
Welcome to your Quest For Wealth
Welcome to the Education section of Your Quest for Wealth—where knowledge becomes your greatest asset. True wealth isn't just built on dollars; it's built on understanding, mindset, and mastery. Here, you'll find the tools, lessons, and strategies that empower you to make confident financial decisions, avoid costly mistakes, and accelerate your path to lasting prosperity.
Whether you're just starting your journey or looking to level up your money game, this is where your transformation begins. Learn. Apply. Grow. Get Started Below or Jump to the section you want below.

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What you are going to learn and how you will achieve. After, we get you on a basic path forward, then we will get to the real teachings on building wealth. This 6 Day 6 Lesson is only the start. We will guide you step by step to your path to wealth. So don't get discouraged. Go to " The Map " Link for every step in this journey. It is encouraged to follow every section of this website Step By Step and not to skip over any part. This could give you a dramatically different outcome on your wealth journey. Please download our Workbooks to help you along.
🧠 Day 1, Lesson 1: What Is Wealth—Really? Start Here
Key Topics:
Misconceptions about wealth
Net worth vs. cash flow
Time freedom, choice, and control as real wealth
Activity:
Write your current definition of wealth in one sentence.
Example: “Wealth is waking up without an alarm clock and knowing my bills are covered for life.”
🧭 Day 2, Lesson 2: The 3 Pillars of Personal Wealth (Can Be Found Here)
1. Financial Wealth – Money that supports your lifestyle
2. Time Wealth – Freedom from trading time for money
3. Emotional Wealth – Peace, purpose, and meaningful relationships
Activity:
Rank these three in order of importance for your current life phase. Reflect on why.
🧮 Day 3, Lesson 3: Calculate Your Freedom Number (Can Be Found Here)
Your Freedom Number = Monthly income needed to live life on your terms
(Include housing, food, transportation, insurance, entertainment, travel, giving, and savings.)
Worksheet:
Fill out a simple “Freedom Budget” template.
Then multiply that by 12 to get your Annual Wealth Goal.
🖼️ Day 4, Lesson 4: Create Your Wealth Vision (Can Be Found Here)
Use questions like:
What does a wealthy day look like for you?
Where do you live? Who are you with?
What work, if any, do you choose to do?
Activity:
Write a short “Wealth Vision Statement.” Bonus: Turn it into a vision board using Pinterest or Canva.
🧩 Day 5, Lesson 5: Find Your Why (Can Be Found Here)
Understanding why you want to be wealthy is crucial to staying committed through the ups and downs.
Activity:
Use the “5 Whys” method:
Start with “Why do I want to be financially free?”
Keep asking “Why?” until you’ve drilled down 5 times.
🎓 Day 6, Lesson 6: Set a Guiding Wealth Goal (Can Be Found Here)
Now that you’ve defined wealth, set a SMART Wealth Goal
(Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound)
Example Goal:
“Reach $5,000/month in passive income within 5 years to replace my day job.”
✅ Wrap-Up Challenge: (Can be Found Here)
Record a 60-second video or write a journal entry answering:
“What does wealth mean to me, and what will I do this week to start pursuing it?”
🧠 Day1, Lesson 1: What Is Wealth, Really?
When most people hear the word "wealth", they think of bank accounts stacked with cash, luxury cars, sprawling homes, or exotic vacations. While money is an essential part of wealth, it’s not the whole story. In fact, if you focus solely on dollars, you risk missing the true purpose of wealth — freedom and fulfillment.
Wealth Is a State of Being
Wealth is not just a number in your bank account; it’s the ability to live life on your terms. Money alone can’t buy more hours in your day, restore your health, or create deep, meaningful relationships. True wealth happens when your finances, time, and emotional well-being are in harmony.
The Three Dimensions of Wealth
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Financial Wealth
This is the tangible part — your income, investments, and assets. It gives you the resources to meet your needs and fund your dreams. We will show you how to do this. No matter, if you make $20,000 a year or $200,000 a year. -
Time Wealth
The ability to control your schedule. Having enough money is meaningless if you have no time to enjoy it. -
Emotional Wealth
The inner peace, purpose, and relationships that make life worth living. This is often the missing link for people who are “rich” but not truly “wealthy.”
