially starting at age 15, I'm telling you, by the time you're 35,
you will be financially independent.
You'll have the ability to live from the income of your own resources.
And then one more point on passive capital.
There's a Bible philosophy.
I'm an amateur on the Bible.
But there's a Bible philosophy that teaches
the borrower is servant to the lender.
And if you want to be in a powerful position
as you grow older,
finally when you become mature,
maybe have your own business,
things have worked out for you for the future,
the position you always want to be in
is the power position.
And that's called the lender.
The lender is the power position.
So if kids learn early enough
and then you ask them what they'd like to be when they grow up.
I'm telling you, once they understand, they'll say,
well, one of the things I want to be is one of those lenders.
That's the power position, not the spender.
No, you'll be pitied the rest of your life if you just become a spender.
You've got to become a lender.
And I think this is the one formulas to follow.
10 cents out of every dollar.
Let someone else use it, be the lender, power position.
Then try to show a profit.
Can't we teach our children how to take a dollar,
search the neighborhood,
Find a broken wagon, pay a dollar for it, bring it home, you know, clean it up, sand it until it's clean, paint it red till it shines, straighten out the wheels till they're true, take it back to the neighborhood, sell it for $5.
Anybody can do that. Now does the child deserve $4 profit? And the answer is yes, society now has a mended wagon.
And that's what America's all about. Finding something, touching it, making it better, making a profit, taking part of your research.
helping people who can't help themselves,
let someone else use it to make a profit.
Some projects require more capital than one person has.
Exciting.
And then let them pay you for the use of it.
America's had this philosophy now all these years.
Communism has taught all these years.
Capital belongs in the hands of the state,
not in the hands of the people.
We've been teaching all these years.
Capital belongs in the hands of the people,
not in the hands of the state.
And we turned out to be right.
right. Capital in the hands of the kids. Capital in the hands of the people. Enterprises that make
a profit, enterprises that grow, it's the hope of our future. So that little simple formula,
I hope will help you. Now, one more key on financial independence, and that is attitude.
Attitude. Here's number one. I used to say, I hate to pay my bills. My teacher straightened me out
He said, let's see, Mr. O'Ne, what you hate to do is pay $100 on an account and reduce your liabilities and increase your assets.
I said, well, no, not if you look at it that way.
He said, well, it all depends on how you look at it.
So wouldn't you love to pay your bills, reduce your liabilities, increase your assets?
You've got to have that kind of attitude.
I found out the same attitude about taxes.
I used to say, I hate to pay my taxes.
And Mr. Schoeb said, well, that's one way to live.
But don't you understand taxes is how we care and feed the good.
Goose that lays the golden eggs.
Wouldn't you want to do your share?
Someone says, yes, but the goose eats too much.
Probably true.
But hey, we all eat too much.
We all need to go on a diet.
Better a fat goose than no goose.
So I finally became a happy taxpayer.
Now, I think taxes are too high,
so I'm working to get taxes lowered for our economic future.
But then whatever they turn out to be,
I gladly pay, do my part,
because that's what makes the whole system run,
each of us doing our part.
Now, I want these three subjects to be valuable for you.
I want them to have meaning for you.
I want you someday to be financially independent.
I want you to have the personal development so that you feel good about yourself.
If I had a chance to meet you someday, I'd like to have you show me the list of goals that you got started and say, Mr. Lone, here's some I've already checked off.
Here's the books I'm reading.
Here's what's happened.
I'm developing the skills.
I'm better this year than I was last year.
I've got more self-confidence, my skills are developing.
That's what I want for you, and that's why I took the time to come and share in this video message with you.
I do seminars all around the world, but this is one way that I can reach out and touch you in case you can't come to my seminars.
Wherever I am, maybe this video will reach you somewhere, and it'll have an impact on your life.
And what I'd like to do is later hear about it, a letter, phone call, or to have a chance to meet you in person.
And now I'd like to leave you with these four questions called questions to ponder.
These questions were valuable for me, and I want to make them valuable for you.
Here's the first one, why.
We all ask why we should work this hard.
Why take that many classes?
Why go to school that many years?
You know, why take the notes?
Why read the books?
Why work that hard?
Why put yourself through the push-ups and the disciplines?
Why?
Good question why.
Best answer to why, I think, is the second question.
Why not?
Why not see how many books you can read, how many classes you can take, how many skills you can develop?
Why not see how valuable you can become to the marketplace and to your friends and to your family?
Why not see what you can make of yourself?
Why not see how far you can go, how much you can see, how much you can earn, how much you can share?
Why not?
That's the heritage.
us have in America especially is to see what we can make out of our lives now that we've
been given this extraordinary opportunity now my third question I'd love to ask you in person
but since I can't do it in person I want to ask it of all of you but I want you to take it
personally and my third question is why not you why not you with good self-esteem
why not you starting to change and setting goals why not you starting to make progress
toward financial independence.
If I can do it, you can do it.
I wish I had a lot more testimonials here today
besides mine, a whole steady stream
that would come by and tell you their story.
Someone who started with nothing,
finally run a big enterprise,
a mother who was on welfare,
now she owns her own business.
In addition to my story,
I wish I had a lot more.
And if all of them told their story,
guess how they would probably wind up their story.
They'd probably say, just like me,
Why not you? If we can read, you can read. If we can change, you can change.
If we can figure it out, you can figure it out. If we can turn it around, you can turn it around.
There isn't anything you can't accomplish. That's what those testimonials would say.
And so I want to say it to you personally. Why not you? You've got the brains, you've got the
stamina, you've got the vitality, you've got the interest, you've got your life ahead of you,
you've got the future. You can do it. If anybody can do it, you can do it. If one of us can do it,
hey, we all can do it.
And now here's my last question.
Why not now?
This is a good time as the 20th century starts to wind down a few more years as we get ready for century 21.
What a good time to set your goals, work on yourself, work on your skills.
What a good time to get it together.
What a good time to start this process.
Personal development, growing, changing, developing, having a good plan for your
money and for your life and for your future. Why not now? Thank you for tuning in. Continue
strengthening your mind by listening to our other episodes.
