and energetically as well as materially. Let’s say you’ve got your own clothing
company. You need money to have a space to create your designs, you need to
pay for materials, manufacturing, shipping, payroll, marketing, and all the
other expenses of running your business.
That’s obvious. But you also need to feel healthy, happy, and good so you
can do your best work and bring the most awesome products to your
customers. Maybe you need to live and work in a place you love that inspires
you or hire assistants so you’re not exhausted and spread thin or do things that
fill you with happiness like travel and buy your friends dinner or join a gym or
get a puppy or buy clown noses for everyone in your office. Maybe you want
to give twenty percent of your income to help drill water wells in Africa as
well as hire more staff so you can donate some time to doing charity work. It
ALL counts. Feeling like you don’t deserve the things that make you the
happiest and best version of yourself, because it’s greedy or is asking too
much, ultimately rips off the rest of the world because you aren’t being fully
supported and, as a result, aren’t sharing your highest frequency with the
world.
Be your best, do your best, demand the best, expect the best, receive the
best, and put your best out into the world so everyone can receive your best,
too.
Think of it this way: would you rather hang out in a world where everyone
feels happy and well taken care of and aspires to be the best they can be or be,
or would you rather be in a world where people live in fear and shame and
scrimp and hold themselves back? What would each scenario do to
your
energy?
One of the best things you can do to improve the
world is to improve yourself.
It’s a grassroots effort. So if you need money to improve your life, get over
it already and go get yourself some. ’Cuz this isn’t just about you, m’kay?
In order to go get some money, get very clear on what kind of life will make
you truly happy. And be honest. What kind of experiences
and possessions will
support you in the work you want to do and in the kind of life you’d love to
live? If you’re truly happy living a simple life in a yurt surrounded by people
you love, trading little trinkets you’ve carved out of cow bones for food and
making just enough to get by, that’s one thing, but pretending you don’t want
more than you already have because you can’t afford it or feel guilty and
pretentious for wanting it— that’s another. That is called being a weenie.
Determine what your, personal, truest version of success looks like (no
comparing yourself to others please), figure out how much it will cost, and
then set out with steadfast determination to manifest the money you need to
create it.
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