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| The Financial Wisdom of Ebenezer Scrooge : 5 Principles to Transform Your Relationship with Money | 
enlarge | Authors: Ted Klontz, Rick Kahler, Brad Klontz Publisher: HCI Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $8.99 You Save: $5.96 (40%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $8.90
Avg. Customer Rating:   (26 reviews) Sales Rank: 77382
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 200 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 4.7 x 0.8
ISBN: 0757303544 Dewey Decimal Number: 332.0240019 EAN: 9780757303548 ASIN: 0757303544
Publication Date: November 15, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
Discover the 5 Essentials to Financial Freedom and Prosperity! Do you wish you had more money saved for retirement? Do you and your partner fight about money? Do you want to make an investment but are unsure in what? Do you make yourself promises about finances that you just can't seem to keep? If you answered yes to any of these questions, you may have a problem-but it's not the problem you think it is. Your money problems are a consequence of the relationship you have with your money. A problem in that relationship is what's really holding you back. In this compelling book, The Financial Wisdom of Ebenezer Scrooge, you will learn the breakthrough approach that is transforming lives-a method which The Wall Street Journal hails as "an innovative effort that combines experiential therapy with nuts-and-bolts financial planning." Finally, a practical plan to be your money's master instead of its servant. Ebenezer Scrooge would seem an unlikely source from which to glean financial wisdom: He was a wealthy man who kept his living quarters cold to save shillings and lived a reclusive existence because he worried someone would take his money. However, Dickens' classic tale of how Scrooge found his true course in life is a powerful model we all can benefit from today. Unlike other financial planning books that focus narrowly on the "dollar and cents" of money, The Financial Wisdom of Ebenezer Scrooge is an easy read. Written for the layperson, this book provides advice that is simple, transformational, and timeless. Through the process they've used successfully with their clients, the authors will show you how to recognize ways unconscious Money Scripts may keep you trapped; how to deal with the relationship between your net worth and your self-worth; how to discover your authentic goals and values; how to permanently change self-destructive money behaviors; and, through 5 essentials of financial prosperity, how to leave a family legacy of financial wellness. "These are five essentials indeed, they have literally changed my life Clients, friends, and family will all be receiving this book as a gift from me. They will no doubt thank me later." -Kerry Hansen, Career Management Specialist for Wynonna Judd "The authors have hit a grand slam with this outstanding book. Brilliant, clear, moving... a must-read." -Jerry Moe M.A., National Director of Children's Programs, Betty Ford Center "This will be on my clients' 'must-read' list." -Elizabeth Jetton CFP, Chairperson of The Financial Planning Association, 2005
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| Customer Reviews: Read 21 more reviews...
  The Financial Wisdom of Ebenezer Scrooge: 5 Principles to Transform Your Relationship With Money July 30, 2008 I suggest that my psychotherapy clients read this book. Many of my clients, who are mostly affluent professionals, have underlying issues which get played out in the financial arena.
I wish I could have written this book. It is very user friendly and motivates the reader to do the exercises at the end of each chapter. Many clients recognize that they identify with Ebenzer at times and Bob at other times. Thanks for writing this book!
  Clever, Wise, and Helpful May 2, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is one of the most clever approaches to helping people find their way to financial freedom. I have read many many books on personal finance and it has always confounded me as to why more people don't take an interest in their financial future. This book shows how mind traps that were set in youth can keep people from making the right financial choices. The authors talk about "money scripts" that people carry with them and that influence their money behavior. The authors cleverly use the story of Ebenezer Scrooge and Bob Cratchit showing what their money scripts might have been and how those scripts influenced their behaviors in A Christmas Carol. The exercises are excellent. It took me a while but I eventually identified some of my own money scripts. Frankly, this method could be used to help identify life scripts that keep us from achieving our ultimate potential as well.
The authors come through as genuinely wanting to help their readers. I have read books that were promoted as self-help financial books but in the end were books to promote an author's seminars rather than providing sound advice and help.
I highly recommend this book for anyone who wants to start today to shape a better financial future for themselves and their families.
  The financial wisdom of ebeneezer scrooge March 13, 2008 I started reading "The Financial Wisdom of Ebeneezer Scrooge" expecting to see financial "ghosts" of past, present and future. I wasn't disappointed. What I didn't expect to see was financial failures of Bob Crachit. So I was pleasantly surprised to see that in spite of our perrenial wink and nod associated with the poor among us, The "Bob's" do bear some responsibility to be educated about their situation.
The book seems to be practical in its application of conservative financial wisdom. I say "seems to be" because it's up to me to apply the tools. I think I can, I think I can...
  Thought Provoking January 27, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Enlightening regarding the way you view money and how this affects so many other areas of your life. The impact of early script imprinting and its affect on your adult life is both fascinating and helpful.
  A lot of different people will like this for various reasons January 26, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book is worth the price for several different reasons. First, the style is sympathetic, and most people reading this book do not want to have an author shaking a finger at them for their financial living styles. Second, the use of Dickens' famous short story as a lesson outline is not only clever, but also very easy to relate to. Although everyone knows that the miser gets turned around in the end of the story, few have likely stopped to notice that old Scrooge had to go through several stages to realize his money pathology. Also, the book points out that Scrooge was an eager student! The third is that the book is not overly long, and the story flow makes the reader want to keep going, even though we kind of know what is likely to happen in the next chapter.
The author's personal twist near the conclusion is endearing, and of course will not be given away here. It can be a good thing to know that the authors and consultants have had difficult times also. The only example/actual character that sounded less credible, though, was that single woman who earned a quarter million dollars a year, but somehow could never save any money. Yikes! Nobody most of us know.
The general wisdoms in this book are not all that unpredictable. Most have to do with "you are not your money," "it's the LOVE of money that's not good," "you don't escape most problems by getting more net worth," and so forth. True, and always worthwhile being reminded of such. A personal view: too much time spent on the generality of these admittedly good thoughts, not enough numbers thrown in. A good example is the statement (recently found by some uncredited survey, I think) in the middle of "Scrooge" that people usually are better off getting to about $50K annual income; after that, increased happiness doesn't come in the nearly the proportion that increases in net worth do. Probably true, and things like this probably should have been forcefully mentioned a number of times. Readers like to hitch onto tangible, named amounts. Still, it WAS mentioned, and the clever reader will find the passage. A good buy.
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