Why Redefining Wealth Matters
If you only chase financial numbers without a bigger vision, you may:
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Burn out before reaching your goals
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Feel empty once you “arrive”
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Sacrifice health, relationships, or happiness along the way
By redefining wealth to include time and emotional dimensions, you create a more balanced, sustainable path to independence.
Action Step
Write your personal definition of wealth, incorporating all three dimensions.
Example:
“Wealth is having the financial resources, free time, and emotional well-being to live each day with purpose and choice.”
Topic 1: Misconceptions About Wealth
Subtitle: Why You Might Know The "Whole Story" about wealth.
Topic 2: Net Worth vs. Cash Flow
Subtitle: Why You Need Both for True Wealth
Understanding the Difference
Many people confuse net worth with cash flow, but they measure very different aspects of financial health. Knowing the difference — and how to grow both — is crucial to building lasting wealth.
1. Net Worth: Your Wealth Snapshot
Definition: Net worth is the total value of everything you own minus everything you owe.
Formula: Net Worth = Total Assets – Total Liabilities
Assets include:
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Cash & savings
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Investments (stocks, bonds, retirement accounts)
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Real estate value
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Business ownership
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Personal valuables (cars, art, collectibles)
Liabilities include:
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Mortgages
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Car loans
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Credit card debt
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Student loans
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Personal loans
Example:
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Assets: $500,000
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Liabilities: $300,000
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Net Worth = $200,000
Key Insight: Net worth is like a snapshot of your financial position at one point in time — it shows how much you own.
2. Cash Flow (Cash flow is king): Your Wealth Engine
Definition: Cash flow measures the money flowing in and out of your life each month.
Formula: Cash Flow = Total Monthly Income – Total Monthly Expenses
Income includes:
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Job salary or wages
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Business revenue
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Investment income (dividends, rent, royalties)
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Side hustle earnings
Expenses include:
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Housing costs
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Utilities
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Food & transportation
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Debt payments
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Entertainment & personal spending
Example:
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Income: $6,000/month
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Expenses: $4,500/month
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Cash Flow = $1,500/month surplus
Key Insight: Cash flow is your financial heartbeat — it tells you whether your money situation is growing or shrinking.
Why This Matters for Wealth
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High Net Worth, Low Cash Flow:
You might own millions in assets but be “house poor” if your expenses exceed your liquid income. -
Low Net Worth, High Cash Flow:
You might have modest assets but generate strong monthly income — this can accelerate your wealth growth if invested wisely. -
The Sweet Spot:
Healthy net worth and positive, growing cash flow.
Building Both ( You Need both)
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Increase Assets & Reduce Liabilities → Grows Net Worth
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Increase Income & Control Expenses → Improves Cash Flow
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Invest for Passive Income → Grows both over time
Action Step
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Calculate your current net worth using the formula.
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Calculate your monthly cash flow.
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Identify one step to improve each this month.
Topic 3: True Wealth = Freedom of Time, Choice, and Purpose
Subtitle: The Real Destination of Your Financial Journey
Why Money Alone Isn’t Enough
You’ve probably heard stories of people with millions who still feel trapped, stressed, or unfulfilled. That’s because wealth that’s measured only in dollars misses the point.
True wealth is about what money allows you to do — not just the money itself.
The Three Freedoms That Define Real Wealth
1. Freedom of Time
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You control your schedule, not your boss, clients, or circumstances.
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You choose when to work, rest, travel, or spend time with loved ones.
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This freedom means you’re no longer trading every hour for dollars.
Example: Imagine deciding to take a weekday off to go hiking with your kids — because you can.
2. Freedom of Choice
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You decide where you live, what projects you work on, and who you work with.
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You aren’t forced into decisions solely for financial survival.
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Choice means having the options most people don’t.
