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Posted almost 13 years ago

A Definition of "Financial Freedom" Changed My Life.

I once heard a defintion of "Financial Freedom" that changed my life. The definition went like this;

"FINANCIAL FREEDOM happens when your wants and your needs are exceeded by your passive income."

Once I heard that definition everything changed... everything became crystal clear to me. I had been chasing money but I didn't know exactly why or how much I needed. How much was enough? I had nothing to measure by.

Until I heard that definition, I always assumed that people who were "financially free" were rich. After hearing that definition my life changed completely because I finally understood that being financial free and being wealthy were to completely different things.

That definition said to me that I controlled the bar. Where the bar was set was up to me. At the time I needed $3,500 per month to be free... free from having to have a job or to answer to anyone else on a daily basis. Thinking of becoming rich was daunting but financial freedom was doable. Freedom was well within reach. $3,500 per month was doable!

That definition also said to me; when I become financially free at a modest level, I'd then have the luxury of persueing my hopes and my dreams 24/7/365 days a year. I instinctively realized (finally) that the sooner I became financially free, the sooner I'd have my run at being wealthy.

From that day forward I became singlular in focus and knew exactly where I was at and how fast or slow I was approaching the inevitable first step to my freedom. I had to create $3,500/mo worth of passive income. Suddenly, the mountain of entrepreneurism was not so tall. I could see - smell- the first platue along my own personal hike towards success.

I achieved that goal in a relatively short period of time...1 year. I quit my job and began chasing my dreams every day - all day. My first year I did 45 houses. My 2nd year I did 65 houses. My 3 year I purchased 150 houses and sold 97.

It all started one day when my desire for "chunks of money" was replaced with a desire for "slices of cash flow" that added up to $3,500 per month. After all, money isn't what we are really after is it? I contend we are after our freedom. If freedom could be bought with jelly-beans, we'd all be reading books about how to find jelly-beans...right? All money does is buy you freedom.

I didn't have to be rich to keep my overhead low. In fact, being poor had already tempered me towards doing just that; living modestly. The secret was to keep my overhead low even as I began to make more and more money. Personally, I wanted my freedom more than I wanted a boat or a new car. I put a premium on "Freedom." I wanted my freedom so I could see just who I'd become if I didn't have the pressures of making a living haning over my head. It ended up just as I suspected. I became wealthy after I became financially free.


Comments (6)

  1. That is correct Jon. I'm ot saying I always adhere to my own advice...I've come to know it would better if I did this.


  2. I hear you saying, do a few things extremely well, rather than many things, merely well.


  3. Michael, One of the biggest lessons of my life is that I should have gone slower, more methodical, taken the best deals and left the rest. That being said, I leaned a lot from my days of "churning and burning." I wouldn't trade my life experiences because they have made me a certain type of tested metal and because it gave me a reputation that still persists today in my small pond. However, I wouldn't teach it. Things might have gone much different. I could've imploded except for the times and for my drive. I think it is smarter to persist one great deal at a time. To hav a definite plan of slow maturity. That wasn't me. I took a great chance in the way I did things. Fortunately, it worked out. A person only needs to do a handful of deals a year to greatly improve thier position in life and retirement. I'm older now. Simplification is more important to me. I don't have that "bullet proof" mentallity I once possessed because I see the risk I took. I have the luxury of reflection


  4. Mitch I liked your book. Especially the twist where you became the bank and removed all the head aches of property management. I also liked how you admitted you should have focused on doing the best deals instead of all the deals. It is fun to say you did "X" deals but where they the right deals ...


  5. Thx byran, I'm finding it hard to put things into prospective. Seems every topic leads to more questions. Every answer leads to another topic.


  6. mitch, good to see you blogging...you seem to have a wealth of experience and i look forward to your future posts...