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This is an amazing book if you want to make changes in your life. Tony really gets you to focus on how to be positive. I also believe that anyone as the power to change themselves, as long as they are willing to commit to it and work hard at it.
 
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CMDoherty | 14 other reviews | Oct 3, 2023 |
 
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Nadia678 | 10 other reviews | Sep 11, 2022 |
The best self-help book you'll ever find. Yes, it's unlike others where all of the things are cut too short in a few pages here you get a thick and perfect book with all you ever could question of. Go for it.
I would suggest reading The One Thing as well.
 
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varishaa | 14 other reviews | Sep 5, 2022 |
This book explains and showcases some of the new technologies coming though in medicine. Many are still expensive and for the rich only but hopefully many will eventually be more accessible. Worth a read if you have some medical condition because the technologies are wide ranging and offer hope to a lot of people. It finishes with some of Tony's techniques which are summarised very well. I have bookmarked a few pages to go over and investigate further.
 
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Neale | 1 other review | Apr 30, 2022 |
I was recommended this book to me several years ago by a friend. He was the most positive person I had ever met and I asked him how he was that way. He was going through a divorce and things in his life were quite difficult but he was always happy. He told me that this book transformed his attitude about life.
It has taken me a while to actually sit down and read this book but this was definitely the right time. For many years, I was a wife and mother and all my goals and dreams involved my husband and kid. Five years ago, that all ended and my youngest graduated from high school a couple of years later. I am finally ready to focus on me and my goals again. I don't think I realized that until I read this book. I have been thinking about goals and dreams now and am making plans. I have broken a lifelong habit of picking my skin. Tomorrow is two weeks since I picked and I actually have not had a hard time in days. I am no longer a picker. I have tried to quit all my life. Quitting smoking was easy compared to this. Suddenly, after reading this book, it has been easy to quit.
I highly recommend this book to anyone that is wanting to make positive changes in their life. I will continue to work on the assignments in the book and continue to grow and follow my new dreams and goals.
 
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KyleneJones | 14 other reviews | Apr 25, 2022 |
This book is showing us the latest breakthroughs in science and longevity. It starts out with the basic building blocks for well-being: nutrition, fasting, sleep, and exercise. Nutrition is the one that is the biggest challenge with all our bad habits of eating. The authors show how the latest studies reveal some of the new research in Stem cells, genetics, supplements, and diet can not only cure many diseases but reverse aging by more then 20 years. That’s right make your cells much younger.
One of the research scientists that they interview is David Sinclair the author of “Lifespan”. From his research he has developed his own regimen that has created a 20-year reversal in ageing. They share his supplement stack. Vitamins, D3 with K2, 1 gram of resveratrol (mixed in yogurt), metformin, and one gram of NMN. My personal Stack has been minimum of 10,000 units of D3 with K2 for many years. I have used resveratrol off and on. The metformin I have not used but am considering other sugar lowering supplements like bitter melon (when I did a book review of Donald Yancy’s book on adaptogens he mentions that bitter melon lowers blood sugar better then metformin) and, or Pendulum’s glucose control probiotic (its expensive but cool to have a probiotic that lowers blood sugar and improves the microbiome). The NMN I first learned about when I read the “Lifespan” book but did not understand why he took it until reading this book. NMN is a precursor to NAD+ which decreases as we age. It is the main molecule that is involved with energizing our cells.
Our body has 30 trillion human cells-and produces 330 billion new ones each day. If you want to get younger and healthier you need to have the proper building blocks for those new cells. We not only need the right materials, but we need to guide the cells in the proper functioning of the system. The epigenome is the software our cells listen too. Since the epigenome is the controller, we need to know the genes that affect the controller, it is the seven regulatory genes called sirtuins. These sirtuins tell the epigenome to boost mitochondrial activity, reduce inflammation, and protect telomeres, besides directing DNA repair. NAD+ is the molecule that powers the entire sirtuins system.
Shinya Yamanaka discovered that four genes could transform garden-variety adult cells into age-zero stem cells. These magical cells had the ability to repair or replace injured tissue anywhere in the body. Then Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte turned on all four “Yamanaka factors” and achieved the astonishing feat of refreshing aged mice waning mitochondria and increasing their lifespan by 30 percent.
David Sinclair turned on 3 of the Yamanaka factors in mice blinded by glaucoma. They had their sight restored. This is the first treatment to reverse vision loss in a glaucoma model. We are on the verge of being able to turn back our biological clock and cure a disease as though we are very young even neonatal.
The book gets into gene editing. They can actually edit and replace our bodies genes with software similar to our word processor. ApoE2 is the longevity gene they are researching now. They call it the jackpot gene.
Then we get to the Wnt Pathway: The ultimate fountain of youth? This is the signaling pathway, a sort of relay circuit made of genes and proteins. It signals our progenitor stem cells to make specific types of tissues. This is the one I am excited about. I tore the cartilage in my knee playing high school football. I recently had a bone specialist look at it and it was bone on bone. They wanted to do a knee transplant. I like the idea of an injection in the knee, and it regenerates cartilage in 24 weeks. They have injected this medicine Lorecivivint in mice whose spinal cords have been destroyed and had them regenerate in 6 months. Osman Kibar the inventor says, “We call our platform a fountain of youth, but piece by piece.” He sees the Wnt pathway as a basic tool to not just stop or slow the aging process, “but actually to reverse it. We believe we are going to make us younger.”
This is a 650-page book, so it gets into a lot of exciting things. I have just touched on a few that impacted me. The biggest was the explaining of how important NAD+ is. It is a helper molecule-a” coenzyme”-found in every cell in our body. It partners with our sirtuin vitality genes-those signaling proteins that regulate cell metabolism and longevity genes-to keep those cells in good working order. Specifically, it helps process nutrients into ATP, the power “currency” of our cells. NAD+ is an essential component of all living things; we’d be gone without it. Since NAD+ is a large molecule, it needs precursor molecules to enter the cell. One of the precursors I have been taking is vitamin B3, also known as niacin. This is an inexpensive vitamin compared to NMN but is also less effective. Of interest is that there are new products on the horizon, NAD3 (Wasabi japonica extract, theacrine and copper(I)-niacin complex and MIB-626 a synthetically manufactured molecule that is similar to, but not identical to NMN. Our future looks amazing.
 
