A book (📕 / 📀 / 🎧) by Ryan Kiyosaki
Why do we keep falling for the rat race?

Like many other things, we choose our jobs to please others — mainly our parents. But what do we want for ourselves?
Today, many people choose to be trapped in a race against themselves. The rat race idea is that you keep doing tons of hard and often unnecessary work to make ends meet. You do everything it takes, and your employer, the government, and utility bills take away nearly everything you’ve earned, leaving you with little or nothing to save.
⚡️The rat race is an endless quest where you must work hard to catch up with bills and taxes.
Sadly, many individuals are aware of the rat race and hate to be part of it but are worried about backfiring from their social circle; they keep racing anyway.
We’ve all heard conventional advice: “Go to school, study hard, get a good job, and everything will be alright.” The truth is, this advice is a clear indication of how the poor and the middle class see financial security. The rich don’t see things that way. This is no longer the recipe for a life free of financial struggles. Good education and high grades no longer guarantee success.
⚡️Financial education is robust, while money is where this power manifests.
You can go to college, graduate with a summa cum laude, get a white-collar job, and never have financial growth. You need to realize that no matter how hard you work, you will never be the one who benefits from your endeavors. One day you may have it all and lose it the next day. However, you can gain power over money and start building wealth from scratch with financial literacy.
A more significant percentage of people in our society still follow the “go to school” advice. These people may avoid being poor, but they never grow wealthy. Societal disapproval prevents us from quitting the rat race and building wealth.
“One of the reasons the rich get richer, the poor get poorer, and the middle class struggles in debt is that the subject of money is taught at home, not in school.”
Robert Kiyosaki
Did you know? Adjectives “broke” and “poor” have different connotations. The first is a temporary state; however, the second is an eternal quality.