The Conscious Use of Money
Every morning at 11 o’clock, a shiny Rolls Royce
drove through Central Park in New York City.
A Conversation with Jack Canfield Although I did not t have money as a kid, I grew up around it. I used to spend summers with my wealthy cousin. I have no money no home no family I also went to a private school (with tuition paid for by my rich aunt) and I got a scholarship to go to Harvard, where I had friends like Larry Rockefeller. So I was in an environment where people had both power and material possessions. My uncle instilled in me a sense of noblesse oblige . I have dreams.It was a terrible dream and I could not sleep at all.
A Conversation with Jack Canfield Although I did not t have money as a kid, I grew up around it. I used to spend summers with my wealthy cousin. I have no money no home no family I also went to a private school (with tuition paid for by my rich aunt) and I got a scholarship to go to Harvard, where I had friends like Larry Rockefeller. So I was in an environment where people had both power and material possessions. My uncle instilled in me a sense of noblesse oblige . I have dreams.It was a terrible dream and I could not sleep at all.
I always wanted to have money, "hm It’s
a wonderful dream" but not so much for my own personal fulfillment, but because I saw what it
could do for people. I thought, "If I had that much money, I know what I d
do with it," and it wasn t buying three Mercedes. I have always been
interested in the conscious use of money. My first job out of college was as a
high school teacher. I got two paychecks each month for $129 each. My rent was
$80. After expenses, there wasn t a lot left over.
I used to have what I called my eleven-cent dinner a can of Contadina
tomato paste over noodles. I then became a teacher trainer, went to graduate
our school, wrote my first book for educators, started doing trainings for
teachers across the country, and later, for this businesses. I was living a
pretty standard middle class life until our book, Chicken Soup for the Soul ,
took off. It was a slow build, but after awhile, we started getting royalty
checks for $200,000.
Eventually, I got for a million dollars,
and then one year I made 7 million. We sold thirteen-and-a-half million books
that year and suddenly I was in a different world. My ex-wife and I went
through what I call our nouveau riche period. We sold our small house in L.A.
and moved to Santa Barbara, where we bought a big spread with horses and a
swimming pool. We got a cook, a housekeeper, a decorator, a gardener, and a
Lexus. It was expensive and time consuming to maintain the property. When you
re making six million dollars-which is about three-and-a-half million after
taxes - it s hard to spend all that money on yourself.

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