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ADYTUMSANCTUARY | 1 other review | Mar 6, 2022 |
50 pg of good investment advice & 600 pg of infomercial
I was pretty disappointed. This was my first Tonny Robbins book, and for someone whose net worth is $500 million, you would expect a better product.

Do you really need 650 pages to say: save money from your work and invest in index funds and make sure you diversify and allocate assets between equities, bonds, commodities, gold, real estate? Then, keep rebalancing your portfolio from year to year. Then repeat this multiple times with various anecdotes and scenarios and mention that being rich is fabulous and he knows a lot of rich and famous people. That's torture. I don't understand why the book was not reviewed in more detail and then recommended by Oprah? I don't think Oprah read it. I think she is a wise woman and would never put herself through this torture.

There were a few important ideas in the book. Main one -- investment and asset allocation advice by David Swensen, Yale chief investment officer who invested money not for himself but for his favorite institution (and who passed away this year, unfortunately):
Smart asset allocation:
--70% in equity-like --> 30% in US stocks; 10% emerging markets, 15% in foreign development, 15% in real estate investment trusts;
--30% in fixed income --> 15% in Treasuries; 15% in inflation-protected TIPS.
Invest in index funds instead of managed funds, which charge high fees.
--Check on your 401k fees.
--Considering hiring a fiduciary advisor rather than just a financial advisor. Use National Association of Personal Financial Advisors (NAPFA).


What I liked about the book:
Interviews with the top 12 famous investors made billionaires. However, only one woman was interviewed. Warren Buffett didn't want to give an interview b/u he said he had already said everything he had to say in previous interviews.
Tony's enthusiasm and passion.
Few stories were interesting.