Example: You can move to a quieter city, start a passion project, or travel for a month without worrying about a paycheck.
3. Freedom of Purpose
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You spend your energy on things that matter deeply to you.
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You’re not stuck doing meaningless work just to pay bills.
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Purpose gives your wealth emotional and spiritual depth.
Example: Funding a cause you care about, mentoring young entrepreneurs, or creating art that inspires others.
How These Freedoms Work Together
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Time without money can feel like struggle.
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Money without time feels like a golden cage.
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Both without purpose feels empty.
When you have all three — time, choice, and purpose — you have true wealth.
Action Step
Write one sentence for each:
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If I had complete freedom of time, I would…
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If I had complete freedom of choice, I would…
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If I had complete freedom of purpose, I would…
Keep your answers visible — they’re your compass for building wealth with meaning.
We have included helpful PDF files to get you started.
🧭 Day 2, Lesson 2: The 3 Pillars of Personal Wealth
Subtitle: Building a Wealthy Life That Stands Strong
Why You Need More Than Money
Think of wealth like a sturdy three-legged stool. If one leg is missing or weak, the stool wobbles — or falls over entirely. The same goes for your life. Focusing only on money can leave you unstable and unfulfilled. True, lasting wealth rests on three essential pillars: Financial Wealth, Time Wealth, and Emotional Wealth.
Pillar 1 – Financial Wealth
Definition: The money and assets you control that allow you to fund your life and future.
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Includes savings, investments, real estate, business ownership, and passive income streams.
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Provides security, opportunity, and the means to invest in other areas of life.
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What Is Financial Wealth?
Financial wealth is the foundation of personal wealth because it fuels your ability to make choices, pursue opportunities, and secure your future.
It’s not just the money in your bank account — it’s the combination of:
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Assets you own (real estate, investments, businesses, valuable property)
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Income streams (active and passive)
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Debt management (eliminating bad debt, leveraging good debt wisely)
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Financial habits (budgeting, saving, and investing consistently)
Think of financial wealth as your economic engine — it powers the other two pillars (time wealth and emotional wealth).
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Why Financial Wealth Matters
Without financial stability, even the best plans can crumble. It gives you:
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Security – You can weather emergencies and unexpected life changes.
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Freedom of Choice – You’re not forced to stay in a job or situation just for a paycheck.
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Opportunity – You can invest, take calculated risks, and seize opportunities when they arise.
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The Core Components of Building Financial Wealth
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Earning More – Increase your income through career growth, side hustles, entrepreneurship, or investments.
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Spending Wisely – Keep your expenses below your income so you have room to grow wealth.
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Investing Consistently – Put money into assets that grow in value and generate income (stocks, real estate, businesses).
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Protecting Your Wealth – Use insurance, diversification, and smart planning to avoid major financial losses.
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The Compounding Effect
The earlier you start building financial wealth, the more it can grow over time.
Example: Investing $500 a month at 8% returns for 20 years equals $294,000 — but for 30 years, it grows to $745,000. Time is your best wealth-building partner.
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Common Pitfalls to Avoid
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Lifestyle inflation (spending more as you earn more)
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High-interest debt (especially credit cards)
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Failing to invest early due to fear or procrastination
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Relying on a single source of income
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Action Step
Write down your current financial snapshot:
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Total assets
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Total debts
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Monthly income
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Monthly expenses
From there, create one short-term goal (3 months) and one long-term goal (5 years) for increasing your financial wealth.
We have included helpful PDF files.
Pillar 2 – Time Wealth
Definition: The freedom to control your schedule without being chained to obligations you don’t choose.
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Achieved by reducing dependency on trading time for money.
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Often grows through passive income, efficient systems, and delegation.
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What Is Time Wealth?
Time wealth is the ability to control your schedule so you spend your hours on what matters most to you.
It’s not about never working — it’s about having the choice to work when, where, and how you want.
While money can be replenished, time is the one resource you can never get back.
