By PATRICK WAMEYO
Posted Thursday, March 28 2013 at 02:00
Posted Thursday, March 28 2013 at 02:00
After examining the lives of 800 most successful men and women and over 25,000 failures in his time, Napoleon Hill concluded in his Philosophy of Achievement that wealth is first a state of the mind.
For example, while he had acquired all the information from real life examples that formed his philosophy of personal achievement and taught these principles at various universities, he had not been baptised by failure, a key psychological transition one cannot acquire in any other way.
His subsequent publication, Outwitting the Devil, introduces this reality through his personal experience.
This psychological gap between those who have acquired personal insight and those who continue to nurse fear is an indomitable bridge between failure and success.
You, the youth of Kenya, need to know that the two top presidential candidates in the General Election were mentored in an environment of power and wealth.
It will not generate visions — the deep desire for success — plans, or persistence to achieve what they have.
Is it not ironical that their sons and daughters are following in their footsteps, unable to see anything wrong with it.
The larger proportion grew up in families that mentored them to know only one formula — get a college degree or diploma to enable you to get a job.
Fellow parents, wealth begins with visualising a desired state of riches in future, following a definite plan in small steps to transmute it to tangibles, and persisting in the face of temporary failure to develop insight. How is your family mentoring your life?
Patrick Wameyo is a financial literacy educator and coach
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