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Paperback It's Not about the Money: A Financial Game Plan for Staying Safe, Sane, and Calm in Any Economy Book

ISBN: 0061234052

ISBN13: 9780061234057

It's Not about the Money: A Financial Game Plan for Staying Safe, Sane, and Calm in Any Economy

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Book Overview

Your one-stop financial guide

Includes ten new tips to survive any economy

Overhaul your investment portfolio to thrive in good times and bad Uncover the roots of your bad financial decisions Discover how much is enough for you Find peace of mind in any financial situation

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A book that is spiritual, thoughtful and practical all rolled into one

Are you ready to discover your money personality? You know, the one that acts like a four year old one day and a mature adult the next. Brent Kessel in his book, It's Not About The Money: Unlock Your Money Type to Achieve Spiritual and Financial Abundance explores the emotional and intellectual aspects of how we deal (or don't deal) with our finances. Brent Kessel did a great job of marrying the emotional, spiritual and practical aspects of money, financial planning and wealth management. It's Not About The Money is the type of book you'll want to make time to read, study, work the activities and absorb the material on both an emotional and intellectual level. Part One: First we have to understand what is happening inside on an emotional level before we can work on outside circumstances. Here are some of the emotional/spiritual highlights I gathered within the first few chapters: ~ We all get what we think we deserve. ~ Financial freedom requires more of a focus on our inner life than on our outer financial circumstances. ~ Inner wealth often leads to outer wealth. ~ To truly understand our relationship with money, it's important to embark on an inner journey in which money is the primary focus. Part Two: This part focuses on recognizing and understanding your core money personality. Brent Kessel believes that to understand where we are as adults, we have to understand are financial archetypes. Archetypes are the powerful financial energies within us that make up our day-to-day financial life and often have roots in childhood. The author analyzes eight money personalities/archetypes. In this section he has us work on how to recognize our money personality, probable causes for why we view money the way we do, why this personality may or may not be working for us and possible solutions for solving what isn't working. Brent does this by taking us through different activities for each of the eight money personalities. This section is an eye-opener! Part Three: This is the intellectual side of money management. Here is when It's Not About The Money gets into investing, financial planning and using your core story to help you make money. Once you know your core money story and understand how it affects your life, you can gain power and control over money. Brent shows you how to use your money personality to help make money. Brent believes when investing stay true to yourself, your money personality and core values. Become a "conscious" investor who invests in a board range of stocks that will universally help the climate and humanity. Your best financial decisions are the ones that support "what is most important to your essence." Part Four: This is the nuts and bolts resource section. Here you will find pages of valuable information which standing alone is worth the price of the book. My overall impression of It's Not About The Money: Unlock Your Money Type To Achieve Spiritual and Financial Abundance is that I'm very glad I read

That is right!

Brent has distilled for us what he has learned from years of being a financial planner and years of spiritual seeking. He challenges people to examine their relationship to money and unearth the hidden motives which drives them in self destructive ways. Drawing on meditation and yoga practice he offers simple exercises to bring awareness to these behaviors so that we can understand them and undermine their counterproductive effects. In a society that is besotted by consuming and anxious about money and security Brent offers straight forward and very useful insights. After presenting us with the psychological/spiritual challenge of money and ways of addressing it, in an appendix Brent offers the nuts and bolts of sensible investment and saving strategies for the various money personality types he explores in the book. Although not immediately obvious his financial strategies would make life much simpler and more secure for people who flounder around in the hype of television money programs or the headlines of the business sections of newspapers which engender greed for ever growing wealth or fear that all will be lost. If people followed Brent's sage wisdom there would be a lot less dot com busts or subprime debacles and their lives would be more at ease. Read this book. Charlie Fisher, author of Dismantling Discontent: Buddha's Way Through Darwin's World. (For the sake of full revelation, Brent's business partner was a student of mine many years ago and I look on their firm with grandfatherly interest).

