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A review by itzami
Secrets of the Millionaire Mind: Mastering the Inner Game of Wealth by T. Harv Eker
2.0
If you're interested in this book to know the 'secret recipe' for being rich, you'll be extremely disappointed.
While the premise of the book is very good (change your way of thinking to be able to see things differently), it overextends it by going through the 'positive thinking' and 'the universe is not against you'. If you can look past that, it has some great insights and will most probably change your life in a good way (and that's all we can ask about, really).
However... My bad score for this book lands on the fact that:
- the good points could be listed on a 10-minute read instead of 212 pages
- the premise on why I should listen to Harv is because he has seminars about being rich
- most of the book is about changing your habits and way of thinking but rephrased in different ways
The book gets salvaged by:
- several insight moments (that means, you end up seeing a lot of stuff written that you might have thought but never really stopped to take a closer look at it)
- offers a different point of view that some people might not be used to
I feel bad for giving this book a bad score because it's pretty much against what Harv 'teaches' and some of his stuff is pretty much accurate but I feel like there are better books out there with more complete information and with a clear learning path
While the premise of the book is very good (change your way of thinking to be able to see things differently), it overextends it by going through the 'positive thinking' and 'the universe is not against you'. If you can look past that, it has some great insights and will most probably change your life in a good way (and that's all we can ask about, really).
However... My bad score for this book lands on the fact that:
- the good points could be listed on a 10-minute read instead of 212 pages
- the premise on why I should listen to Harv is because he has seminars about being rich
- most of the book is about changing your habits and way of thinking but rephrased in different ways
The book gets salvaged by:
- several insight moments (that means, you end up seeing a lot of stuff written that you might have thought but never really stopped to take a closer look at it)
- offers a different point of view that some people might not be used to
I feel bad for giving this book a bad score because it's pretty much against what Harv 'teaches' and some of his stuff is pretty much accurate but I feel like there are better books out there with more complete information and with a clear learning path