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Why Time Wealth Matters
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Life Quality – You can experience more of life while you’re healthy and active.
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Flexibility – You can pivot quickly when opportunities or challenges arise.
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Relationships – You have the capacity to invest time into the people who matter most.
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Purpose – You can dedicate time to meaningful pursuits instead of just survival.
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Signs You Lack Time Wealth
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You feel rushed, burned out, or “always behind”
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Your schedule is dictated by your boss, clients, or obligations
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You put off personal passions and relationships until “someday”
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How to Build Time Wealth
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Increase Passive Income
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Build income streams (investments, real estate, royalties, online businesses) that earn while you’re not actively working.
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Delegate & Outsource
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Hire others to handle tasks that drain your time and energy.
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Automate & Systematize
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Use tools, apps, and workflows to reduce repetitive work.
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Say No Strategically
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Protect your calendar from commitments that don’t align with your goals.
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The Connection to Financial Wealth
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Financial wealth without time wealth is like having a luxury yacht you never get to sail.
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Many chase money only to realize they’ve traded away their most valuable asset — their time.
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The smartest wealth builders aim to grow both together.
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Example of Time Wealth in Action
Sarah earns $6,000/month in rental income and has minimal debt. She works part-time on a creative project she loves, spends mornings exercising, afternoons with her kids, and travels for 2 months each year — all without worrying about money.
Action Step
Answer these in your journal:
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If I had total control over my time, what would my ideal weekday look like?
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What 1–2 changes can I make in the next 90 days to free up at least 5 hours per week?
We have included helpful PDF files.
Pillar 3 – Emotional Wealth
Definition: A deep sense of peace, purpose, and fulfillment in life.
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Built through meaningful relationships, personal growth, contribution, and alignment with your values.
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Often overlooked, yet it’s the pillar that determines whether wealth actually feels rewarding.
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What Is Emotional Wealth?
Emotional wealth is the inner state of well-being, fulfillment, and purpose that makes all other forms of wealth feel meaningful.
It’s the emotional and mental stability that allows you to enjoy what you’ve built without feeling empty, anxious, or restless.
It’s not measured in dollars — but it deeply influences how you use your dollars.
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Why Emotional Wealth Matters
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Without emotional wealth, financial and time wealth feel hollow. You can have money and free time but still feel unfulfilled.
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It fuels motivation and resilience. When challenges arise, a strong emotional foundation keeps you moving forward.
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It shapes your decisions. You choose opportunities and paths aligned with your values, not just your bank balance.
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The Key Ingredients of Emotional Wealth
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Purpose – Knowing your “why” and living in alignment with it.
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Relationships – Deep, healthy connections that bring support and joy.
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Growth – A commitment to personal development and learning.
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Contribution – Giving back in ways that matter to you.
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Health & Well-being – Physical and mental wellness that supports your emotional state.
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How to Build Emotional Wealth
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Clarify Your Values – Write down the principles and causes most important to you.
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Invest in Relationships – Prioritize time and effort for family, friends, and your community.
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Practice Gratitude – Daily reflection on what you already have builds contentment.
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Balance Achievement with Enjoyment – Don’t wait until “someday” to experience joy.
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Engage in Meaningful Work – Whether paid or volunteer, focus on activities that fulfill you.
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The Connection to the Other Pillars
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Financial Wealth gives you the resources to pursue what matters.
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Time Wealth gives you the space to nurture purpose and relationships.
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Emotional Wealth gives both meaning, creating a complete and satisfying life.
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Example of Emotional Wealth in Action
David built a business that supports his lifestyle and provides ample free time. He spends that time mentoring young entrepreneurs, traveling with his partner, and supporting environmental charities. His wealth isn’t just in his bank account — it’s in the satisfaction he feels daily.
Action Step
Answer these in your journal:
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What are the top three things that bring me joy?
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Who are the most important people in my life, and how can I spend more time with them?
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If money and time were unlimited, what meaningful project or cause would I pursue?
How the Pillars Work Together
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Financial wealth gives you the resources.
