‘Despite wanting wealth, most people never make wealth a big enough MUST in their lives.’
Seemingly endless wish lists.
Interwoven into conversations are seemingly endless wish lists.
People wish they had more free time; wish they did not have to work such long hours, wish they had more disposable income; wish they did not have to get up and go to work; or wish they could take a decent holiday.
In fact, most people have a relatively long wish list, yet seldom do they ever take the time to think about the reasons why their present results are as they are.
Simply by wishing for the results to be different, most people fail to seek solutions to the causes of why things turn out the way they do.
Most people never make wealth a big enough MUST.
Despite wanting wealth, most people never make wealth a big enough MUST in their lives.
Their patterns of behaviour lead to the continuation of actions based on a struggle of opposing subconscious desires.
A superficial view, on the one hand, reveals an image, which appears ‘normal’ and not really all that bad. While people wish for things to be better there is a relative degree of comfort in their immediate surroundings. As a consequence, there is little motivation for serious change to take place.
A much deeper struggle taking place ...
On the other hand, despite this seemingly ‘normal’ view, there is a much deeper struggle taking place which witnesses a constant internal conflict between wishing for wealth to happen and the avoidance of the necessary actions one must take in order for wealth to be achieved.
Because most people never resolve this internal conflict, doubt, fear, worry, cynicism, scepticism and the lack of certainty become constant companions in a contemporary busy life.
While societal practices actively support the development of people into consumer beings, so they can spend a lifetime consuming their financial potential, it actively resists and discourages development beyond this level.
For the system to survive, as we know it, the majority must remain hypnotised because anything else would threaten the status quo.