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23 things to say when someone wants to
When you value your services and create boundaries; others will value your services, too. Remember, you're in business to earn a living and then live the way you've always dreamed of. Many service business owners these days are...

Hawala, or the Bank that Never Was - Part II
II. HAWALA AND TERRORISM Recent anti-terrorist legislation in the US and the UK allows government agencies to regularly supervise and inspect businesses that are suspected of being a front for the ''Hawala'' banking system, makes it a crime to...

How Appraisals and Assessments Differ
Many people think appraisals and assessments are the same thing or at least that they should be for the same amount. The truth is they can vary greatly. Let's look at each of them. Appraisals An appraisal is an estimate of market value....

The Right Time To Pay-Off Your House Mortgage
If you are in dire need of money and don't have the financial means for a large cash transaction to buy a house, then opting for a home mortgage is worth consideration. Basically, a mortgage refers to a long-standing credit that a debtor...

Victims of Hurricane Katrina - IRS Gives Tax Relief
In response to the devastation along the Gulf Coast, the IRS is giving tax relief to victims of Hurricane Katrina. The following steps are expected to be expanded upon in the next few weeks. The IRS seems to realize it is hard to file your taxes if...

 
Views are Spectacular Off the Beaten Path

When I was practicing law, my colleagues would talk about how lucky they were to put their kids through college or. "I don't know how we did it, but we put the kids through college , and now we're hoping to start saving for retirement," they'd say. In reality, they were saying much more--"Wow! We're so lucky to barely be able to put the kids through college, now we're just crossing our fingers that we'll be able to start saving enough to retire." I was on that path too, toward a life of just scraping by, where I'd spend just as much (if not more) than I earned, living financially strapped. It was only a matter of time before I made the same comments and had the same financial destiny.

I thought having my own law practice would make me financially free, but my path (owning my own firm) wasn't going to lead me there, as I learned from my colleagues. So I decided to get off the beaten path and head down a road less trodden, as difficult as it might be at first. In the end, the views are worth the extra effort.

Why is it so difficult to get ahead? 1. We unnecessarily spend money on the "latest and greatest," things we don't need (but that emotionally appeal to us) 2. Debt--once we're in the red, and spend based on habit and emotion, it can be very difficult to break patterns, discipline ourselves and get out of debt 3. Taxes take up to 50 percent of our salary.



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