
- 144 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
True power in this world comes from economic independence, but too many people have too much month left at the end of their money. John Hope Bryant, founder and CEO of Operation HOPE, illuminates the path toward liberation that is hiding in plain sight. His message is simple: the supermajority of people who live in poverty, whom Bryant calls the invisible class, as well as millions in the struggling middle class, haven't gotten "the memo"âuntil now. Building on his personal experience of rising up from economically disadvantaged circumstances and his work with Operation HOPE, Bryant teaches readers five rules that lay the foundation for achieving financial freedom. He emphasizes the inseparable connection between "inner capital" (mindset, relationships, knowledge, and spirit) and "outer capital" (financial wealth and property). "If you have inner capital," Bryant writes, "you can never be truly poor. If you lack inner capital, all the money in the world cannot set you free." Bryant gives readers tools for empowerment by covering everything from achieving basic financial literacy to investing in positive relationships and approaching wealth with a completely new attitude. He makes this bold and controversial claim: "Once you have satisfied your basic sustenance needsâfood, water, health, and a roof over your headâpoverty has more to do with your head than your wallet." Bryant wants to restore readers' "silver rights," giving them the ability to succeed and prosper no matter what very real roadblocks society puts in their way. We have more power than we realize, if only we can recognize and claim it. "We are our first capital," Bryant writes. "We are the CEOs of our own lives."
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Yes, you can access The Memo by John Hope Bryant in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Personal Development & Personal Finance. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
RULE 1
We Live in a Free-Enterprise SystemâEmbrace It
Money runs the world from the moment you wake up until the moment you hit your pillow and head to sleep. Actually, money is even intersecting every aspect of your life while you sleep!
I am talking about YOUR life, not some random person you donât know and cannot relate to. I am not talking about a cityâs economics, or a companyâs balance sheet or revenue, or a countryâs identity, brand, or GDP. I am talking about YOU.
So, you doubt me? Okay, thatâs understandable. Check this out:
You woke up this morning at 6 a.m., 7 a.m., 8 a.m., or whatever. What precisely woke you up? An alarm clock, or an alarm setting on your mobile phone or smartphone? Thatâs money, folks. (Itâs actually more than that. Itâs entrepreneur-ship, which I address in Rule 4 in the book.) You or someone who loves you spent hard-fought-for cash money for that alarm clock or phone. No one got it for free.
You pulled back the sheets someone purchased and rolled out of the bed that someone purchased and put your feet on the ground of a house or an apartment that someone is paying for (even in most public housing the tenants pay a portion of the rent out of their own pockets).
You put on the slippers you or someone paid for, and walked into your bathroom to brush your teethâwith toothpaste and a toothbrush that someone paid for.
You washed up with soap and dried yourself with towels that someone paid for.
You then walked to the refrigerator that someone bought, and nourished yourself with food that someone purchased, probably that same week.
As you walked out the door, you turned off the lights and other utilities that you or someone else is paying the bill for.
You plopped yourself into a car that you pay for, probably on a monthly basis.
You started the car up, and within fifteen minutes you glanced at the gas gauge. If it was low, you pulled into a gas station, and you paid for that gas in real time.
You dropped your children off at day care on the way to work, and while the ladies there are super nice and kind, for sure they are not keeping your crazed-with-energy kids just for the hell of it. You are paying these hardworking people to put up with them. (Smile. I am sure your kids are just angels.)
Late for work after dropping your kids off at day care, you got pulled over for driving too fast on the street, or maybe you got a ticket on the freeway for driving in the carpool lane because it was only you and the blow-up dummy in the car that morning.
The police officer, who could not have been more polite in this instance, did not want an excuse. He did not want an apology. He did not want to hear your sob story or promises for redemption. He wanted your money for your cityâs coffers, and so he wrote you a ticket. And you didnât get mad, you just paid itâunless of course the radar was lying (smile).
You stressed yourself out to get to work before starting timeâletâs say 8:30 a.m.ânot because you absolutely love punctuality but because you value your job. A job that hopefully you love, or at least enjoy and find fulfilling, but letâs face it: It is a job that provides you with a paycheck. You are getting paid to be there, which is at least part of the reason you are there.
And even if you did love your job and would be willing to do it for free if you could afford to do so, you probably wouldnât break your hypothetical neck to get there before 8:30 every morning.
Given a choice and complete economic freedom, you would probably stroll in at whatever time you liked to that job. And this is precisely why my lovely retired mother, who worked hard her entire life to raise her children, build her own nest egg, and take care of her responsibilities, now has a business card that lists her full nameâand nothing else.
