| Retire
Rich Retire Young
The
following is the story of how my wife Kim, my best
friend Larry Clark and I, began our journey from
broke, to rich, to retired in less than 10 years. When
Kim and I started, we were nearly out of money and
filled with doubt. We all have doubts. The difference
is what we do with those doubts.
In
December 1984, Kim, Larry and I were on a skiing
holiday. At night we would discuss our plans for the
future. Kim and I were on our last few dollars and
Larry was in the process of building another business.
On New Years Day, we tried to set some goals. Larry
wanted to do more than just set goals for the coming
year, he wanted us to set goals that changed our
lives. "Why don't we write a plan on how we can
all become financially free?" he urged.
I
had talked about it and dreamt about it. But the idea
of being financially free was always in the future,
not today.
"Let's
write it down," Larry said. "Once we write
it down, we have to do it, and we'll support each
other on the journey."
Kim
and I looked at each other doubtfully. "It's a
good idea but I think I would rather just focus on
surviving for the next year."
"Come
on," said Larry. "Let's go for freedom. I
don't want to spend my life working just to pay bills.
I want to live. I want to be rich. I want to travel
the world while I'm young enough to enjoy it."
I
recalled the words of my rich dad: "The biggest
challenge you have is your own self-doubt and your
laziness. It is your self-doubt and your laziness that
define and limit who you are. It is your self-doubt
and laziness that deny you the life you want."
It
was time to choose. "OK, let's set the goal to be
financially free." That was New Year's Day 1985.
In 1994 Kim and I were free. Larry went on to build
his company, which became one of Inc. Magazine's
fastest growing companies of the Year in 1996. Larry
retired in 1998 at the age of 46 after selling his
company.
How
did we do it?
It's
not about how we did it. It's about why we did it.
From 1985 to 1994, Kim, Larry, and I focused on rich
dad's three paths to great wealth:
- Increasing
business skills
- Increasing
money management skills
- Increasing
investment skills
The
why is because I wanted to challenge my own
self-doubts, my laziness and my past. It was the why
that gave us the power to do the how.
My
arguments against Larry's idea were things like:
"But we don't have any money"; "I can't
do that"; "I'll think about it next year, or
once Kim and I get settled".
Rich
dad had told me: "Whenever someone says something
like 'I can't afford it', or 'I can't do it' to
something they want, they have a big problem. Why in
the world would someone say 'I can't afford it' or 'I
can't do it' to something they want? Why would someone
deny themselves the things they want? It makes no
logical sense."
My
own whys
- I
was fed up with being broke and always struggling
for money.
- I
was tired of being average.
- My
parents had struggled under a mountain of bills.
- Most
painful of all, my beautiful wife Kim was in this
financial mess because she loved me.
Things
got worse for us before they got better. Kim and I
lived in a car for about three weeks after our money
ran out. So things did not get better just because we
made the decision to retire rich, but it was the
reasons why that kept us going.
Rich
dad used to say: "If you want something, be
passionate. Passion gives energy to your life."
Passion is a combination of love and hate. "If
you want something you do not have, find out why you
love what you want and why you hate not having what
you want. When you combine those two thoughts, you
will find the energy to go get anything you
want."
For
example, I would create the following list:
LOVE
- Being
rich
- Being
free
- Buying
anything I want
- Expensive
things
- Having
other people do what I don't want to do
HATE
- Being
poor
- Being
required to work
- Not
having what I want
- Cheap
things
- Doing
things I don't want to do
So
sit quietly to find and define your loves and hates.
Then write down your whys. Write down your dreams,
goals and plans on becoming financially free, retiring
early and retiring as young as possible. Once it is in
writing, you may want to show it to a friend who will
support you in achieving your dreams. Take a look at
this paper with your dreams, goals and plans on a
regular basis. Talk about it often, ask for support,
be willing to continually learn, and before you know
it, things will begin to happen.
I
have heard many people say: "Money doesn't buy
happiness." That statement has some truth to it.
But what money does do is buy me the time to do what I
love and pay other people to do what I hate doing.
By Robert Kiyosaki
|