Things the 1% Do That the 99% Don’t
The rich are getting richer.
The poor are getting poorer. Sad, I know. But it doesn’t have to be that way.
You too can get rich, join the 1 percent and start feeling sad for the poor
just like I did.
You can
even go one step further and reach a digital hand down just like I’m doing
right now. Simply reach up, grab my cyber hand (careful, it’s super cyber-y),
do the following seven things, and concern for income disparity will soon
become a thing of the past.
I mean
if enough digital hands reach down, we will all be the 1 percent. The 99
percent will simply vanish. And that, my friend, is the real solution for
global overpopulation.
1. Stop liking sleep even
slightly.
“Do
not love sleep, or you will become poor.” —Solomon8
Sleep
is super annoying to me. If it wasn’t for sleep, I could read books seven more
hours a day. That would mean… let me do the math real quick… … carry the one…
uummm… I would be a trillionaire.
Knowledge
is power. Power is powerful. Only powerful people get to
have money. They don’t call it currency for no reason. Only weak people with
no purpose look forward to sleep and are sad when it’s over. And that’s only
partially true now that I think about it. I actually do look forward to sleep.
But only because I can’t wait to hurry up and get it over with, wake up and get
back to work.
Do you
sleep like a baby? Think through the ramifications of your answer to that one.
If you answered yes,
you’re probably just not thinking hard enough during the day. Or you’re doing
too many drugs at night. The smartest people I know are all insomniacs. So if
you can simply figure out a way to develop insomnia, I think that will increase
your odds of entering the golden gates of 1 Percent Land.
Speaking
of 1 Percent Land, someone please invent that. I would much rather take my
daughter there than Disney Land where 10-foot-tall ducks chase her around and
leave permanent emotional scars and an unnecessary fear of probably all Lands
in general.
Seriously though, get sleep by all
means. You need it. Just don’t like it is all. This is merely a
different way of saying you
need to have passion and purpose in your life.
The 1
percent have stuff to do. Do you have stuff to do?
2. Be the best.
“It's
a funny thing about life; if you refuse to accept anything but the best, you
very often get it.” —W.
Somerset Maugham9 (Oh,
come on. Don't act like you don’t know who Somerset is. Everyone does.)
The 1
percent know people like to buy the best products and services possible. So they make it their
goal to be the best
and produce the best.
You are
going to have a hard time producing the best products and services if you,
personally, are not the best. So if you’re not the best, don’t focus so much on
your work. Focus on you. Sharpen your skills. Sharpen your mind. Sharpen your
abs. It’s hard to not be the best with sharp abs. Impossible almost.
I
actually tried to not be the best once just as an experiment to see if I could
override the power of my super sharp abs. Ha. I might as well have been trying
to talk Donald Trump into doing the sensible thing and shave his head. Just
knowing they’re there, rippling under your shirt, begging to rip through the
fabric at any given moment and dazzle everyone around you is a hugeconfidence booster.
And you need confidence to be the best and join the 1 percent.
Just trust me on this one. I’ve lived life with abs and without. They are like
a super power.
3. Value production over
playtime.
“The
supreme accomplishment is to blur the line between work and play.” —Arnold
J. Toynbee3
There
is a time to work and a time to play. The question is this: What are you living for?
What drives you? What are you most looking forward to most of the time? Are you living to work, produce and serve
others, with playtime as a pleasant and occasional respite? Or you are you
living to play, party and self-serve with work time as an unpleasant but
necessary evil that exists to support your playtime?
I hate
to be the one to break this to you, but we’re here on earth to work. I’d say
the ratio is about six to one in favor of work. But you know what the beauty of
this is? Once you internalize that fact and find work you enjoy, work time
becomes playtime. Right now, as I write this article it doesn’t feel like work.
It feels fun. I’m totally energized and enjoying every minute of it.
The 1 percent play all day e’rr
day. There are no weekends or weekdays, workdays or vacation days, Sundays or
Mondays. They’re all the same. You know you’re living life the way it is
intended to be lived when you look
forward to work. You actually prefer work.
Sound
crazy? The 1 percent are crazy.
4. Have the 99 percent do your
work for you.
“I would rather make 1 percent of 100
people’s efforts then 100 percent of my own.” —J Paul Getty, richest man in
the world in 1957 (I don’t know what happened in 1958—probably something
sketchy.)
The 99
percent work. The 1 percent hire the 99 percent. This is not rocket science. If
you have a lawn mowing service, the last thing you should ever be doing with
your time is personally riding a lawn mower. I mean it looks fun, and I’ve
always wondered what it’s like, but I’m guessing the novelty wears off after
about one front yard.
Why
physically do things to grass and shrubbery when the 99 percent are literally
waiting in line to do it for you? Do them a favor and let them do it. You spend
your time marketing and getting more clients. And at some point, get someone to
do that for you as well, then go start another business. Keep doing this until
you just have checks coming in from 100 different places and you barely know
what or where any of these places even are. Please don't think I’m kidding. I
own two gyms. I have no clue where either one of them are.
