One of the most
enlightening books I have ever read is “the richest man in Babylon” by George S.
Clason. Never have I until that time being interested about the wonderful
things you can do with money and that money can do for you if you know how to
deal wisely with your ‘gold’.
For so many, money has
become their master; their ultimate goal in life is to make more and more
money. However, reading the book has changed my perspective. I now know that
while the poor work to make money, the rich make money work for them.
Wealth is not in the
amount of money you possess; wealth is in your ability to create it at will,
over and over again. For me, the wisdom of wealth is more beneficial than
having wealth alone. It is better that a man be equipped with the wisdom of
money than for him to possess large estates and know not how to tame his money.
Ideally, you can’t
truly know the value of wealth until you have work for it, in sweat and in
blood. Wealth is not in winning lotteries, that is luck and ‘lucky’ wealth will
not last. Only a man with the wisdom of money can turn ten thousand naira into
an estate of inestimable value. People with ‘lucky’ money usually end up
wasting it because they have very little or no value at all for money. The
wisdom of money includes one’s ability to invest his money and reap profitably.
Better a wise man with
little money than a fool with an estate of doom. Take heed, for the wisdom of
money supersedes its possession.
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