Wanted: 25 people curious about changing their money story, for good...
“93.8 % of people say they feel anxious about money, at least once a day - and that figure might be low.”
I don’t know how you feel about money, but for most of us, it’s kind of a big deal.
Hi, my name is Rex Henry and my regular job is I help people grow their business. But - if I can let you in on a little secret after nearly 30 years of teaching and doing this stuff - business is kind of simple. There are only a few things you need to do to get results.
The real problem is the “inner game”, what we THINK about money.
I know this because I sucked at money all my life until I started working on the inner game.
The turning point came when I discovered the work of Milton Erickson. He was a deeply successful American psychiatrist and psychologist who understood the value in activating unconscious processes within.
And what amazed me most was that he could change someone’s life—not with lectures, not with heavy-handed advice—but by telling them seemingly odd little stories. A parable about a boy and a horse. A memory about walking in the desert. A detail that seemed random, but somehow landed exactly where it needed to.
That idea stuck with me: that these special little stories could change us in a way nothing else could, so I have spent a lot of time studying and researching how to write these special stories, both for myself and for my clients.
I liked all of this stuff so much I wrote a (kind of popular) little book about it all called “The Money Secret”, which you can get over at Amazon, anytime, if you are interested. It explores the idea that there are 7 “bad” money stories that keep messing us up. I spent a lot of time researching and writing it and I think it is a good read if you have a few hours.
But what about if you want something a bit simpler.
Something you could do 100% free, starting right here, right now.
Something easy (that actually works).
Well, as it turns out, I got you.
You see, over the years I’ve learned that doing one little thing every day to improve a process, really works. So a few years ago I started doing a little experiment on myself, and how I think about money.
I started a simple daily habit to see what happens when I made tiny, deliberate changes to my inner game of money, every day, by borrowing from things that work in other areas.
And to be honest the results kind of surprised me.
What does all of that mean?
I find stuff that works.
Like... how Prince used a simple three-chord pattern to make songs people couldn’t stop playing. How Jonas Salk ignored almost everything else and focused on one small decision that changed medicine forever. Why Michael Jordan kept doing one boring, unfashionable thing long after he was already the best in the world. How Emma Stone used a strangely simple way of speaking to sharpen her acting and end up with two Academy Awards.
Odd stuff like that.
One each day.
Then I ask myself one simple question: how can I use this to improve my money story?
It sounds stupid, I know.
But it works very, very, very well.
So well that, when I started talking about it to my readers, they wanted me to share it with them.
So now, every day, after I research and find my new “thing” for that day, I then write about it in a simple little email and send it to my readers (all over the world) so they can use it (if they want) in growing their own “inner-game-of-money”.
I call it The Money Secret, and I would love it if you joined in on this little adventure.
It’s 100% free, and if you like you can join in too, right now.
P.S. If you’re ever curious about changing your money story on autopilot - maybe you don’t have much time or aren’t that interested in asking yourself questions every day - I also make a completely DFY version called The Girl Who Was Made Of Money based on the unconscious change processes I learned from studying Milton Erickson’s work. It’s a wonderful little inner-money-game-change-story series I write for myself and my paid subscribers each week, and I get lots of nice thank-you messages about it.
P.P.S. Why am I doing this? When I was researching the book I read a statistic that said something like 93.8% of people reported that they felt anxious about money, at least once every day. That's a lot. And it got me thinking, if I could make the world a bit better, by helping people feel less anxious about money, even if only a little bit, surely that would be a good thing for all of us, right?
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