A  Blog Posted by Singapore 's Youngest  Millionaire

By  Adam Khoo   |

Some of you may already know that  I travel around the region pretty
frequently,  having to visit and conduct seminars at my  offices in
Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and  Suzhou (China). I am in the airport
almost every  other week so I get to bump into many people who  have
attended my seminars or have read my  books.

Recently, someone came up to me on  a plane to KL and looked rather
shocked. He  asked, 'How come a millionaire like you is  travelling
economy?' My reply was, 'That's why I  am a millionaire.' He still
looked pretty  confused. This again confirms that greatest lie  ever
told about wealth (which I wrote about in  my latest book 'Secrets of
Self Made  Millionaires'). Many people have been  brainwashed to think
that millionaires have to  wear Gucci, Hugo Boss, Rolex, and sit on
first  class in air travel. This is why so many people  never become
rich because the moment that earn  more money, they think that it is
only natural  that they spend more, putting them back to  square one.

The truth is that most  self-made millionaires are frugal and only
spend on what is necessary and of value. That is  why they are able to
accumulate and multiply  their wealth so much faster. Over the last 7
years, I have saved about 80% of my income while  today I save only
about 60% (because I have my  wife, mother in law, 2 maids, 2 kids,
etc. to  support). Still, it is way above most people who  save 10% of
their income (if they are lucky). I  refuse to buy a first class
ticket or to buy a  $300 shirt because I think that it is a complete
waste of money. However, I happily pay $1,300 to  send my 2-year old
daughter to Julia Gabriel  Speech and Drama without thinking  twice.

When I joined the YEO (Young  Entrepreneur's Organization) a few years
back  (YEO is an exclusive club open to those who are  under 40 and
make over $1m a year in their own  business) I discovered that those
who were  self-made thought like me. Many of them with net  worths
well over $5m, travelled economy class  and some even drove Toyota's
and Nissans (not  Audis, Mercs, BMWs).

I noticed that it  was only those who  never had to work hard to build
their own  wealth (there were also a few  ministers' and tycoons' sons
in the club)  who spent like  there was no tomorrow. Somehow, when
you did not have to build everything from  scratch, you do not really
value money. This is precisely the reason  why a family's wealth (no
matter how much) rarely  lasts past the third generation. Thank  God
my rich dad (oh no! I sound like Kiyosaki)  foresaw this terrible
possibility and refused to  give me a cent to start my business.

Then  some people ask me, 'What is the point in making  so much money
if you don't enjoy it?' The thing  is that I don't really find
happiness in buying  branded clothes, jewellery or sitting first
class. Even if buying something makes me happy  it is only for a
while, it does not last.  Material happiness  never lasts, it just
give you a quick  fix. After a while you feel lousy  again and have to
buy the next thing which you  think will make you happy. I always
think that  if you need material things to make you happy,  then you
live a pretty sad and unfulfilled  life.

Instead, what make ME happy is when  I see my children laughing and
playing and  learning so fast. What makes me happy is when I  see by
companies and trainers reaching more and  more people every year in so
many more  countries. What makes me really happy is when I  read all
the emails about how my books and  seminars have touched and inspired
someone's  life. What makes me really happy is reading all  your
wonderful posts about how this BLOG is  inspiring you. This happiness
makes me feel  really good for a long time, much much more than  what
a Rolex would do for me.

I think the  point I want to put across is that happiness must come
from  doing your life's work (be in  teaching, building homes,
designing, trading,  winning tournaments etc.) and the money that
comes is  only a by-product. If you hate what  you are doing and rely
on the money you earn to  make you happy by buying stuff, then I think
 that you are living a life of  meaningless.

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