Rich Dad Poor Dad
133
secret of winners is that failure inspires winning; thus, they’re not
afraid of losing. Repeating Fran Tarkenton’s quote, “Winning means
being unafraid to lose.” People like Fran Tarkenton are not afraid of
losing, because they know who they are.
They hate losing, so they
know that losing will only inspire them to become better. There is a
big difference between hating losing and being afraid to lose. Most
people are so afraid of losing money that they lose. They go broke
over a duplex. Financially, they play life too safe and too small.
They buy big houses and big cars, but not big investments. The
main reason that over 90 percent of the American public struggles
financially is because they play not to lose. They don’t play to win.
They go to their financial planners or accountants or stockbrokers
and buy a balanced portfolio. Most have lots of cash in CDs,
low-yield
bonds, mutual funds that can be traded within a mutual-fund family,
and a few individual stocks. It is a safe and sensible portfolio. But it is
not a winning portfolio. It is a portfolio of someone playing not to lose.
Don’t get me wrong. It’s probably a better portfolio than more
than 70 percent of the population has, and that’s frightening. It’s
a great portfolio for someone who loves safety. But playing it safe
and balanced on your investment portfolio is not the way successful
investors play the game. If you have little money and you want to
be rich, you must first be focused, not balanced. If you look at any
successful person, at the start they were not balanced.
Balanced people
go nowhere. They stay in one spot. To make progress, you must first
go unbalanced. Just look at how you make progress walking.
Thomas Edison was not balanced. He was focused. Bill Gates was
not balanced. He was focused. Donald Trump is focused. George Soros
is focused. George Patton did not take his tanks wide. He focused them
and blew through the weak spots in the German line. The French went
wide with the Maginot Line, and you know what happened to them.
If you have any desire to be rich, you must focus. Do not do what
poor and middle-class people do: put their few eggs in many baskets.
Put a lot of your eggs in a few baskets and FOCUS:
Follow One
Course Until Successful.
Chapter Seven: Overcoming Obstacles
134
If you hate losing, play it safe. If losing makes you weak, play it
safe. Go with balanced investments. If you’re over 25 years old and are
terrified of taking risks, don’t change. Play it safe, but start early. Start
accumulating your nest egg early because it will take time.
But if you have dreams of freedom—of
getting out of the Rat
Race—the first question to ask yourself is, “How do I respond to
failure?” If failure inspires you to win, maybe you should go for it—but
only maybe. If failure makes you weak or causes you to throw temper
tantrums—like spoiled brats who call attorneys to file lawsuits every
time something doesn’t go their way—then play it safe. Keep your
daytime job. Or buy bonds or mutual funds. But remember, there is risk
in those
financial instruments also, even though they may appear safe.
I say all this, mentioning Texas and Fran Tarkenton, because
stacking the asset column is easy. It’s really a low-aptitude game. It
doesn’t take much education. Fifth-grade math will do. But building
your asset column is a game in which attitude plays a major role. It
takes guts, patience, and a great attitude toward failure. Losers avoid
failing. And failure turns losers into winners. Just remember the Alamo.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: