Rich Dad's Retire Young, Retire
Rich: How to Get Rich Quickly and
Stay Rich Forever!
by Robert T. Kiyosaki and Sharon L. Lechter C.P.A.
How To
Become Rich and Retire Young
The following is the story of how my wife,
Kim, my best friend, Larry, and I began our journey from broke, to rich,
to retired in less than ten years. I tell this story to encourage any of
you who may be doubtful or in need of some self-confidence to begin the
journey to retiring young. When Kim and I started, we were nearly out of
money, low on confidence, and filled with doubt. We all have doubts. The
difference is what we do with those doubts.
The Journey Begins
In December of 1984, Kim, my best friend,
Larry Clark, and I were skiing in Vancouver, British Columbia, on Whistler
Mountain. The snow was very deep, the runs were long, and the skiing was
excellent, although very cold. At night, the three of us sat in a little
cabin that was snuggled in between tall pines, barely visible because the
snow was up to the roof.
Sitting around the fire every night, we
would discuss our plans for the future. We had very high hopes but very
little resources. Kim and I were on our last few dollars and Larry was in
the process of building another business. Our discussions ran late into
the night, every night. We discussed books we had recently read as well as
movies we had seen. We listened to educational audiotapes we had brought
along and then discussed the lessons on those tapes in depth.
On New Year's Day, we did what we do every
year, we set our goals for the coming year. But this year our goal-setting
session was different. Larry wanted to do more than just set goals for the
coming year. Instead of discussing just our goals for the year, he wanted
us to set goals that changed our lives by changing our realities. He said,
"Why don't we write a plan on how we can all become financially
free?"
I listened to his words and heard what he
said. But I could not fit what he said into my reality. I had talked about
it, dreamed about it, and knew that someday I would do it. But the idea of
being financially free was always an idea in the future, not today...so
the idea did not fit. "Financially free?" I said. The moment I
heard my voice I knew how much of a wimp I had become. My voice did not
sound like the old me.
"We've talked about it many
times," Larry said. "But I think it is time to stop talking,
stop dreaming, and start committing. Let's write it down. Once we write it
down you know we have to do it. Once we write it down, we'll support each
other on this journey."
Being almost out of money, Kim and I looked
at each other. The glow from the fire illuminated the doubt and
uncertainty on our faces. "It's a good idea but I think I would
rather just focus on surviving for the next year." I had just left
the nylon and Velcro wallet business. After it had crashed in 1979, I had
spent the next five years rebuilding it and then walked away from it. I
walked away early because the business had changed drastically. We were no
longer manufacturing in the United States. In order to compete with
increasing competition, we had moved our factories to China, Taiwan, and
Korea. I left the business because I could no longer stand the idea of
using sweatshop child labor to make me rich. The business was putting
money in my pocket, but it was taking life out of my soul. I was also not
getting along with my partners. We had grown apart and did not see eye to
eye. I walked away with very little equity. I just could not continue to
work in a business that violated my spirit and with partners I could not
talk to. I am not proud of how I left, yet I knew it was time to leave. I
had been there for eight years and I had learned a lot. I learned how to
build a business, how to destroy a business, and then how to rebuild it.
Although I walked away with very little money, I did walk away with
priceless education and experience.
"Come on," said Larry.
"You're being a wimp. Instead of setting simple one-year goals, let's
go for it. Let's set a big multiyear goal. Let's go for freedom."
"But we don't have much money," I
said, looking over at Kim, whose face reflected my concerns. "You
know we're starting over again. All we want to do is survive for the next
six months and maybe a year. How can we think about financial freedom when
all I can think about right now is financial survival?"
Again I was shocked at how wimpy I sounded.
My self-confidence was really low. My energy was really low.
"Even better. Think of this as a fresh
start," Larry was now on it. He would not stop.
"But how can we retire early when we
don't have any money?" I protested. I could hear more and more of the
wimp in me coming out. I felt weak inside and did not want to commit to
something just yet. I did just want to survive for the financial short
term and not think about the future.
"I did not say we were going to retire
in a year," said Larry, now irritated with my wimpy responses.
"All I am saying is let's plan on retiring now. Let's write down the
goal, create a plan, and then focus on the idea. Most people do not think
about retiring until it's too late... or they plan on retiring when
they're sixty-five. I don't want to do that. I want a better plan. I don't
want to spend my life working just to pay bills. I want to live. I want to
be rich. I want to travel the world while I am young enough to enjoy
it."
As I sat there listening to Larry sell me
on the benefits of setting such a goal, I could hear the little voice
inside of me telling me why setting a goal to be financially free and
retiring early was unrealistic. It even sounded impossible. Larry
continued. He did not seem to care if Kim or I were listening so I tuned
him out as I began to think about what he had said. Silently, I said to
myself, "Setting a goal to retire early was a good idea...so why am I
fighting it? It is not like me to fight a good idea."
Suddenly, in my silence, I began to hear my
rich dad saying, "The biggest challenge you have is to challenge your
own self-doubt and your laziness. It is your self-doubt and your laziness
that define and limit who you are. If you want to change what you are you
must take on your self-doubt and your laziness.
