Thanks, Mum
Hi Scott
I will be forever grateful to you for removing the noose around the neck of both me and my mum. A couple of years ago I read your book and was hooked — I set up my buckets and paid down my credit cards. Then I realised I could also help my mum. She had just hit 70, was desperate to stop working, had little super, had credit card debt, still had a mortgage, and was being crippled by strata and council rates. On New Year’s Day of 2018 I sat her down and suggested she read your book, which she did in a couple of hours. Before we knew it, her credit cards were gone and her dreaded bills were covered. Most amazingly, she sold her place, paid off the mortgage, and retired to the country. Honestly, the best gift you could give your mum is to rid her of money stress. (P.S. I’ve just purchased my own first home — something I thought would never happen.)
Thanks, Jess
Hi Jess,
What a fantastic story!
Let’s repeat that last line so everybody gets it: “The best gift you could give your mum is to rid her of money stress.”
Not flowers. Not chocolates. Not Apple gear.
You know who would love this idea?
Anna Jarvis.
Anna is none other than the Mother of Mother’s Day.
She created the first Mother’s Day in 1908, to honour her late mother … and all mothers.
Yet, just like Coca-Cola hijacked Christmas (ever wondered why Santa’s dressed in Coke’s corporate colours?), it didn’t take long for corporations to cash in and commercialise Mother’s Day.
But she wasn’t one to stand down; instead she fought them every step of the way.
Newsweek reported that she once had as many as 33 simultaneous Mother’s Day lawsuits on the go!
She devoted the rest of her life — and every cent of her savings — to fighting to keep Mother’s Day pure.
In a day and age where you can buy anything for your mum and have it gift-wrapped and delivered, spending time with them, and maybe even helping them out, is what Anna Jarvis envisaged all those years ago.
You Got This!
Scott.