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Time wealth gives you the freedom to use those resources well.
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Emotional wealth ensures those resources and that freedom actually matter to you.
When all three are strong, your life stands solid — able to weather setbacks and thrive in good times.
Action Step:
Rank the three pillars in order of importance for your current life stage.
Then, write one action you can take this month to strengthen the weakest pillar.
We have included helpful PDF files.
🧮 Day 3, Lesson 3: Calculate Your Freedom Number
Subtitle: Know the Exact Income You Need to Live on Your Terms
What Is a Freedom Number?
Your Freedom Number is the monthly (or annual) income you need to cover all your desired living expenses without relying on a traditional job.
It’s the point where your passive income (investments, rental income, royalties, etc.) matches or exceeds your expenses — giving you financial independence.
This number is personal — it’s based on your lifestyle, not someone else’s.
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Why It’s Essential
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Gives You a Clear Target – Without a number, “financial freedom” is just a vague dream.
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Prevents Over- or Under-Shooting – You’ll know when you’ve reached your goal instead of endlessly chasing “more.”
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Directs Your Planning – Helps you reverse-engineer your wealth strategy.
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Step 1: Define Your Desired Lifestyle
List what your ideal life includes — not just the basics, but also travel, hobbies, giving, and growth.
Break your lifestyle down into monthly costs.
Example:
Expense CategoryMonthly Cost
Housing (rent/mortgage) $1,500
Utilities $250
Food & Groceries $600
Transportation $400
Health Insurance $300
Entertainment $300
Travel Fund $400
Giving/Donations $200
Savings/Investments $500
Total $4,450
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Step 2: Multiply by 12
Once you have your Monthly Freedom Number, multiply it by 12 to find your Annual Freedom Number.
Example:
$4,450 × 12 = $53,400/year needed for financial freedom.
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Step 3: Factor in Taxes & Inflation
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Add a buffer for taxes if your income sources aren’t tax-sheltered.
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Add at least 2–3% annually to account for inflation over time.
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Step 4: Determine How to Fund It
Break your number into income streams:
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Investments (dividends, interest)
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Real estate (rental income)
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Businesses (profit)
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Royalties/licensing
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Other passive or semi-passive sources
Common Mistakes to Avoid
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Underestimating costs (forgetting annual expenses like insurance or maintenance)
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Using your current lifestyle instead of your ideal one
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Ignoring inflation or future needs
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Counting unstable or unpredictable income as guaranteed
Example Freedom Number Plan
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Freedom Number: $53,400/year
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Income Sources:
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Rental Property: $18,000/year
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Stock Dividends: $12,000/year
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Online Business: $24,000/year
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Total = $54,000/year → Goal Achieved ✅
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Action Step
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Fill out a Freedom Number Budget Worksheet (list all desired expenses).
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Multiply monthly total by 12 for annual number.
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Brainstorm income streams to reach that number.
We have included helpful PDF files.
🖼️ Day 4, Lesson 4: Create Your Wealth Vision
Subtitle: See It. Feel It. Build It
Why a Wealth Vision Matters
Before you can achieve wealth, you need to know exactly what it looks and feels like for you.
A wealth vision is a clear, detailed picture of the life you want to live when you’re financially free. It acts as your north star — guiding your decisions, keeping you motivated, and helping you avoid distractions.
Without a clear vision, it’s easy to chase someone else’s idea of success, waste time on the wrong goals, or lose momentum.
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The 3 Parts of a Wealth Vision
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The Lifestyle – Where you live, how you spend your days, what experiences fill your life.
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The Environment – The spaces, people, and surroundings you choose to be around.
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The Feelings – The emotions you want to experience daily (peace, excitement, contribution, etc.).
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How to Create Your Wealth Vision
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Imagine Your Perfect Day
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From the moment you wake up to when you go to bed, write down exactly how your day unfolds in your wealthy life.
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Include your work (if any), hobbies, travel, relationships, and daily habits.