What I didn't like about the book:
-650 pages of paraphrasing information, not getting to the point;
-Super small font - 8 or 9 pt? 650 pages long?
-Stories and anecdotes and more tales;
-It feels like an infomercial and is very sellsy.
-The apparent conflict of interest, funneling readers to his advisory arm, Anthony Robins companies such as Namale Resort and Spa, Fortune Practice Management, Advisor Excel, a Coaching company,
-Name dropping which alienates average investors;
-Constant references to 'I will teach you this later," "we'll come back to that in more detail in a later chapter," etc.
-Advice about life insurance, which can be very tricky if you hire someone who doesn't know what they are doing. Therefore, recommending the expensive companies related to Tony.
-Total self-promotion.
-The book being more motivational than actual financial education, you still won't learn 'how to do things.
-Tools that don't work: PortfoliocheckUp website, for All Season portfolio options, doesn't work. You have to schedule a consultation with Tony's partner company.
-The Lifetimeincome website is a sale for life insurance products.
-The masterthegame app has been defunct since 2016, according to Wayback machine. It is now changed to TR Money app.
-The book is used as a giveaway at Tony's $500, $2,000, and up events.
-There are no footnotes or sources to any of the information. The access to resources on the masterthegame website doesn't work.
-I understand having a content magnet as a giveaway and not expecting much, but people buy this book for $28 as the main product and get a lot of nothing.


Total 2.3/5
*Readability - 2.5
*Scope - 2.5
*Depth - 2
*Format - 2
*Clarity -2.5

Read this book if:
-You need the same information repeated over and over and over again.
-You love Tony Robbins so much that you don't mind that a man of that $500 million net worth would make you buy an inferior product.
-You need a lot of motivation to believe that making money is good and fancy being sold to.
 
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Aki_Stepinska | 5 other reviews | Jan 18, 2022 |
Essential elements of personal development
 
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Jolene.M | Jul 30, 2020 |
 
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Jolene.M | Jul 30, 2020 |
Tony Robbins is a great inspiration, and operates his body/mind/soul with an infectious zeal. He makes no secret that the purpose of his life is to collect, absorb, test, and retail wisdom. The material he presents is valuable and marketable -- he markets it.

In terms of critique, the proof is in the alumni who have taken his "courses". Many have made successes of their lives by finally "hearing" this wisdom because of Tony's ability to communicate it. The only sad part is that he is so caught up in the illusion of "individual entrepreneurship" that he misses the Collective power of organized specialization. The Project is filled with negative aspersions about "Government", missing both the point and the hope of good governance in a participatory representative Republic. Politically, Tony veers into a personality cult. To his credit, he really does model the wisdom he preaches. He fails to understand or teach the social economic discovery of Adam Smith and the benefit of a democratic Republic as a form of governance owned by its citizens. He ends up preaching hatred of "our" Government, which is self-hatred.

Ultimately, "free enterprise" is only unleashed if capitalist/monopolist impulses are regulated by just laws enforced fairly with judicial recourse for violations and breaches. Humans have understood this since Aristotle studied Politics. Greed and corruption have always interrupted our implementations. Ultimately all "self-improvement" movements fail and fall in the face of those interruptions. Tony never challenges the Greed kill.

Tony teaches Unlimited Power by grasping the potential of the human brain. He locked on to Neuro-linguistic Programming, psychological triggers, and couples techniques with business acumen and marketing. Steps include building a ready-State for the mind/body/soul, with physiological body-training and emotionally resonant compassion. "Turn your mess into message" by labelling your own Identity, telling and rewriting your Story, and unfolding your Self. Unlocking your emotional drivers and "secrets" to create breakthroughs. All directed to taking action. "Happiness is a habit," and "Success leaves clues".

He teaches the power of Relationships -- "the greatest evolutionary advantage is Love" -- although he restricts his lessons to the short plays, to intimacy and private partnerships, not the Great Game of polity and Governance. One beautiful contribution is his explicit example of the power of apology, paying restitution, forgiveness, and finding honor in making amends. He uses the healing concept of Hoʻoponopono.

The teaching is filled with reinforcement "triggers" --Tony is primarily a teacher, but pretends to be a leader for the hidden and very limited heuristic purpose of modeling the lessons. As a leader he brings a genuine delight and love for people. The project is filled with charism, non-judgmental acceptance of others, and well-thought out marketing designs. The project brings genuine "opportunity" by enabling us to find the answers that are inside every one of us all the time. We need Tony to help us "see" and hear.
 
