Thursday, February 28, 2013

The Science of Getting Rich Reloaded - How to Put the Law of Attraction to Work

By Aniek van Wordragen


There is a great old book called "The Science of Getting Rich" written in 1911 by a man named Wallace Wattles. The book was the inspiration for "The Secret" a movie all about the law of attraction. Although "The Science of Getting Rich" is about the law of attraction, it never calls it that, even so this book is perhaps the best reference about using the law and putting it into action in your life.

Most of these programs are nothing but scams to get a hold of your money. They won't make you rich. The only thing they do is make you spend a little extra money for some half thought out idea that has no proof and hasn't worked for anyone. There is hope though. one man, Bob Proctor has delivered on the promises he makes time and again. With his program, The Science of Getting Rich, you learn real ways to help get you started on the path to financial success.

Bob Proctor was once like the rest of us, looking for a way to make more money and become financially wealthy. He was given a long forgotten book written by Delois Wattles called the Science of Getting Rich and his life was forever changed. Bob recognized the potential contained within the book and used it to amass wealth and success.

As you go through the day find moments to bring your vision to mind just long enough to appreciate it and be grateful for it.Continue this process as the first step of the law of attraction daily cycle.Whether you have read "The Science of Getting Rich" or not you'll want to experience it in a whole new way. You'll want to experience it as delivered and interpreted by Bob Proctor with some help from Michael Beckwith and Jack Canfield. You will learn to use The Science of Getting Rich as your own secret weapon and as your key to success and creation.What's your excuse for not being successful? There are plenty. We place blame, we allow others to become obstacles to us, we blame outside forces for our lack of success.The problem here is that those things really don't matter. If you really want to succeed, you won't allow anything to stand in your way.

Proctor decided that this method should not be kept secret. Although he doesn't come right out and tell you how to get rich, there are enough hints and exercises contained in the program he modeled after this book that anyone could find the answers to their problems and gain wealth for themselves. Who better to learn how to become rich than someone who has used the method and been successful in fulfilling his dreams?

In addition, his book precedes the far more popular classic Think And Grow Rich, which was written by Napoleon Hill. Upon reading the two books, one can't help but wonder to what degree if any, Wattles' work may have influenced Hill. There are commonalities between the two books that are unmistakeable. For the true student of law of attraction and for anyone looking to understand the mechanics of the process of deliberate creation and creating a life of inspired abundance, The Science of Getting Rich is a very valuable read.

Environment goes far beyond where you live though or how you grew up. Race, religion, sex, and other factors are part of your environment. These factors don't matter when it comes to success though because you will always find both rich and poor in any environment.Talent isn't a factor in getting rich.Hollywood, as well as the rest of the world, is populated with plenty of people who don't have a lot of talent. What they do have is the drive and ambition to succeed, and they know what they need to do to achieve their goals.As a writer, I see this more than in just about any profession there is: writers think that because they are talented, or they have written the "Great American Novel," that all they have to do is be discovered, and it will launch them into best seller status.

To be fair, the book, first published in 1910, didn't, even in 1910, stand alone in the annals of what is now called "new thought." At the turn of the century, Wattles contemporaries, Judge Thomas Troward, William Walker Atkinson, and many others offered their take on the universal laws that governed the universe and how individuals could create, seemingly, incredible results at will. Countless others, both before and after Wattles generation, have added their voices to this stream of thought.Where Wattles departed from those that preceded him, his contemporaries, and most current new thought authors, was in focusing squarely on money and, in no uncertain terms, getting rich.

Once you get used to the arcane language, the book is crystal clear in virtually every argument it poses, from everyone's right to be rich, to the abundance of opportunities available to anyone, and how riches are attracted. The book takes only a few pages to clearly cut straight to the chase. In fact, you've almost got to love any book about money that, in it's first sentence, says that it's, "a practical manual, not a treatise upon theories...intended for the men and women whose most pressing need is for money, who wish to get rich first, and philosophize afterward.

Regardless, successful people come from every strata of society. In the United States, almost half of all successful self employed people don't have a high school diploma. Getting an education or being intellectually brilliant really isn't necessary.You don't need to choose a particular business.Whatever the business, there are millionaires in just about every business enterprise. The most important thing to remember here is to choose a business you like, and place your business where your customers are.If you want to sell ice cream, sell in a place where it's hot. It won't do too well in a place that's cold.The bottom line is that regardless of your circumstances, you have the ability to get rich if you want to. If you are willing to do what it takes to succeed, and you don't make excuses, you will succeed.




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