It's Not About the Money: Unlock Your Money Type to Achieve Spiritual and Financial Abundance ~ Everything Finance

Friday, June 6, 2008

It's Not About the Money: Unlock Your Money Type to Achieve Spiritual and Financial Abundance

About the Author

Brent Kessel was named one of the top 250 financial advisors in the U.S. by Worth magazine and his company, Abacus Wealth Partners, which manages more than $800 million in client assets, was named one of the "top 250 wealth management firms in the U.S." by Bloomberg's Wealth Manager. Dubbed a "Financial Soul Searcher" by Research magazine, Kessel has been featured in Newsweek and Yoga Journal, and has been widely quoted in the Los Angeles Times, Newsweek, Business Week, and the Wall Street Journal. After meeting the Dalai Lama and Mother Teresa as a young man, Kessel began practicing yoga and meditation and skyrocketed to success in a career that uniquely combines spirituality and wealth management.



In the Book

Part One: First we have to understand what is happening inside on an emotional level before we can work on outside circumstances.

Part Two: This part focuses on recognizing and understanding your core money personality.

Part Three: This is the intellectual side of money management. Here is when It's Not About The Money gets into investing, financial planning and using your core story to help you make money.

Part Four: This is the nuts and bolts resource section. Here you will find pages of valuable information which standing alone is worth the price of the book.

Brent Kessel did a great job of marrying the emotional, spiritual and practical aspects of money, financial planning and wealth management. It's Not About The Money is the type of book you'll want to make time to read, study, work the activities and absorb the material on both an emotional and intellectual level.

You may want to revisit the concepts after an initial reading, but that will be efficient because the book is easy to follow. The book is well organized with chapters & sections for various archetypes, so that in the future the reader can just refer to the pertinent sections.

This book might be appealing to perhaps a college freshman with a sudden profound interest in psychology and finance and absolutely no prior experience.

Overall a good read!!

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