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keylawk | 10 other reviews | Jun 30, 2020 |
This definitely is not a 'once read' book. There is just too much info in a single book , too many exercises , too much to assimilate. I for one need to read it again. I liked the concept of pain pleasure linking , moving towards and away values.
 
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rrkreads | 14 other reviews | Jun 15, 2020 |
Great summary about the state-of-the-art in money management, investing and building a nest egg
 
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remouherek | 5 other reviews | Feb 24, 2020 |
This book's a pretty much what everyone who reads its title probably suspects it is, an updated version of the previously released Tony Robbins's bestseller Awaken the Giant Within. There's not much difference from the previous book within it, but there are some new pointers that may as well prove valuable and worthy to you as you go through this wonderful mystery of existence of life. That said, it's very short, only like one-hundred pages long, but even though it is very short it still serves its purpose, to motivate and to inspire its avid reader to do many great things in life and to read the Awaken the Giant Within once again, so its reader doesn't by any chance forget what he has learned from its previous version and to once again apply various different exercises and challenges to his or her life.
 
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Champ88 | Dec 25, 2019 |
Many people think of him a fraud, because of how much he charges for his motivational words and motivational speeches, but many people also think of him as their personal savior, because he has managed to have an immense impact on their lives and has made sure they have found enough courage not only to follow their deepest and craziest dreams but also to have enough faith in themselves, their abilities, and their limitless potential. I for one don't think of him a fraud or a personal savior. I think of him as a very intelligent man who has learned how to have a successful career and how to succeed in life, and is actually learning other people with help of Neuro Linguistic Programming, who have great potential, how to have a successful career and how to succeed in life, and that's something I believe all of us should cherish.
 
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Champ88 | 14 other reviews | Dec 25, 2019 |
I read this book in a day. I decided to read it after listening to Tony's interview with Tim Ferriss. This book has practical information on how to invest your money and also has a key message on happiness. I read this after reading chapters 8 and 20 of The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham and hearing of various other snippets of information from Mr Money Moustache and Tim Ferriss. Worth a read for anyone wondering if they are doing the best thing with their savings.
 
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StevenJohnTait | 1 other review | Jul 29, 2019 |
Il voto è collegato alle motivazioni che crea nel leggerlo non certo alla qualità (una guida) letteraria.
 
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Ste1955 | 10 other reviews | Apr 24, 2019 |
One of his earlier works but like all of Tony's books, this is inspiring.
I'd recommend this to everyone.
 
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GedQ | 14 other reviews | Sep 22, 2017 |
I received the first chapter of the book via Smiley360 but it leaves me in disappointment because the first chapter only covers 'Introduction', and how he met lots of successful people all over the world. I finished reading all 55 pages, and I don't even get the point on how to master the game of money. Not straight-forward. I was hoping that the 1st chapter has some insights on how to master the game of money. Alas, it only leaves me wasting my time reading for nothing.

I received a free sampler of the book for the purpose of my review. Opinions are 100% my own.
 
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dayverampas | 5 other reviews | Sep 17, 2017 |
First off, this is a review for Smiley360 (https://smiley.socialmedialink.com). I received a sample chapter of the book for review, so this review is not based on the complete book. Reader be warned.

The book begins as any hyped-up book does - with numerous pages of positive reviews. I generally skip these because I really don't want them to color my opinion of the actual book. But I feel obliged to note that there were, in fact, 5 pages of hype before the title of the book. This is followed by a Foreward and Introduction that is basically drawn out examples of the same thing. All of the hype is designed to 'prime' you for what the author is trying to sell.

The book itself does not begin until about page 30 (30 of 55 on the pdf version I was asked to review). The first chapter, appropriate to the book's title, deals with money. It goes on to emphasize the importance of money in our day-to-day lives with "I want to remind you, this is a game that you and your family can’t afford to lose." This impresses on the reader their need to continue reading this book. This is further implied by the following: "My promise to you is this: if you will stay with me and follow the 7 Simple Steps in this book—the steps that have been distilled from the world’s most successful financial players—you and your family will win this game. And you can win big!"

