BEST of PONDER on THIS for Thursday, August 20th, 2009 by Arnold Patent in YOU CAN HAVE IT ALL

"Debts exist only because the concept is given general acceptance, and is used extensively in our society. Car loans, home mortgages and charge accounts are considered valuable vehicles for circulating money in our economy. Yet there are people who do not believe in debts, and they do not have any. Debt is not a requirement for living. Every day there are people who buy cars and houses for cash and enjoy doing it.

Debts are not an inherent part of the real Universe. If we are troubled by debts, it is possible for us to eliminate them from our lives. The people who have done this are essentially no different from you and me. They just have different thoughts about money. Thoughts that you and I can have also.

Debts are not a general condition. They are a specific condition. No matter how much difficulty we are having with cash flow, we do pay some of our bills. We do manage handling money to some extent, and whatever that extent is, it is not an accident… We have the capacity at any time to attract sufficient money into our lives to pay any debt that we really want to pay."
    
                              Arnold Patent, in "You Can Have It All"

For more information regarding this book visit Amazon.


A FREE service since its inception, "Ponder on This" benefits subscribers, authors, and publishers by including "links" to Amazon.com and other Web sites where subscribers can learn more about the book being quoted, and also purchase it. In all instances these links are provided as a convenience, and do NOT generate any type of compensation for Pondercentral.

Individuals interested in a direct subscription to "Ponder on This" are requested to please click here
or feel free to forward to a friend. To contact Pondercentral via email, please click here.




 

What did you think of this article?




Trackbacks
  • Trackbacks are closed for this post.
Comments
  • No comments exist for this post.
Leave a comment

Submitted comments are subject to moderation before being displayed.

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.