Couverture de Rich Dad Poor Dad (Deluxe)

Rich Dad Poor Dad (Deluxe)

Rich Dad Poor Dad (Deluxe)

De : Team Sarezah
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The journey to financial freedom, as outlined in the principles of "Rich Dad Poor Dad," hinges on a crucial mental shift from the conventional wisdom of a "poor dad" to the strategic mindset of a "rich dad." This transformation begins with rejecting the notion of simply working for money and instead learning to make money work for you. The core of this philosophy lies in financial literacy: the ability to understand the fundamental difference between an asset, which generates income, and a liability, which creates expenses. While the middle class focuses on their income statement and often acquires liabilities they believe are assets, like a primary residence, the wealthy focus on building their asset column with items like businesses, stocks, and income-generating real estate. Ultimately, escaping the "rat race" of working harder only to pay more in taxes and debt requires self-discipline, a continuous education in how money operates, and a focus on minding your own business by diligently building a portfolio of assets that can provide financial independence.

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Team Sarezah
Direction Développement personnel Economie Finances privées Management et direction Réussite personnelle
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    Épisodes
    • Your Journey to Financial Freedom Begins
      Oct 4 2025

      In one corner, you have "Poor Dad." He's a certified genius with a Ph.D., a great government job, and a library's worth of academic knowledge. His life advice sounds like a very sensible, but slightly nervous, guidance counselor: "Study hard, get good grades, find a safe, secure job, and for goodness sake, never take risks! Money is the root of all evil, and our house is our greatest asset." When faced with something expensive, he throws up his hands and declares, "I can't afford it," effectively ending the conversation.


      In the other corner, you have "Rich Dad." This guy never even finished the eighth grade but is on his way to becoming a real-life Scrooge McDuck (the cool, business-savvy version). His advice is the complete opposite: "School is fine, but study hard to find a good company to buy, not work for. The lack of money is the root of all evil! Learn to manage risk, because playing it safe is the riskiest thing you can do." When he sees something expensive, his brain whirs to life as he asks, "How can I afford it?"

      So, young Robert is stuck in the middle of a philosophical cage match. Poor Dad blames his kids for not being rich, while Rich Dad uses his kids as the ultimate motivation to be rich. Poor Dad says taxes are a noble duty to help the less fortunate; Rich Dad says taxes punish the productive.

      Instead of just picking a side, Robert was forced to actually think. He realized that being wealthy wasn't about your paycheck; it was about your mindset. Poor Dad, despite his high income, had a "poor" person's brain—one that shut down when faced with financial problems. Rich Dad had a "rich" person's brain—a powerful computer he was constantly exercising by solving money puzzles.


      Ultimately, Robert decided to listen to the dad who was actually getting rich. He learned that financial education is the real superpower. You can give a man a dollar and he'll spend it, but if you teach him how money works, he can build an empire. The whole book is about the simple but powerful lessons Rich Dad taught him, proving that your most valuable asset isn't your house or your job, but the well-trained financial supercomputer sitting between your ears.

      Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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      11 min
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