Profound, life changing, and practical

A must read for everyone! This book is unique in that it addresses the fundamental issue that all of the other personal finance and investment books out there seem to overlook, which is that you must first understand your own motivations, behaviors, patterns, etc. surrounding money before you can begin to transform your financial life. This book has done so much for me and I have recommended it to all of my friends and family. The beauty of the book is that it not only helps to recognize these imbalances in ourselves, but it also gives advice on how to address them in an easy to understand and practical way.

It's about your bizarre reactions to money

This is a really different way of looking at money. The author gets you to think about what emotional reactions you have to common financial situations (e.g. I hate thinking about money, I love piling it up, I WANT that car!). Basically he says we might feel many of these at various times, and the way we were raised may have a lot to do with the dominant patterns. Then asks if acting on those emotional impulses is really working for you. Without criticizing, he gives ideas on ways to lighten up on yourself, how to get out of your rut...and states that often just trying a different behavior, and observing that the world doesn't come to an end, allows you to get increasing control of your reactions over time rather than always being driven by your unconscious drives (or your parents' unconscious drives). It's really easy, fun reading. As I read about the eight "archetypes" or common patterns he points out, I admit I felt a bit superior to some...but when he got to my main pattern it was scary how accurate he was! Actually several patterns can apply to a person at different times or in different situations, so there's a lot of hands-on advice. (The little online quiz took about 2 minutes and confirmed pretty much how I'd classified myself using the book.) The interweaving of Eastern thought and quotations was interesting without being gimmicky. I got a lot out of this book and I'm no spiritual guru. At the back is a "Conscious Investor" chapter that I thought would be a rehash of every other financial self-help book. But instead of the usual "you can beat the market" cheerleading, it's a clear explanation of a pretty rational way to invest. The appendix "Nuts and Bolts" is like a one-chapter basic financial advice book...the key things to know or find out about, without having to read a whole book. (This chapter's about the money at least.) Bottom line, it's useful, thought-provoking, fun without being insubstantial, and gives concrete advice for managing your irrational relationship to money...and pointers on money nuts and bolts too.

Inspiring, transformative book

"Don't get me wrong. I am by no means saying that you can't be both wealthy and happy. But whether you have a seven-figure trust fund or a pile of unpaid bills on your kitchen table, the path to freedom requires that you focus more on your inner life than on your outer financial circumstances." ~ Brent Kessel from "It's Not About the Money" If you, like me, have struggled with integrating your spirituality with your economics, your self-awareness with your bank balance, and all the rest of the challenges that go with showing up consciously around money in our often frenetic lives, Brent Kessel, "financial planner by day, yogi by dawn," is your friend. And, his book, "It's Not About the Money," is a must-read. "It's Not About the Money" is all about pointing us to the spiritual path within our relationship to money--helping us master this part of our life to help us live in integrity with our highest ideals. As Brent wrote the book, he traveled around the world, interviewing such spiritual and investment luminaries as His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Thich Nhat Hanh, Rabbi Harold Kushner, David Whyte, Nobel Prize winner Dr. Harry Markowitz, Vanguard Funds founder John Bogle, Ram Dass, and Joseph Goldstein. It's a remarkably transformative book--the 50+ exercises Brent shares brought me to tears several times--as I re-lived traumatic episodes around money from my childhood and witnessed how these experiences have affected me throughout my adult life. AND how I can now use this awareness to better understand my financial archetypes and create a more conscious life around money. VERY powerful stuff. You're going to want to get this book to dive deeply into Brent's brilliant process of discovering your Core Story that's running your show and which of his eight archetypes show up in your life--from "The Guardian," "The Pleasure Seeker," "The Idealist," and "The Saver" to "The Star," "The Innocent," "The Caretaker," and "The Empire Builder." It's quite remarkable to see which of these archetypes shows up when and how. And, as I said, what you can do about it. So, I think you'll really enjoy Brent's many Big Ideas and what the yogi/financial planner has to say about achieving spiritual and financial abundance!
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