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Get Specific
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Instead of “I live in a nice house,” write “I live in a 3-bedroom lakefront home with large windows overlooking the water, a home office, and a deck for morning coffee.”
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Add Emotional Detail
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Describe how it feels to live your wealthy life. This emotional connection keeps your vision inspiring.
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Put It Where You Can See It
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Create a vision board on Canva, Pinterest, or with magazine clippings.
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Print or save a written version somewhere you review regularly.
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Example Wealth Vision Statement
“I wake up naturally in my mountain cabin, brew coffee, and watch the sunrise from my porch. My morning is spent reading and writing for my online business. In the afternoon, I hike with my spouse, then host friends for dinner. My passive income covers all expenses, and I work on projects I’m passionate about without financial pressure.”
Why This Works
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Clarity – Keeps your goals laser-focused.
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Motivation – Helps you push through setbacks.
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Decision Filter – You can ask, “Does this bring me closer to my vision?”
Action Step
Write your own Wealth Vision Statement and create a vision board that reflects it. Place it somewhere you’ll see daily.
We have included helpful PDF files.
🧩 Day 5, Lesson 5: Find Your Why
Subtitle: See It. Feel It. Build It
Why Your “Why” Matters
Most people start their wealth journey with excitement but lose steam when obstacles appear. That’s because their goals are based only on numbers — not on deeper meaning.
Your Why is the emotional driver behind your financial goals. It’s the reason you’ll keep going when things get tough. Without it, money is just paper; with it, money becomes a tool for a richer, more purposeful life.
The Power of Purpose
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Clarity – Helps you cut through distractions and stay focused.
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Motivation – Fuels you when progress feels slow.
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Resilience – Anchors you when challenges arise.
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Fulfillment – Ensures your wealth brings satisfaction, not emptiness.
How to Find Your Why
The simplest tool is the 5 Whys Method:
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Start with your first reason: “I want to be financially free.”
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Ask Why? about that answer.
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Keep asking “Why?” five times (or until you reach a deeply emotional reason).
Example:
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I want financial freedom. → Why? → To quit my stressful job.
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Why? → To spend more time with my kids.
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Why? → Because I don’t want to miss them growing up.
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Why? → Because my parents were always absent, and I want to be different.
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Why? → Because I want to create memories and a legacy of love, not just provide money.
Final Why: “I want financial freedom to give my kids the childhood I never had.”
Reflection Prompts
To uncover your Why, ask yourself:
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Who benefits most from my financial freedom?
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What pain or frustration disappears once I achieve it?
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What meaningful experiences will I create with my time and money?
Action Step
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Complete the 5 Whys exercise in your journal.
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Write your final Why Statement in one clear, powerful sentence.
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Example: “I want to achieve financial freedom so I can dedicate my life to my family and meaningful work, not just a paycheck.”
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Post your Why where you’ll see it daily — on your desk, phone wallpaper, or vision board.
We have included helpful PDF files.
🎓 Day 6, Lesson 6: Set a Guiding Wealth Goal
Subtitle: Turning Vision Into Measurable Action
Why a Wealth Goal Is Essential
By this point, you’ve defined what wealth means to you, identified your pillars, calculated your freedom number, and created your vision. The next step is to set a clear wealth goal — a single guiding target that keeps you focused and moving forward.
Without a defined goal, it’s easy to drift, change directions too often, or feel like you’re making progress without actually reaching financial freedom.
The SMART Goal Framework
Your wealth goal should be SMART:
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Specific – Clear and detailed, not vague.
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Measurable – You can track progress with numbers.
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Achievable – Ambitious but realistic with effort.
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Relevant – Connected to your vision and values.
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Time-Bound – Has a deadline to create urgency.
Examples of Weak vs. Strong Goals
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Weak Goal: “I want to be rich.”
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Strong Goal: “I will generate $5,000/month in passive income within 5 years by investing in real estate and online businesses.”
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Weak Goal: “I’ll save more money.”
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Strong Goal: “I will save $10,000 in my emergency fund within 18 months by cutting $300/month in expenses and adding $250/month in side income.”
