For the past several weeks I've been actively working to build my business by reading and applying the information in Jack Canfield's book, The Success Principles: How to Get from Where You Are to Where You Want to Be. The impetus for this decision came as a result of realizing that I have been living for far too long in a serious scarcity mentality. You could have knocked me over with a feather when I first recognized this truth. I had always attributed scarcity with not having money. Since I was raised in a well to do home and have had no real issues with money for most of my life, I thought that I was insulated from that thinking. I realized that was not the case and recognize that my beliefs around money and value has been a big reason why I have eaten out of frustration for many years.
Like many women, I grew up with a very strong, powerfully dominant father presence in my life. My dad raised me with very clear cut ideas about what women could and could not do in business and in life in general. Like many people, he said one thing and did another, leaving me to wonder what was really true. As a child, I considered him my hero, and believed everything he said without question. He told me that I could achieve anything that I wanted and to reach for my goals. Yet when I had the unique occasion to run a business with him, I learned firsthand what he valued most of all, money. If it couldn't be measured in dollars and cents, he didn't see the value in it. We got into constant arguments over this, and the stress of it caused a lot of distance and pain.
Now looking back I realize that it's not personal. Dad's just Dad, and I'm just me. We're two people who are just different. Here's the important take away for you:
Like many women, I grew up with a very strong, powerfully dominant father presence in my life. My dad raised me with very clear cut ideas about what women could and could not do in business and in life in general. Like many people, he said one thing and did another, leaving me to wonder what was really true. As a child, I considered him my hero, and believed everything he said without question. He told me that I could achieve anything that I wanted and to reach for my goals. Yet when I had the unique occasion to run a business with him, I learned firsthand what he valued most of all, money. If it couldn't be measured in dollars and cents, he didn't see the value in it. We got into constant arguments over this, and the stress of it caused a lot of distance and pain.
Now looking back I realize that it's not personal. Dad's just Dad, and I'm just me. We're two people who are just different. Here's the important take away for you:
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