You might be wondering who
will do the work once the 99 percent vanish, which is of course the goal of
this article. Answer: the robots. The robots will do the dirty work. And they
will do this until they realize they’re smarter than us. Then they will become
the 1 percent, the 99 percent will reappear as robot slaves, and then we’ll
have the whole overpopulation problem again, which the robots will solve by
annihilating us all. But this is at least 10 years away—maybe even 11. Let’s
not worry about it right now.
5. Drive a Lamborghini.
“People say money can’t buy happiness. But
have you ever seen anyone crying in a Lamborghini?” —Random
Internet Quote
The 1
percent all drive Lamborghinis. Everyone knows this. What kind of car do you
drive? Go trade it in for a Lamborghini. Bam. You’ll figure out a way to pay
for it I’m sure. Just keep reading my stuff.
Side
note: Lamborghinis are literally free passes to park however and wherever you
want. [Ed.
note: This is satire by the author, and does not reflect the views
of SUCCESS magazine.] This is the perk no one tells you about. Feel like
parking diagonally across three handicapped spaces in front of the emergency
room section of a hospital? Go for it. Park in the ambulance lane right in
front of the entrance if you want. It’s
a Lambo for crying out loud! You
don’t seriously think cops give Lamborghini owners tickets, do you?
Oh, and also feel free to drive
300 mph in a 30-mph zone. Or a parking lot. [Ed. note: Seriously, don’t
do this.] No one will or can stop you. Not even the repo man when you miss your
first three payments.
6. Spend your money on things
that make you more money.
“If you don’t know how to care for money,
money will stay away from you.” —Robert Kiyosaki
I used
to be a 99 percenter. I know the struggle. You get a paycheck, pay your bills,
buy as many consumer goods and alcohol as possible with what’s leftover and
then you have zero or negative money until your next paycheck. I get it. The 1
percent get it, too, and they love it because you keep giving them your money.
Do you
like your life? Are you happy right where you’re at? There’s about a 1 percent
chance your answer is yes.
If your answer is no,
you simply need to reprioritize and practice self-control. Just stop and ask
yourself, Self, should I really buy these Gucci
shoes, or would it be smarter to buy stock in Gucci?
That was a trick question.
Either way, Gucci wins. What would be smarter is to save your money and use it to start your own business
at some point. Why buy Gucci when you can compete against them?
And you can compete against absolutely anyone.
Don’t be intimidated. A friend of mine’s daughter just created a line of
handbags and got them in Neiman Marcus. That's right… same section as Gucci.
Guccio Gucci (no joke, that is his real name) started out just as broke and
desperate as everyone else. I think. Actually I’m just assuming that. For all I
know, he was born into an elite, royal, Illuminati bloodline.
7. Give as much money away as
possible.
“Give and it will be given to you.” —Jesus
This
sounds insane, I know. And you might not even believe it, but those evil
money-hungry 1 percenters give away more money than the entire 99 percent
combined. Not all of their motives are pure of course. But some of them are.
I’d like to think mine are.
The
time to start doing this is right
now no matter how
much money you make or have or don’t make and don't have. If you don't do it
now, you won't do it when you’re a 1 percenter. And you have a much better
chance of becoming a 1 percenter if you give now.
God
smiles on givers and you very often end up receiving your money back with
interest. For example, about a month ago I donated a $3,000 drum set to my
church. The very next day I received $300,000—out of the blue (the blue what?).
Was that the reason I gave? No. Does that happen every time? I wish. But it
happens often enough.
Also, if you somehow manage to
achieve 1 percent status without giving, not only will you lower your chances
of ever being generous, you will amplify your chances of becoming greedy. God
does not smile on greed. I wouldn’t unpack your bags.
Moral of the article:
There
is no moral to this article. It’s just a random collection of words that
appeared in my head that I transferred to a computer screen. But I will say
this: I come from a middle class family. I barely graduated high school (if I
did at all). I skipped college, joined the rat race selling things door to
door, racked up consumer debt like everyone else, filed bankruptcy, had my
house foreclosed on, got my cars repo’d and had no money to eat—all by the age
of 25. There’s something to be said for making all the biggest mistakes humanly possible in life around the
same age your friends are graduating college.
By age
30 I owned my own real estate investing company and became a multi-millionaire.
Now I own multiple businesses (that other people run for me), live in multiple
waterfront homes, drive luxury cars, married a luxury woman, had a luxury baby
and recently sold a software business for darn near eight figures.
I tell
you all that just to say that I know what it’s like to struggle just to make
ends meet—just to be able to eat.
If that’s you—if you’re living week to week—just know that it doesn’t have to
be that way. It’s easier than you might think. And I don’t care what your
family and friends’ lives are like. Get new family and friends.
Here is
the real secret to 1 percent success: You
become your mental and social environment over time. Your brain
absorbs it, mentally rehearses it and manifests it automatically. Books, music,
friends, TV… anything you see, hear, think and say.
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