Desire is good

A business acquaintance we know is very judgmental of anyone who talks about, thinks about or strategically pursues monetary success. Making money. She thinks it’s a lower urge, somehow beneath her.
She is proud to be poor, but not above living in assisted housing, receiving food stamps or having her “wealthy” friends pick up the tab when out for lunch. Do you know anyone like her?
The sad thing is she’s not only denying herself more fulfillment, she’s doing her best to hold everyone around her back as well.
Wattles points out that “we are subject to the urge of life”. When we work to express this urge, we’re being true to the desire to know more, do more and be more. For us to do that requires us to have more. We must have things in order to learn more because we learn, do and become only by using things.
Bottom line
“The desire for riches is simply the capacity for larger life seeking fulfillment; every desire is the effort of an unexpressed possibility to come into action.”
When this desire is suppressed it’s like putting a dam in a river and preventing it from flowing and sustaining more life down stream. It stops the creative process. It eliminates the power to generate more life.
The same thing that compels you to make more money is the same natural force that causes plants to grow. It’s life seeking fuller expression.
There is a substance that fills and permeates the inner workings of the universe and this substance seeks fuller expression. For you to want more life is in harmony with natural law.
The fable of Ponce deLeon…
…illuminates this perfectly. Humankind has always been drawn to the spring of eternal life because it symbolizes this urge for more life.
This explains in part why the natural products industry is experiencing an unprecedented boom. As people age, the elemental force for more life and greater longevity becomes stronger.
Although Boomers represent only 44% of the US population, they’re projected to hold 70% of US disposable income and their buying power in the next 5 years will be greater than any other demographic group.
Baby Boomers make up 40% of the customers paying for wireless service, and 41% of those who purchase Apple computers.
Boomers…
…also represent one-third of all online and social media users, and nearly another third of them report they are heavy internet users, with more than 8 million boomers spending more than 20 hours a week online. Their use of social networking has nearly doubled in the last year and 53% are on Facebook.
This is why I highly recommend anyone seeking financial abundance look into my number one health and wellness business opportunity.
This company has not discovered the fountain of youth but they do have the next best thing. A full spectrum cellular rejuvenation formula proven to reduce the rate of DNA damage within as little as fourteen days.
Onward