So I modified my financial class to include pictures of my house and assets due to requests from students. This all happened after inviting a student to my house for a party and she literally thought I lived in a shoe box with all the frugal budgeting talk. I had another young pharmacist who once read my lecture and called it the "no fun life", now wants to hear my talk after she visited my house.
After the modification to my class, the reviews have been overwhelmingly positive. People were just mind blown after sitting through a 2 hr lecture on budgeting and debt payments. It almost changed everything since it's really giving people something to work toward to vs a life of frugal living. If anything, I think my overall talk focus more on patience and financial responsibility than frugal living.
I now wonder how motivational can the book "The Millionaire Next Door" be since it mostly focus on being frugal all your life..never get the nicer car, or the nicer house. Essentially it's like chasing a number all your life by sucking the fun out of it (not saying everyone wants nice house or cars, but the people who do are most in trouble ..so in their opinion, the book is the ultimate drag).
I see a lot of all or none here. Either you buy used honda civics all your life or you're just keeping up with the Jones. No one really focus on patience. I feel like most people wants nice things...they just don't really know how to have them in their lives the correct way.
After the modification to my class, the reviews have been overwhelmingly positive. People were just mind blown after sitting through a 2 hr lecture on budgeting and debt payments. It almost changed everything since it's really giving people something to work toward to vs a life of frugal living. If anything, I think my overall talk focus more on patience and financial responsibility than frugal living.
I now wonder how motivational can the book "The Millionaire Next Door" be since it mostly focus on being frugal all your life..never get the nicer car, or the nicer house. Essentially it's like chasing a number all your life by sucking the fun out of it (not saying everyone wants nice house or cars, but the people who do are most in trouble ..so in their opinion, the book is the ultimate drag).
I see a lot of all or none here. Either you buy used honda civics all your life or you're just keeping up with the Jones. No one really focus on patience. I feel like most people wants nice things...they just don't really know how to have them in their lives the correct way.
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