It is your self-doubt and laziness that
keep you small. It is your self-doubt and laziness that deny you the life
you want." I could hear rich dad driving home his point, saying,
"There is no one in your way except you and your doubts about you. It
is easy to stay the same. It is easy not to change. Most people choose to
stay the same all their lives. If you will take on your self-doubt and
your laziness, you will find the door to your freedom."
Rich dad had had this talk with me just
before I left Hawaii to come on this trip. He knew I was probably leaving
Hawaii for good. He knew I was leaving my home and a place I felt very
comfortable in. He knew I was venturing out into the world without any
guarantees of security. Now just a month after my talk with rich dad, I
found myself sitting on this tall snow-covered mountain, feeling weak,
vulnerable, and insecure, listening to my best friend telling me the same
things. I knew it was time to grow up or give up and go home. I realized
that it was this moment of weakness on the mountains that I had come for.
It was decision time once again. It was time to choose. I could let my
self-doubt and laziness win or I could go on and change my perceptions
about myself. It was time to move forward or to go backward.
As I tuned back into Larry talking about
freedom I realized that he was not really talking about freedom. At that
moment, I came to realize that taking on my self-doubt and my laziness was
the most important thing I could do. If I did not take it on, my life
would go backward.
"Okay, let's do it," I said.
"Let's set the goal to be financially free." That was New Year's
Day 1985. In 1994 Kim and I were free. Larry went on to build his company,
which became one of Inc. magazine's fastest-growing companies of
the year in 1996. Larry retired in 1998 at the age of forty-six after
selling his company and took a year off.
How Did You Do It?
Whenever I tell this story, the question I
am asked is, "How? How did you do it?"
I then say, "It's not about how.
It is about why Kim and I did it." I go on to say,
"Without the why, the how would have been impossible." I could
go on to tell you how Kim, Larry, and I did it, but I won't. How we did it
is not that important. When it comes to how we did it, all I will say is
that from 1985 to 1994, Kim, Larry, and I focused on rich dad's three
paths to great wealth, which are:
1. Increasing business skills
2. Increasing money management skills
3. Increasing investment skills
There are many books written on each of
these paths, and if I did the same, this would be just another how to
book. But what I think is more important than how to, is the why
we did it, and the why is because I wanted to challenge my own
self-doubts, my laziness, and my past. It was the why that gave
us the power to do the how.
Rich dad often said, "Many people ask
me how to do something. I used to tell them until I realized that
even after I told them how I did something, they often did not do it. I
then realized that it was not the how to but why I do
something that is more important. It is the why that gives you
the power to do the how to." He also said, "The reason most
people do not do what they can do is because they do not have a strong
enough why. Once you find the why, it is easy to find your own how
to to wealth. Instead of looking inside of themselves to
find their own why they want to become rich, most people look
for the easy road to wealth, and the problem with the easy road is
that the easy road usually ends in a dead end."
Arguing with Myself
That night, sitting in the cold mountain
cabin, listening to Larry, I found myself silently arguing with him. Every
time he said, "Let's set it as a goal, write it down, and create a
plan," I could hear myself arguing in response, saying such things
as:
1. "But we don't have any money."
2. "I can't do that."
3. "I'll think about it next year, or
once Kim and I get settled."
4. "You don't understand our
situation."
5. "I need more time."
Over the years, my rich dad had taught me
many lessons. One of the lessons was, "If you find yourself arguing
with a good idea, you may want to stop arguing."
That night as Larry went on and on about
getting rich and retiring early, I again heard rich dad warning me about
arguing against a good idea. Explaining further, rich dad said,
"Whenever someone says something like 'I can't afford it' or 'I can't
do it' to something they want, they have a big problem. Why in
the world would someone say, 'I can't afford it' or 'I can't do it' to
something they want? Why would someone deny themselves the things they
want? It makes no logical sense."
As the fire crackled in the fireplace, I
found myself arguing against something I wanted. "Why not retire rich
and retire early?" I finally asked myself. "What would be wrong
with that?" My mind began to open slowly and I repeated silently to
myself, "Why am I arguing against the idea? Why am I arguing against
myself? It is a good idea. I have talked about it for years. I did want to
retire by thirty-five and now I'm soon to be thirty-seven years old and
I'm not even close to retiring. In fact, I'm nearly broke. So why am I
arguing?"
Once I said that to myself, I realized why
I had been arguing against a good idea. At the age of twenty-five, I had
planned on becoming rich and retiring between ages thirty to thirty-five.
It was my dream. But after losing my Velcro wallet business the first
time, my spirit was crushed and I had lost much self-confidence. That
night sitting by the fire, I realized it was my lack of self-confidence
that was doing the arguing. I was arguing against a dream I wanted. I was
arguing because I did not want to feel disappointed again. I was arguing
because I was protecting myself from the pain that dreaming big dreams can
bring if that big dream does not become reality. I had dreamed and failed.