My mother has no interest whatsoever in being reached by anyone whom she does not fancy now that she can afford to fancy whomever she chooses. Money got my mother to work on time every day for thirty-plus years, and money allows my mother to get up at any time she likes now. She has an 850 credit score, by the way.
So, your being there at work on time every morning (at least I hope this is the case) is all about money. Your money! And thereâs also this: someone values you enough to pay you to be there.
Is the light bulb going on yet for you?
As my best friend, Rod McGrew, once told me, âEven the parking meter that you stopped your car in front of on your way home to pick up some food for dinner has figured out capitalism.â
All it does is sit there every day, collecting consistent and impressive passive income from you and everyone else who wants to sit before it on an hourly basis. Every day.
And donât get mad at the parking meter, either. The income it generates allows the city you live in to collect enough money to pay for public services for you and your city.
Take my friend, St. Louis Treasurer Tishaura Jones, who used parking meter fee income to fund financial education for the residents of her city. She even partnered with Operation HOPE and five local banks in town (that benefit from city deposits in their bank vaults) to form and launch the first-ever HOPE Inside location at St. Louis City Hall, where it proudly operates to this very day. All of this was done at no direct cost to city residents, thanks to Tishauraâs brilliant thinking. (And by the way, the financial literacy, homeownership, small business, and entrepreneurship classes are all FULL. I just love this, and you should too.)
And now back to an average day in the life of YOU:
You head home after grabbing dinner, which was also paid for with someoneâs cash, and you and the family sit down at the dinner table, using plates, utensils, even napkins and paper towels that you or someone who loves you paid for. After dinner, maybe you sit down to watch the big-screen television that someone definitely paid for.
And so on, and so on, and so on.
This routine continues until you go to bed with the things and services that occupy every aspect and moment of your life involving money. Even when you are sound asleep, (your) money is at work.
And then, like magic, the entire routine begins again. When you wake up six to eight hours later, it all repeats itself. Just like Groundhog Day.
But most of us never notice any of this. We go through the motions, never noticing the elephant in the living room of our lives. Money.
But where did all of this start? We were born brilliant, correct? So how did we take a turn so wrongânot only down the wrong street but on the wrong expressway, heading in the wrong direction, to the wrong city.
The answer is: we never got the Memo.
Here I Go Again: Why I Love Credit Scores
If you never got the Memo and are a card-carrying member of the Invisible Class, I can predict some basic things about your economic situation. First, your personal finances arenât togetherâmaybe a few of the bills on your kitchen table have red âpast dueâ stamps on them. More importantly, you donât know (or want to know) your credit score. Second, your family finances probably arenât overflowing with hope. You donât own, you rent, and youâre not putting away money for your kidsâ educations. And, in all likelihood, your business plans are nonexistent. You donât see yourself ever running a business, and you couldnât get a business loan even if youâd just invented the best thing since the Ginsu knife.
In short, you are going in the wrong direction down at least one of the three basic paths to financial independence.
Letâs start at the beginning. The beginnings of financial literacy come from understanding how our purchases and debts contribute to an invisible (for the Invisible Class) number that determines our economic destiny: the credit score.
A large and growing portion of employers (more than 40 percent at the time of this writing) require a credit check before they will hire you. That means that no matter how smart or qualified you may beâor how brilliant your now-college-educated-child may in fact beâif your or their credit reports stink, you can pretty much forget about getting hired.
But there is hope. This is a challenge that you can do something about. Take one of our clients at HOPE Inside Ebenezer (Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.âs home church in Atlanta), Ms. Eboni Brown.
Here is Eboniâs story in her own words:
I applied to participate in the 700 Credit Score Community after having been denied my dream job. The reason behind that denial was my credit score. It was too low, and I had too many items in collection.
Doubtful that I would get accepted (because my score was so far from 700), I was overwhelmed with joy and so excited when I received the email saying that I had been accepted into the program. This was the opportunity I needed to receive guidance and motivation as well as a game plan to get my overwhelming debt and falling credit score under control.
After attending the first session, I was elated to see that I was not the only person having debt issues, and that I would be in a cohort of like-minded individuals ready to get their finances in order.
During my tenure in the 700 Credit Score Community, I learned several things. The first, and I believe most important, was that you canât change your credit score overnight. It takes time and patience and the practice of one day at a time.
I learned also to evaluate my lifestyle. I needed to determine the root of the problem. Was I living a caviar and champagne life with a Wendyâs and Coca-Cola budget? Was it the mistakes I made in my young adult life that were now catching up to me? Did I just not make enough money?
