Step1
- The road to financial freedom is to
have great health so that you are in good shape
to learn.
Step
2 - An open mindset to start learning
and practicing what you have learned.
Step
3 - Investing your time in your
financial & health education so that you
are in control of your life to create wealth to
enjoy a better life.
Step
4 - Enjoy the wealth that you have
created because you have been taking care of
your health.
4 Steps To Financial Freedom (2007
edition) Sean Toh
4 Steps To Financial Freedom
reveals the philosophies and secrets of Sean
Toh's financial journey in creating wealth
for himself. Here you will learn proven
principles and timeless wealth building
techniques, as well as simple, practical,
and proven financial strategies used by
thousands of people to create a life of
abundance. By starting to practice these
four steps, you will change you life. Make
the decision now to take the necessary
actions to embark on this journey of
creating wealth for yourself.
The 4 Steps to Financial Freedom
consist of:
Step 1 - Get Healthy and Strive for
Great Health
Step 2 - Adopt an Open Mindset to
Learn
Step 3 - Invest Your Time in
Financial and Health Education
Step 4 - Enjoy the Wealth that You
Have Created
You will also learn why financial
education is directly linked to your
financial destiny. Sean Toh shows you how to
get financial education and how you can
teach yourself to create and preserve your
wealth. He explains the different types of
incomes and how you can design a simple
model for yourself to take action on so that
you can start to see some financial success.
Embark
on your financial education today to reach
your financial destiny faster!
Married, with children: These are the real heroes
among us. Mercifully, we're clueless about the
financial implications when we take our wedding vows.
In case you haven't figured it out, the reason you
always feel broke is that you are married, with
children.
It's that simple.
Yes, you probably put too much on your Visa bill. And,
yes, it's incriminating that you know the exact price
of a Starbucks Grande Mocha. But when push comes to
shove, such indulgences are minor compared to the real
cause.
Children.
For better or worse, we're clueless about the
financial commitment we make when we take our wedding
vows.
The sad, sad numbers
You can understand exactly why it's difficult to make
your paycheck cover your expenses if you'll spend a
few minutes thinking about a tool once used by the
Department of Labor. It's called the "Revised
Equivalence Scale," and it is one of the many
devices that have been used to sort out the
differences in cost of living for households of
different age, size and composition. While academics
continue to debate the best tools, a revised
equivalence scale that's more than 20 years old tells
the story.
Let's say that the cost of living for a young married
couple without children gets an index number of 100.
From there, the revised equivalence scale has an index
to represent the cost of living for each size and age
of family composition.
A young single person, for instance, would get an
index of 71.
The arrival of a first child takes the index to 127.
The arrival of a second child moves the index to 147.
The index continues to climb as the children age. It
reaches 204 when the older child is 6 to 15 years old
and peaks at 231 when the older child is 16 to 17.
(The index is apparently unaware that some children go
to college.)
By Scott Burns
2006 (c) creditplushealth.com
Credit Plus Health By Sean Toh All rights reserved.