That night I realized that I was arguing against failing again, not
against the dream.
"Okay, let's set a big goal," I
said quietly to Larry. I had finally stopped arguing against a good idea.
The argument was still there but I was not going to let the argument stop
me. After all, it is only an argument I was having with myself and no one
else. The little person in me was arguing against the person that wanted
to grow up and be bigger. "Good," said Larry. "It's about
time you stopped being such a wimp. I was really getting worried about
you."
The reason I had decided to do it was
because I had found my why. I knew why I was going to do it, even
though at that moment I did not know how I was going to do it.
Why I Decided to Retire Early
How many of you have ever on occasion said
to yourself, "I am sick and tired of myself "? Well that New
Year's Eve, sitting around the fire with Kim and Larry, I got sick and
tired of my old self and decided to change. It was not just a mental
change; it was a change that came from deep inside. It was time for a big
change and I knew I could change because I found out why I wanted to
change. The following are some of my personal whys...why I
decided to go for retiring young and retiring rich:
1. I was fed up with being broke and always
struggling for money. I had been rich for a brief moment with my wallet
business, but after the business crashed, I was back to struggling again.
Although my rich dad had taught me well, I still only had his lessons. I
had still not become rich and it was time for me to become rich.
2. I was tired of being average. Through
school, teachers said, "Robert is a bright boy but he just does not
apply himself." They also said, "He's bright but he'll never be
as smart as the gifted kids. He is just above average." That night
sitting on the mountain, I got sick and tired of being average. It was
time for me to stop being average.
3. When I was eight years old, I came home
and found my mom crying at the kitchen table. She was crying because we
were buried under a mountain of bills. My dad was doing the best he could
to earn more money, but as a schoolteacher, he wasn't doing so well
financially. All he would say was, "Don't worry, I'll handle
it." But he didn't. The way my dad handled it was by going back to
school, working harder, and waiting for his annual pay raise. Meanwhile,
the bills kept piling up and my mom felt more and more alone with no one
to turn to. My dad did not like to discuss the subject of money, and if he
did, he only got angry. I remember deciding at the age of eight to find
the answers that could help my mom. That night sitting on the mountain, I
realized that I had found the answers I had searched for since the age of
eight. It was now time to take those answers and turn them into reality.
4. The most painful why of all was the
reality that I now had a beautiful young woman in my life, Kim. I had met
my soul mate and she was in this financial mess because she loved me. That
night on the mountain I realized that I was doing to Kim what my dad had
done to my mom. I was repeating a family pattern. At that moment, I found
my real why.
So those are my whys. I wrote them down
that night and kept them in a secret place. For those of you who read my
second book, Rich Dad's CASH-FLOW Quadrant, you may recall that
things got worse for us once we left the mountain. I started that book by
telling the story of Kim and me living in a car for about three weeks
after our money ran out. So things did not get better just because we made
the decision to retire rich, but it was the reasons why that kept us
going.
Things did not go well for Larry either
after leaving the mountain. He too had substantial financial setbacks in
the late 1980s, yet his whys kept him going.
A suggestion: I learned years ago
that passion is a combination of love and hate. Unless
someone has a passion for something, it is difficult to accomplish
anything. Rich dad used to say, "If you want something, be
passionate. Passion gives energy to your life. If you want something you
do not have, find out why you love what you want and why you hate not
having what you want. When you combine those two thoughts, you will
find the energy to get off your seat and go get anything you want."
So you may want to start with a list
comparing loves and hates. For ex-ample, I would create the following
list:
Love Hate
Being rich Being poor
Being free Being required to work
Buying anything I want Not having what I
want
Expensive things Cheap things
Having other people do Doing things I don't
want to do
what I don't want to do
I found out as my rich dad did that I
cannot tell anyone how to get rich. I now first ask people why they want
to become rich. Without a strong enough why, even the easiest how to get
rich will be too hard. There are many, many, ways to get rich...but there
are only a few personal reasons why you want to get rich. Find your why
and then you will find your how. As the old saying goes, "Where there
is a will there is a way." For me, I would say finding my will made
finding my way possible. Without the will, the way would have been way too
hard.
My suggestion is, you may want to start
your list of loves and hates in the space listed below. If you need more
space, which I hope you do, find a much larger sheet of paper. May you
live your life with more and more passion.
So sit quietly to find and define your
loves and hates. Then write down your whys. Write down your dreams, goals,
and plans on becoming financially free, retiring early, and retiring as
young as possible. Once it is in writing, you may want to show it to a
friend who will support you in achieving your dreams. Take a look at this
paper with your dreams, goals, and plans on a regular basis, talk about it
often, ask for support, be willing to continually learn, and before you
know it, things will begin to happen.
As a final comment, I have heard many
people say, "Money does not make you happy." That statement has
some truth to it. But what money does do is buy me the time to do what I
love and pay other people to do what I hate doing.
Copyright © 2002 by Robert T. Kiyosaki and
Sharon L. Lechter
Excerpt posted with permission from http://www.twbookmark.com
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