Did you know that this upcoming Thursday, April 23, 2020, is Take Our Daughters And Sons To Work Day in the United States? No? It’s okay. A few days ago, my answer would have been the same.
Did you know that this upcoming Thursday, April 23, 2020, is Take Our Daughters And Sons To Work Day in the United States? No? It’s okay. A few days ago, my answer would have been the same.
What to do when life happens all over you? Survive the beating, pull your face out of the dirt, and apply chaos ladder theory.
In the olden days of Walkman cassette players, brick-sized cell phones, and Commodore 64 computers, it would have been impossible to grow a money tree from the comfort (or chaos) of your own home. Fortunately, science has loosed you from the technological fetters of the past. You have all the tools required to concoct and establish a home-based business for your household.
During times of financial stress, it can be surprisingly easy for emotion to overcome reason. Before you know it, a person finds him/herself being ground to dust by the daily struggle of reactionary survival. The problem is that long-term wealth accumulation has never resulted from spasmastic fight-or-flight responses.
Just like their trees, money arborists can have wildly varied approaches to the application of their craft. For some, tree tending is simply the expression of a passion that has consumed them from their youth. Others follow in the well-worn footprints of familial generations of money arborists gone before.
You accidentally broke your money tree? All is not lost. Momma’s Money Tree explores the winding path to regrowth.
I first stumbled onto the path to my money tree back in 2012, I think.
It started with me sitting, at my desk, bawling over my complete and utter state of financial “wreckedness”. Not familiar with that term? No problem; I can define it for you.