Not too subtle. "I hope you’ll let me be your translator as well as your guide on this journey. Together we’ll break the code and cut through the complexity that keeps most of us feeling like outsiders in the world of finance." Okay. I'm game... "Before you know it, you’ll be an insider too." Wait... what? So, this is basically a book about Insider Trading for Dummies?

And then comes the name-dropping. (I won't bother quoting the list. Just know that for someone this famous, name-dropping is bad form.) While some of the tips and suggestions hinted at in the first chapter do seem intriguing, they are not enough to answer the question posed at the end of the first chapter: "Do I have you hooked on what’s really possible for your life now?"

This may be a book I come back to later, to read the full story, and thus update my review, but as things stand, I cannot bring myself to place this on the top of my "Reading Shelf". For those looking to get into investing, this is a good place to turn, but for everyone else... do yourself a favor and pass.

 
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Ermina | 5 other reviews | Feb 25, 2016 |
I am not into self-help and motivational gurus so even though I heard Tony Robbins name I didn't read his books or watched him speak. Somebody recommended me this book and I was very surprised. It's a combination of motivational rhetoric and logical concrete steps to try to get your finances in order by the retirement time. It's simplified and often too absolute but I think it will be invaluable for many people. I give discount for annoying repetitions and sales technique, which probably come with motivational territory. But it looks like this method of writing works. Tony Robbins is a good writer and is able to explain some complicated financial matters in a very simple language. His advice is sometimes contradicting but I am ready to overlook this for the overall value of his advice.
 
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everfresh1 | 5 other reviews | May 15, 2015 |
Tony Robbins isn’t the first person you’d think would be the one to write a book on money, but on Tim Ferriss’ recommendation I picked up a copy. As a finance major with an MBA to my name, I was skeptical that I could learn much about money from a “feelings” guru like Tony. I was wrong – this book probably gave me more useful lessons in finance than my entire formal education.

Tony began building this book by interviewing a litany of investment titans – Warren Buffett, Charles Schwab, Carl Icahn, Ray Dalio – pretty much the entire investing all-star team. Most of us would never get the chance to gain access to any of these masters’ knowledge, but Tony used his conversations with all of them to synthesize a money manifesto.


Section 1: Welcome to the Jungle: The Journey Begins with This First Step

The first chapter is an introduction to classic Robbins psychology. Tony begins by lamenting that money is somewhat of a taboo subject, asserting that money is an essential part of our holistic well-being, and explaining how he went about building the book by interviewing the best of the best. His first conclusion is that it’s very difficult to earn enough money through your job to have financial freedom, so you need to save and invest. Develop the mindset of an investor, rather than being only a consumer. The only way to overcome ingrained human psychology and actually save is to create a plan and automate your investing, so set up the automatic withdrawals and forget about them.

Section 2: Become the Insider: Know the Rules Before You Get in the Game

Because money is such a misunderstood topic, especially by those who think they know what they’re doing, Tony goes into the nine financial myths that have to be busted in order to start building a correct understanding of how money works.

Myth #1: The market can be beat. Only a few gifted people can beat the market’s returns consistently, and neither you nor your financial advisor are one of them. Less than 4% of actively managed mutual funds beat the market, which is far, far worse than a coin toss. You’re much better off buying a passively managed index fund, which simply matches the overall market.

Myth #2: People are telling the truth about fees. The average cost of owning a mutual fund is 3.17% a year when you include all the hidden fees – expense ratio, transaction costs, cash drag, unseen taxes, etc. That may not sound like much, but for each 1% increase in fees, 20% of the final value of the typical retirement portfolio is eaten away. The end result is that even though the percent looks small, it can result in (literally) most of your savings ending up in someone else’s pocket. Again, investing in index funds with fees around 1% will make an enormous difference in your financial storehouse.

Myth #3: People are telling the truth about returns. A core truth about investing is that it is much more important to avoid losses than to get gains. Why? If you have $100 in your portfolio and you lose 50% the first year, you then have $50. If you then gain 50% in the second year, you end up with only $75. Your average (time-weighted) return was 0% (up 50%, then down 50%), but your real (dollar-weighted) return was negative 25%. Which type of returns do you think mutual funds like to report?

