Rich
Dad's Rich Kid, Smart Kid: Giving Your Children a Financial
Headstart
by Robert T. Kiyosaki and Sharon L. Lechter C.P.A.
All Kids Are Born Rich
Kids and Smart Kids
Both my dads were great teachers. Both men
were smart men. But they were not smart in the same subjects, and they did
not teach the same things. Yet as different as they were, both dads
believed the same things about all kids. Both dads believed that all kids
are born smart and all kids are born rich. Both believed a child learns to
be poor and learns to believe that he or she is less smart than other
kids. Both dads were great teachers because they believed in bringing out
the genius that each child is born with. In other words, they did not
believe in putting knowledge in, they believed in bringing the child's
genius out.
The word education comes from the
Latin word educare, which means "to draw out."
Unfortunately for many of us, our memories of education are long, painful
sessions of cramming little bits of information into our heads, memorizing
them for the test, taking the test, and then forgetting what we had just
learned. Both my dads were great teachers because they rarely tried to
cram their ideas into my head. They often said very little, waiting
instead for me to ask when I wanted to know something. Or they asked
me questions, seeking to find out what I knew, rather than simply telling
me what they knew. Both my dads were great teachers, and I count them
as some of the top blessings in my life.
And not to forget the moms. My mom was a
great teacher and role model also. She was my teacher for unconditional
love, kindness, and the importance of caring for other people.
Unfortunately my mom died at the young age of forty-eight. She had been
sick most of her life, battling with a heart weakened from rheumatic fever
from childhood. It was her ability to be kind and loving to others in
spite of her personal pain that taught me a vital lesson. Many times when
I am hurt and want to lash out at others, I simply think of my mom and
remember to be kinder...instead of angrier. And for me, that is an
important lesson I need reminding of daily.
I once heard that boys marry women just
like their moms, and I would say that is true for me. My wife, Kim, is
also an extremely kind and loving person. I regret that Kim and my mom
never got to meet each other. I think they would have been best of
friends, as Kim is with her mother. I wanted to have a wife who was also
my partner in business, because the happiest days of my parents' marriage
were the days they worked together in the Peace Corps. I remember when
President Kennedy announced the creation of the Peace Corps. Both my mom
and dad were thrilled by the idea and could not wait to be a part of the
organization. When my dad was offered the position as director of training
for Southeast Asia, he took it and asked that my mom be the staff nurse. I
believe those were the happiest two years in their marriage.
I did not know my best friend Mike's mom
very well. I saw her when I was over for dinner, which was often, but I
cannot say I really knew her. She spent a lot of time with her other kids,
while Mike and I spent most of our time with his dad at work. Yet the
times I was over at their home, Mike's mother was also very kind and
attentive to what we were doing. I could tell that she was a great life
partner for Mike's dad. They were affectionate, kind, and interested in
whatever was going on with each other. Although a very private person, she
was always interested in what Mike and I were learning at school and in
the business. So although I did not know her very well, I learned from her
the importance of listening to others, letting others talk, and being
respectful to the ideas of others even if they clashed with your ideas.
She was a great communicator in a very quiet way.
Lessons from Mom and Dad
The number of single-parent families I see
today concerns me. Having both a mom and a dad as teachers was important
in my development. For example, I was bigger and heavier than most kids,
and my mom was always afraid that I would use my size advantage and become
a bully. So she really stressed that I develop what people today would
call "my feminine side." As I said, she was a very kind, loving
person, and she wanted me to also be kind and loving. And I was. One day I
came home from the first grade with my report card, and on it the teacher
had written, "Robert needs to learn to assert himself more. He
reminds me of Ferdinand the Bull [from the story about a big bull that
instead of fighting the matador sat down in the ring and smelled the
flowers the fans were throwing...coincidentally one of my mom's favorite
bedtime stories for me]. All the other boys pick on him and push him
around, although Robert is so much bigger than they are."
When my mom read the report card, she was
thrilled. When my dad came home and read the same report card, he turned
into a raging bull, and not one that smelled the flowers. "What do
you mean the other boys push you around? Why do you let them push you
around? Are you turning into a wimp?" he said, noticing the comment
about my behavior rather than my grades. When I explained to him that I
was just listening to Mom's instructions, my dad turned to my mom and
said, "Little boys are bullies. Learning how to deal with bullies is
important for all kids to learn. If they do not learn how to deal with
bullies early in life, they often grow up allowing themselves to be
bullied as adults. Learning to be kind is one way of dealing with bullies,
but so is pushing back, if and when kindness does not work."
Turning to me, my dad asked, 'And how do
you feel when the other boys pick on you?"
Bursting into tears, I said, "I feel
terrible. I feel helpless and afraid. I don't want to go to school. I want
to fight back, but I also want to be a good boy and do what you and Mom
want me to do. I hate being called 'fatty' and 'Dumbo' and being pushed
around. What I hate most is just standing there and taking it. I do feel
like I am a sissy and a wimp. Even the girls laugh at me because I just
stand there and cry."
My dad turned to my mom and glared at her
for a moment, letting her know that he did not like what I was learning.
"So what do you want to do?" he asked.
"I'd like to hit back," I said.
"I know I can beat them. They're just little punks who pick on
people, and they like picking on me because I am the biggest in my class.
Everyone says don't hit them because I am bigger, but I just hate standing
there and taking it. I wish I could do something. They know I won't do
anything, so they just keep picking on me in front of everyone else. I'd
love to just grab them and punch their lights out."
"Well, don't hit them," my dad
said quietly. "But you let them know in whatever way you can that you
are not going to be picked on anymore. You are learning a very important
lesson in self-respect right now and standing up for your rights. Just
don't hit them. Use your mind to find a way to let them know that you will
not be picked on anymore."
