The Principle Thing
by Alexander Green
Dear Reader,
When I speak at investment conferences and seminars, the attendees usually want
to know what lies just ahead for the economy and the stock market.
I hate to disappoint them. But I tell them anyway:
"I don't know - and neither does anyone else."
Fortunately, this isn't important. Investment success is not about following the
right predictions. It's about following the right principles.
This is true in virtually every aspect of life.
Imagine a tunnel, bridge, or skyscraper erected without using proven designs,
building materials or construction methods. The result would be calamitous.
A composer is free to create beautiful music, but only within the boundaries of
harmony, melody and rhythm. (Few can bear to listen to a so-called "atonal
masterpiece.")
If you are a golfer, you have to use the proper stance and grip. You have to
keep your head still, your left arm straight, and your right elbow tucked in.
You won't become a champion by re-inventing the golf swing. Players were
whacking balls around St. Andrews before Columbus discovered America.
In sum, principles are the collective wisdom of our species. They tell us what
is valuable. They warn us what is not.
Principles of law safeguard society and protect our rights. Health principles
guide us on nutrition, exercise and the prevention of disease. Scientific
principles further technology and explain the natural world.
Spiritual principles guide our lives. Or should.
There will always be arguments about doctrine, of course. But there is little
disagreement on broad principles: honesty, compassion, forgiveness, tolerance,
perseverance, justice, humility, charity and gratitude.
These principles aren't binding. They're liberating. They imbue life with
meaning.
And, make no mistake, we are meaning-seeking creatures. Without a reason to
live, people easily fall into depression or despair.
In some sense, we are all spiritual seekers.
You may revere The Ten Commandments, The Sermon on the Mount, The Four Noble
Truths, The Five Pillars or some infrangible set of ethical principles.
"Anything else you worship," argued David Foster Wallace at a commencement
address at Kenyon College in 2005, "will almost certainly eat you alive. If you
worship money and things - if they are where you tap real meaning in life - then
you will never have enough... Worship your own body and beauty and sexual allure
and you will always feel ugly, and when time and age start showing, you will die
a million deaths before they plant you... Worship power - you will feel weak and
afraid, and you will need ever more power over others to keep the fear at bay...
Worship your intellect, being seen as smart - you will end up feeling stupid, a
fraud, always on the verge of being found out."
On some level, most of us understand this. The message is embodied in our myths,
proverbs, and aphorisms, our classic films, our great novels.
Yet society and culture - and even our unconscious - tug us the other way.
Madison Avenue surrounds you - in the streets, on the airwaves, in your home -
showing you what you could have, how you could look, how you will feel when you
finally acquire the latest, greatest and most fabulous bauble yet. (And did I
mention it's new and improved?)
The modern economy doesn't just meet our wants. It continually creates new ones.
This isn't all bad, of course. I'm not unhappy that business has brought us
iPhones, Miracle bras and 60-inch plasma TVs.
It's just that a life based on craving - on the worship of self - is no more
satisfying in the end than a bowl of jellybeans.
Fortunately, the great spiritual principles are there, like Polaris, guiding you
toward true north, reminding you that it's really not all about you, suggesting
that the most important thing you can do today may not be to obtain or even
achieve something, but to show those around you you care in a dozen little
unsexy ways.
It may not be glamorous. But it's the truth.
Ralph Waldo Emerson ends his famous essay "Self Reliance" with these words:
"Nothing can bring you peace but yourself. Nothing can bring you peace but the
triumph of principles."
Carpe Diem,
Alex
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Subject: Amazing Program
This program is not really one in which it is helpful to do a lot of promoting.
In fact it does not make sense to bring in more than 4 referrals and help them
to get 2 each--and that is if you get 3 BCs.
What is special about the program is that it is a fantastic money maker for
anyone, even those who cannot refer. In fact, there are no commissions or
bonuses for referring, nor are your referrals likely to end up under you since
it is basically a company forced matrix. I sent out 29 emails and spoke with
several people who called me for other reasons and have 19 direct referrals and
have given 7 referrals to my referrals.
You do not pay anything when you join. They build your downline for you . Then
you pay $200 one time fee and then the monthly autoship of $120 and in 2 weeks
you start getting paid every Friday. Here is the pay plan:
1st Week 0
2nd Week Company sends you $40.00
3rd Week Company sends you $100.00
4th Week Company sends you $200.00
5th Week Company sends you $400.00
6th Week Company Sends you $1,000.00
*Every Friday after that is Pay Day!! $1,000.00 as long as you pay the $120 per
month autoship.
In exchange for this you do nothing. You are requested to share the program with
2 people but it is not a requirement.
This is an offline program which is just coming online. It does not pay you
itself but puts you into well-established online MLM companies where they build
your downline so that you benefit from the compensation plan without having to
refer or ever sell anything. You do pay for the monthly autoship (that is the
$120 monthly). There will be other streams of income added (other MLMs where
your downline will be built for you).
You can opt to come in with 3 BCs for in order to receive more than $1000 per
week profits and you will start getting paid sooner.
http://www.bring2help2.com/opl/operationpromisedland/id/index.php?ref=tyily3 .
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