I Can Make you Rich
Around 1910 a person by the name of Wallace D. Wattles wrote a book called “The Science of Getting Rich. He also wrote a book entitled The Science of being well, which is fascinating, but another story. Wallace D. Wattles assertion was that “the ownership of money and property comes as a result of doing things a certain way, they do things in this certain way, whether on purpose or accidentally, get richer, while those not Some do things in this way, no matter how hard they work or how able they are, remain poor. ”
Today, Paul McKenna, hypnotist and leader of Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) master trainer, is serializing his book “I Can Make You Rich” in our national newspapers, with self-hypnosis CD. So what we have learned in nearly 100 years and numerous theories and textbooks on the subject and what it really is possible to teach how to be rich? Paul McKenna
D is based on Wallace Wattles and the work of Napoleon Hill in Think and Grow Rich. Napoleon Hill was commissioned by Andrew Carnegie to interview 400 of the richest people to learn how to create wealth. By interviewing these people like Charles Schwab M, John D. Rockefeller, Henry Ford and Woodrow Wilson, Napoleon Hill proved the hypothesis Carnegie and established that the real secret to wealth creation is that all wealth is created with the human mind. Define more precisely what a person can do to create this wealth, Hill identified a number of actions that have a real desire to carry out its purpose, faith (spiritual but not so much faith in their ability to reach your goal) and persistence to move forward in the face of adversity.
Paul McKenna gives a modern twist. As a well known hypnotist and NLP Trainer, he is able to apply their skills to help people who may have a negative or destructive relationship with money. What I said is very similar to that of Napoleon Hill and Wallace D. Wattles. He says that rich thinkers are those who live their lives according to their rules and their terms. His bank balance may go up and down, but the internal working of a belief that they will be rich. Poor thinkers, on the other hand, can have big houses and luxury clothing, but their heads are full of fears about the future and distrust those around them.
