Got a treat at work, blueberry cheesecake and some other cakes from Starbucks. I got lucky. hehe. Over the course of eating our desserts, we talked about Rich Dad, Poor Dad, which is one of my favorite books because of how practical and true the words of Robert Kiyosaki were when it came to how to become rich, money-wise.
We all had the same notion that it’s really inspiring and how, upon finishing the book, it would change your perception when it comes to how you see money working for you and you NOT working for money. Although it can be too idealistic at times, the way it was being presented makes it more practical as the issues are just real. There are a number of self-help books that tell you what to do but are sometimes too fake for me to even work on. But this isn’t really much of a self-help book, it’s more of a self-realization based on a person’s testament on how he was being taught by his two fathers on what to do in life. The situations stated that he experienced especially in the working world gives one that strong desire to also set out on one’s own and start looking outside the box.
I love the book so much that I made a review out of it. Here’s the link:
Rich Dad, Poor Dad review
Anyway, it was nice to eat a sweet dessert while discussing topics like these. I can talk about Rich, Dad, Poor Dad even more but I believe it would overkill already. Because I just blogged this out because of being treated out. hehe.