Myth #4: Your broker is on your side. Most brokers are perfectly good and honest people. However, most of them also probably don’t understand the three myths we’ve just covered. On top of that, the broker model is a serious conflict of fiduciary duties. Your broker has a responsibility to increase your money as well as a responsibility to increase his company’s money, and the two duties are mutually exclusive. A much better decision is to go with a registered investment advisor (RIA), who gets an annual fee from you rather than commissions from the mutual funds, to manage your investments. Go to the National Association of Personal Financial Advisors or Stronghold Financial website to find an RIA.

Myth #5: Your 401(k) will set you up for retirement. In my mind before I read this book, I had a mental image of the 401(k) as some kind of timeless bastion of classic investment best practice. Not so – the 401(k) is a (failed) social experiment that has only been around for 30 years. The unique bull market conditions of the 80’s and 90’s blinded society to a point where we believed that the 401(k) system was effectively setting people up for retirement, but with the recent financial crisis, it became more apparent that the system is a failure. The factors listed in Myths 1 – 3 severely limit the growth of your retirement portfolio, and taxes on withdrawals will slash your nest egg further. On top of that, the 401(k) doesn’t do anything to protect against the unfortunate retirement timing that left many people with a fraction of their savings after the financial crisis.

Hopefully you’ve already avoided the traditional 401(k) or IRA in favor of a Roth, in order to solve the tax problem. You can use an IRA instead of a 401(k) to avoid the factors in Myths 1 – 3, but IRAs have much lower contribution limits, and don’t let you take advantage of matching contributions from your employer. Tony recommends that you go to the online fee checker here, which will show how much you’re really paying in fees in your company’s 401(k), and then approach your employer with the results. Because of a new law passed in 2012, employers are legally required to compare their 401(k) plans to make sure the fees are reasonable. Hopefully this combination of information will be enough to convince your employer to consider offering low-cost index funds in your plan.

Myth #6: Target date funds are a good way to allocate your investments. Since ordinary investors have no idea how to diversify their investments, many choose a “target date” fund where their mix of investments changes based on their age. The point is to get higher returns when you’re young and can afford more risk, and then to preserve your capital when you’re getting closer to retirement (typically less in stocks and more in bonds). While it’s a helpful idea in theory, the “experts” who put these plans together operate under two gravely mistaken assumptions: that bonds are safer than stocks, and that bonds and stocks move in opposite directions. We’ll cover more on that later.

Myth #7: Annuities are bad. Conventional wisdom will tell you that annuities as an investment class are overpriced and a bad investment. While this is true in general (largely due to exorbitant fees that are even worse than mutual funds), it would be unwise to paint this entire investment class with the same brush. At least one type of annuity (the tax-free fixed indexed annuity) is an invaluable investment tool. We’ll revisit that soon, as well. (Side note: If you already own a bad investment like a variable rate annuity, ask your advisor about using a feature called a 1035 exchange to switch it for a good annuity without having to pay taxes.)

Myth #8: You have to take big risks to get big returns. One of the most important rules of investing is to risk a little for the potential to make a lot. Some easy ways for the individual to do this are structured notes, market-linked CDs, and fixed indexed annuities, which all share the common feature of protecting your invested principle but also giving you access to upside potential if the market moves the right way.

Myth #9: Success is determined by something beyond our control. We take a detour here for some more classic Tony Robbins psychology, applied to money: a change in mindset is necessary to succeed. With these myths busted, you don’t have any excuse not to turn around your financial life for the better.

____________________________________________

Read the rest at http://www.deconstructingexcellence.com/money-master-the-game/
1 vote
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DE_Blog | 5 other reviews | Feb 11, 2015 |
A great classic that everyone must read.
 
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stephen.tan | 14 other reviews | Jan 9, 2014 |
Great life lessons to live by. This one will be on my shelf to be listened to again. The enthusiasm that Tony Robbins displays is infectious and helps you implement many of these valuable lessons to help master many of these fundamental rules or suggestions.
 
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capiam1234 | 1 other review | Aug 14, 2013 |
Great life lessons to live by. This one will be on my shelf to be listened to again. The enthusiasm that Tony Robbins displays is infectious and helps you implement many of these valuable lessons to help master many of these fundamental rules or suggestions.
 
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smcamp1234 | 1 other review | Aug 14, 2013 |
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