Steps to Setting Your Guiding Wealth Goal
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Review your Freedom Number from Lesson 3.
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Decide on your primary wealth vehicle (real estate, business, investments, or hybrid).
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Break your annual target into smaller milestones (quarterly or monthly).
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Create an accountability system (track progress weekly or monthly).
Why a Single Guiding Goal Works Best
It’s tempting to set 10 financial goals at once, but focus beats scatter.
Your guiding wealth goal becomes the “north star” — even if you pursue other smaller goals, they should all align with and support this main one.
Action Step
Write down your Guiding Wealth Goal using the SMART framework.
Example:
“I will build $60,000/year in passive income by January 1, 2030, through a portfolio of rental properties and dividend-paying investments.”
Then break it down into:
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12-month milestone: What progress can you make this year?
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90-day milestone: What’s your next step right now?
We have included helpful PDF files.
Day 7, The Wrap-Up Challenge – Defining Your New Wealth Identity
Objective
To help participants reflect on their 6-day journey, consolidate their insights, and define their new relationship with wealth by capturing it in a personal commitment statement. This final challenge ensures that what they’ve learned transforms into long-term action.
1. Introduction
Congratulations! You’ve made it through the 6-Day Wealth Journey. Over the past week, you’ve:
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Redefined what wealth means to you.
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Explored the 3 pillars of personal wealth.
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Calculated your freedom number.
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Created your wealth vision.
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Discovered your why.
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Set your guiding wealth goal.
Now it’s time to bring it all together in one powerful moment of clarity: The Wrap-Up Challenge.
2. Key Teaching
Wealth is not just numbers on a page. True wealth is about identity — who you are becoming. The final step in your journey is to declare:
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What wealth means to you now (after 6 days of discovery).
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What first step you are committed to taking to walk your path toward financial freedom, time freedom, and purpose.
This declaration makes your journey real — it’s the difference between thinking and doing.
3. Activity: The Wrap-Up Challenge
Choose one of the following formats:
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Video Challenge – Record a short 1-minute video answering:
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“What does wealth mean to me now?”
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“What first step am I committed to taking?”
Share it with the community (if available) or save it as a reminder for yourself.
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Written Challenge – Journal your answer to the same two questions in a dedicated notebook, wealth journal, or your workbook.
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Accountability Challenge – Share your answer with a trusted friend, spouse, or mentor. Ask them to hold you accountable for your first step.
4. Reflection Prompts
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How has your definition of wealth changed since Day 1?
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Which of the 3 pillars do you feel strongest in right now? Weakest?
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What new clarity have you gained about your “why”?
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How does your guiding wealth goal feel now that you’ve completed the journey?
5. Bonus: Wealth Identity Statement
End by writing a Wealth Identity Statement. Example:
“I am wealthy because I have freedom of time, choice, and purpose. My first step toward my Wealth Vision is to [insert action].”
This will serve as your anchor and reminder anytime you drift off course.
6. Wrap-Up Encouragement
Wealth isn’t built in 6 days, but a new mindset can be. You’ve taken six bold steps that most people never take. Carry this momentum forward. Revisit your workbook often, and keep refining your path.
"This is not the end — it’s the beginning of your Life’s Wealth Quest."
We have included helpful PDF files.
The Map for The Quest To Wealth. (Member Area, It's Free To Look)

Step 1: Start Here. 6 Day, 6 Lesson and Challenge
Step 1a: Understanding The Myths And Lies
Step 1ca: The Who's Who In Guru's
Step 1caa: The Guru's: A Honest Opinion
Step 1cb: The Wrong Advice or Coaching
Step 1cc:: The Right Advice or Coaching
Step 1cd: How To Spot The Hypocrites
Step 1d: Why Wealth Is Important
Step 1e: Understanding The "Game" (Yes, It's A Game)
Step 2: What It Takes & Your Goals
Step 2aa: Dealing With The Negative People
Step 2ac: Starting With Nothing
Step 2da: Understanding Time Frames
Step 2db: Designing Your Wealth Time
Step 2ea: What's Important To You?