My crying stopped. I felt much better as I
wiped my eyes and found some courage and self-esteem reentering my body. I
was now ready to go back to school.
The next day my mom and my dad were called
to my school. The teacher and the school principal were very upset. As my
mom and dad entered the room, I was sitting in a chair in the corner,
splattered with mud. "What happened?" my dad asked as he took
his seat.
"Well, I can't say that the boys did
not have it coming to them," said the teacher. "But after I
wrote you the note on Robert's report card, I knew something would
change."
"Did he hit them?" my dad asked
with great concern.
"No, he didn't," said the
principal. "I watched the whole thing. The boys began teasing him.
But this time, Robert asked them to stop instead of just standing there
and taking it . . . yet they continued. He patiently asked them to stop
three different times, and they just taunted him more. Suddenly Robert
went back into the classroom, grabbed the boys' lunch pails, and emptied
them into that big mud puddle. As I rushed over from across the lawn, the
boys then attacked Robert. They started hitting him, but he did not hit
back."
"What did he do?" my dad asked.
"Before I could get there to break it
up, Robert grabbed the two boys and pushed them into the same mud puddle.
And that is how he got splattered with mud. I sent the other boys home to
change their clothes because they were soaking wet."
"But I didn't hit them," I said
from my corner.
My dad glared at me, put his index finger
over his lips indicating that I should shut up, then turned back to the
principal and teacher and said, "We will take care of this at
home."
The principal and the teacher nodded their
heads as the teacher said, "I'm glad I was witness to the whole event
developing over the past two months. If I had not known the history
leading up to the mud puddle event, I would have reprimanded only Robert.
But you may rest assured that I will be having the parents and the other
two boys in for counseling also. I do not condone throwing the boys and
their lunches into the mud, but I hope now we will see an end to this
bullying that has been going on between the boys."
The next day there was a meeting between
the two boys and me. We discussed our differences and shook hands. At
recess that day, other kids came up to me and shook my hand and patted me
on the back. They were congratulating me for standing up to the two
bullies who were also picking on them. I thanked them for their
congratulations but also said to them, "You should learn to fight
your own fights. If you don't, you will go through life being a coward,
letting the bullies of the world push you around." My dad would have
been proud hearing me repeat his original lecture to me. After that day,
the first grade was much more pleasant. I had gained some valuable
self-esteem, I gained respect from my class, and the prettiest girl in my
class became my girlfriend. But what was more interesting was that the two
bullies eventually became my friends. I learned to bring peace by being
strong rather than allowing terror and fear to persist because I was weak.
Over the next week, I learned several
valuable life lessons from both my mom and dad from this mud puddle
incident. The mud puddle incident was a hot topic of discussion at dinner.
I learned that in life there is not a right answer or a wrong answer. I
learned that in life we tend to make choices, and each choice has a
consequence. If we do not like our choice and consequence, then we should
look for a new choice with a new consequence. From this mud puddle
incident, I learned the importance of being both kind and loving from my
mom and being strong and prepared to fight back from my dad. I learned
that too much of one or the other, or only one and not the other, can be
self-limiting. Just as too much water can drown a plant dying of thirst,
we humans in our behavior can often swing too far in one direction or the
other. As my dad said the night we got back from the principal's office,
"Many people live in a black-and-white world or a right-and-wrong
world. Many people would have advised you, 'Never push back,' and still
others would have said, 'Push back.' But the key to being successful in
life is this: If you must push back, you must know exactly how hard to
push back. Knowing exactly how hard to push requires much more
intelligence than simply saying, 'Don't push back,' or, 'Push back.'"
My dad would often say, "True
intelligence is knowing what is appropriate rather than what is
simply right or wrong." As a six-year-old boy, I learned
from my mom that I needed to be kind and gentle...but I also learned that
I could be too kind and gentle. From my dad I learned to be
strong, but I also learned I need to be intelligent and appropriate with
my strength. I have often said that a coin has two sides. I have never
seen a one-sided coin. But all too often we forget that fact. We often
think the side we are on is the only side or the right side. When
we do that, we may be smart, we may know our facts, but we also may be
limiting our intelligence.
One of my teachers once said, "God
gave us a right foot and a left foot. God did not give us a right foot and
a wrong foot. Humans make progress by first making a mistake to
the right and then making a mistake to the left. People who think they
must always be right are like people with only a right foot. They
think they are making progress, but they usually wind up going in
circles."
I think as a society we need to be more
intelligent with our strengths and our weaknesses. We need to learn to
operate more intelligently from our feminine side as well as our masculine
side. I remember when I was angry with another guy at school back in the
1960s, we would occasionally go behind the gym and fight with our fists.
After one or two punches were thrown, we would begin to wrestle and get
tired, and then the fight would be over. The worst that ever happened was
an occasional torn shirt or bloody nose. We often became friends after the
fight was over. Today kids get angry, start thinking in the less
intelligent "right and wrong" thinking, break out their guns,
and shoot each other...and that goes for both boys and girls. We may be in
the Information Age and kids may be more "worldly" than their
parents, but we could all learn to be more intelligent with our
information and our emotions. As I said, we need to learn from both our
moms and our dads, because with so much more information, we need to
become more intelligent.
This book is dedicated to parents who want
to raise kids who are smarter, richer, and also more financially
intelligent.
Copyright © 2001 by Robert T. Kiyosaki and Sharon L. Lechter
Excerpt posted with permission from http://www.twbookmark.com
Many thanks to Time Warner
Bookmark (Little, Brown & Company, Warner Books, A Time Warner
Company) at: www.twbookmark.com.
We appreciate their cooperation with OfSpirit.com to share this chapter of
their book with our visitors for education, entertainment and
empowerment.
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