In all honesty, it was a combination of all of the above.
So, based on the principles I learned in the class, I began to budget my money and live within my means. I put aside the thought that I would never become debt-free and have a great score and filled my mind with more positive thoughts.
After adjusting to my new lifestyle and mind-set, I was very anxious to report to my coach all the things that I had put into place and to receive her feedback. During that session, I learned that the work I had done within a three-month time frame had increased my score 52 points. To date, I have increased my score 78 points.
I continue to apply the concepts I learned from the program, and I look forward to learning more. I am excited to cross the finish line and attain a 700-plus credit score. All things are possible!
A credit check is not necessarily a character check, but it amounts to the same thing in this world we live in today. Eboni chose not to argue with reality but rather to change it. She decided to win.
If you want to start a new business or buy a home, the financing you seek will most likely pivot heavily off your personal credit history. I know this firsthand.
As an entrepreneur with 1,001 ideas coming up in my teenage years, I used to have credit that stunk. Iâm talking 500-credit-score range. When I was eighteen years old, I was homeless for six months in Los Angeles, California. Things got so bad and the stress and the harassing calls from creditors so intense that I even considered filing for personal bankruptcy. Iâm glad I didnât, but nothing was easy during this period.
I remember signing an auto finance contract to pay more than 18 percent interest to buy a car during that period. I pay 1.99 percent for a car loan today.
I signed up for a time bombâI mean, a new credit cardâthat charged me 23 percent interest annually. Of course, it was marketed to me as âfree money,â and made total sense in my head. Until I had to pay it all back.
I could have easily filed for bankruptcy, and I donât judge others who believe they must, but I knew that I had gotten myself into this mess and I needed to take responsibility and get myself out of it.
No one forced me to take on all those loans or to sign those contracts (which I did not read, even though I was encouraged to). I did that. I didnât need help screwing up my financial life. I did a brilliant job of that all by myself.
My mentor, former UN Ambassador Andrew Young, says that âmen fail for three reasons: arrogance, pride, and greed.â I wasnât full of greed, but I was guilty of being full of pride. Pride kills. I needed to get over itâand get over myself.
On a related note, African Americans are the celebrated and targeted kings and queens of spending needless money, racking up more than $1 trillion in annual payouts, with almost nothing tangible to show for it.
Air Jordan tennis shoes and jeweled cell phone cases donât count. Cars donât count eitherâas they start depreciating the moment they drive off the lot.
In short, we donât own a THING.
It always kills me when professional athletes take out $4 million in loans to buy stuff, and then when their lives fall apart and they canât pay, now the bank is âracistâ and âoppressingâ them. Huh? What?
We werenât saying any of this stuff about being oppressed when we were all set to take out these ridiculous loans and credit agreements. And, no doubt, there would have been huge claims of bias and discrimination if we were denied the loans in question in the first place.
No, nine times out of ten, there is no funny business going on. We just got hoodwinked. Robbed in broad daylight. And now weâre mad.
Well, while we are busy being mad and throwing up the Black Power sign or whatever, the lender just wants their money back. And unless we can prove fraud or misrepresentation, we just need to pay them. Or just say that we canât. That simple.
Losing at the roulette tables in Las Vegas does not rise to the occasion of a Dr. King writing the âLetter from a Birmingham Jail.â No need to call the NAACP. They have better things to do than to waste time with someone on stupid stuff. We just need to deal with our drama. I dealt with mine.
I knew that my name was all that I had. It was my principal and primary asset. I had to protect my good name even if it hurt my pocket and my pride in the short term. I knew that my name (and my financial record) would be my signature and my calling card for the rest of my life, and I had dreams to achieve. It was time to get busy.
My credit score was once just above 500 (really bad, by the way). My credit score today is around 750. The quality of my life changed significantly when I got it above 660. Everything changed. My self-esteem, my self-confidence, and my sense of well-being, it all changed...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- The Memo
- The Five Simple Rules for Economic Independence
- Getting the Memo
- Rule 1 We Live in a Free-Enterprise SystemâEmbrace It
- Rule 2 Your Mind-Set Makes or Loses Money and WealthâYou Choose
- Rule 3 Your Relationships Are InvestmentsâBuild Relationship Capital with Yourself First
- Rule 4 Donât Just Get a JobâBe Entrepreneurial
- Rule 5 Spiritual Capital Is the Start of True WealthâOwn Your Power
- Conclusion: This is Your Memo
- Resources: So You Got the Memo. Now What?
- Index
- About the Author
- About Operation Hope