Step 2eb: Wealth Is Great and Needed, It's Not Your Enemy)
Step 2fa: Learning Costs Vs. Benefits
Step 2fab: College, Do You Need It?
Step 3: Life's Wealth Quest "Overflow Bucket System"
Step 3a: Figuring Out The Numbers
Step 3aaab: Getting Out Of Bad Debt
Step 3aaabb: Credit Card "Pause System"
Step 3aaabc: The Snowball Method
Step 3aaabd: The Avalanche Method
Step 3ab: Spending Without Guilt
Step 3aba: "Be Happy, Pay Off Bad Debt And Build Wealth" At The Same Time. (Yes, You Can Do It)
Step 3b: Main Income & Side Jobs
Step 3ba: Do You Need Another Job Or Side Job?
Step 3bba: Your Job: Love It Or Hate It?
Step 3bbb: Getting The Most Out Of Your Job
Step 3bbc: Go Full or Part Time
Step 3bca: Do You Need A Side Job?
Step 3bcb: Finding The Right Side Job
Step 3bcc: Maximizing Your Time Vs Pay
Step 3bb: How To Make Your Money Work For You
Step 4: Setting Up The Framework.
Step 4a: Setting Up Your Financial Accounts
Step 4ac Brokerage Accounts (Part 1)
Step 4ac Brokerage Accounts (Part 2)
Step 4ac Brokerage Accounts (Part 3)
Step: 4ba: Understanding Taxes
Step: 4bb: Tax Avoidance, Not Tax Evasion (Very Important)
Step: 4bc: Tax Deductions (Getting You To A Lower Bracket)
Step: 4bd: Difference Between Personal & Business Deductions
Step 4ca: Why You Need A Corporation
Step 4cb: Difference In Corporations
Step 4cc: Which State to Incorporate In?
Step 4da: Differences Between a Accountant (CPA) and a Financial Planner
Step 5a: Life's Wealth Quest "Wealth Gap" Formula
Step 5b: Widening "The Wealth Gap" (Getting To Wealth Faster)
STEP 5c — Risk Management & Insurance
Step 6: Finding Your Wealth Building Vehicles
Step 6aa: The Difference In Retirement Accounts:
Step 6aaa: Order Of Retirement Accounts To Use
STEP 6aab — How To Choose Between Roth Vs. Traditional
Step 6ab: Which Retirement Account Is Best For You
Step 6ba: What Business Will Work For You?
Step 6baa: Don't Follow Your Passion. (For Now)
Step 6bab: Will The Business Turn A Profit?
Step 6bad: Do You Know The Business?
***Step 6bae: What Comes next? Entrepreneur Section (Coming Soon)***
Step 6bae: Do You Know The Business?
Step 6caa: How To Select Individual Stocks
Step 6cc: ETFs vs. Mutual Funds
Step 6cd: Returns Needed or Desired
Step 6ce: Common Terms (Stocks, Bonds, Indexes, Options & More)
Step 6cf:Advanced Portfolio Strategies
Step 6d: Stock Options (Optional)
Step 6e: Real Estate (Optional)
Step 6g: Private Investment Funds (Optional)
Step 6h Private Equities (Optional)
Step 6i : Cashflow Multipliers (Optional)
Step 6j: Initial Public Offerings (IPO's)
Step 7a: Defining Your Giving Identity
Step 7b: Building The Giving Bucket
Step 7c: Giving Rules, Boundaries & Protections
Step 7d: Tax Awareness & Strategic Timing
Step 7f: Family, Teaching & Values Transfer
Step 7g: Legacy Design & End Of Life Giving
Step 7h: Living Legacy (Giving While You're Alive)
Step 8 Repeating And Expanding
Step 9: Implementing "The Wealth Quest System
Step 9a: "Your Skills And Mind Set"
Step 9b: Using The "Overflow Bucket System"
Step 9c: Setting Up The Framework.
