Jannice K., a past Virginia resident, now California

resident, worked in Burger King for ten years. Back when I

was a junk food addict, she passed me the bag and drink

through the drive through window. Occasionally, I would go

inside to eat. We became friends and soon had regular times

together early afternoons during her break. It wasn’t long

before I discovered Jannice’s real buried passion was

grooming dogs. She sparkled whenever the topic came up.

Later Jannice and I worked together to write articles and

other materials on her passion. Now, Jannice lives in

California, owns three grooming parlors, and is quite, quite

well off. During a recent phone conversation she shared how

no matter how far she’s come in just the few years, she says

she’s never gotten used to living with a fluctuating cash

flow.

This is an experience shared by many self-employed

individuals.

After living on predictable cash flow, having a variable

cash flow can be nerve racking. Even over time, as you grow

maturely philosophical about money, knowing that it can be

here today and gone tomorrow requires being on your toes.

And, in order to transition from toes to flat foot you must

learn to integrate a prosperity consciousness in order to

survive emotionally. A prosperity transfer means shifting

from the perception of scarcity, to being in abundance.

The secret to handling this elevator ride is to get to the

point of contentment with who you are and what you are

doing, and not have an emotional response to money. This

platform, of course, takes discipline and experience. Over

time, as you learn and become comfortable with a new way of

thinking, you also learn to stay focused, know what "really"

matters, stop wasting time, and relax into a set of

processes and systems that become the rhythm for your

business. This calm approach always accelerates prosperity

and, in turn, allows the cash flow elevator to slow down and

stop on various floors.

During the fast elevator days, tips always help to remind us

to punch the button in order to stop at the next floor.

Here are a few tips to help you push the right buttons:

1. Where you focus is what you will attract. If you focus

on your surplus, the surplus will grow. If you focus on

lack, the lack will grow. Hence, it’s common sense to focus

on surplus, wouldn’t you say. Learn to see abundance in all

that you do, say, and feel. This doesn’t mean giving away

your services if you are business owner. It means in being

in balance with it. Be abundant with your gestures, open

the door for a person, it doesn’t matter on gender.

When someone takes you to lunch, see that as surplus, the

money didn’t come out of your pocket. It’s abundance from

their life to yours. Yes, the good ole, attitude of

gratitude, philosophy is what I’m talking about. It

actually is a secret weapon of the wealthy. Again, of

course, in balance. This same attitude is available to

everyone, including you and I. If it takes fewer muscles to

smile, then of course, it takes less energy to be nice.

2. Know what you’re worth and be consistent about it. If

you take a long lunchtime or spend time browsing the book

aisles or Net, associate your hourly rate to this. When you

associate time to money consistently in your thinking

process, cash flow will follow. With a focus on what

"really" matters and you follow that up with massive action,

it all begins to sink in. This internal awareness will, of

course, again, be attractive.

3. Some is better than none. Partial payments are better

than no payments if you can’t meet your obligations. Even

the telephone and utility companies can cope with partial

payments. Send what you can with an explanatory note.

We both know that bill collectors aren’t the most

compassionate souls. If you deal with them, try not to be

defensive nor try to ignore them. Silence isn’t golden in

this instance. However, you can’t let them intimate you or

make you feel guilty either -- and they surely will try too.

Bring no emotional attachment to their call, conversation,

or even after you hang up. This will affect your energy and

zap your progress.

Just imagine having one of these a day, and if you do, it’s

a-no-wonder why you’re feeling drained, unattractive, and

not making any money. This spiral emotional ride puts you

on the fast elevator ride to the basement.

4. Maintain a list of emergency money generators. These

are items that you can use that require little or no

planning, either because you have it done or it just doesn’t

need it, that deliver short-term cash. This is an insurance

cash flow list for your business. Everyone needs this

whether running a business or not, even if it means

unloading boxes at your brother-in-laws warehouse.

If you list a temporary agency, who are they, have you gone

over there already and established a relationship. Set up

the groundwork so that it’s easy to jump into when "you"

need it. Being mindful of all your options, and not

mindless, adds to your confidence and ability to manage your

cash flow during shortage.

5. Separate emotions from money and separate thoughts of

debt that is an investment and debt that is due to

irresponsibility. If you are going to operate a business,

be accountable, especially if you have employees. People

say to me that one of their number goals is to be debt free.

If you have a habit of creating irresponsible debt then even

when you become debt free it will not last because the

mindset and habits didn’t change.

Change your attitude and remove the emotions. Separate

investment debt from the other. Why wait to be happy, live

your life with a debt free mentality now. Most children

grow up without understanding money and base their knowledge

on emotional expressions they hear from others. Then as

adults they are thrust into the world and told, "You’re

suppose to know better."

Take a class on money management, stop reading the books if

they aren’t helping. If you already taken a class, hire a

money coach. Keep debt manageable and be an responsible

adult and business owner. There aren’t any excuses for poor

money management.

6. Don’t spend yourself poor with feast or famine. Don’t

be tempted to pay off all your old bills and leave yourself

impoverished all over again. Your mental health will be

stronger if you set aside some money and watch it

accumulate. Just knowing you have even the smallest of

funds stashed away will lighten your walk and smooth your

sleep.

7. Get smart about your money. I mean, SMART. Get

Specific, Measure it, be Accountable, make them achievable,

Realistic and the Time is now. Our beliefs today have no

resemblance to the beliefs of money our parents have, nor

will the next generation have with yours. Challenge all the

early assumptions you have about money. Challenge them

every day until. Do it until you learn to manage it. Do it

until it works for you.

Get off the elevator cash flow ride, have less paper, scotch

tape, and paper clips around, and put some money away for

that rainy day. I don’t think either of our grandmothers

where wrong on that philosophy.

(c) Copyright 2005, Catherine Franz. All rights reserved.shopping cart elevator--https://www.vksfujilift.com/product/shopping-cart-escalator.html



コメント