Stop Sweating and Start Living: Sweat Problems Solved

Life is just a bit difficult for those of us that have exuberant sweating problems. We go through the day embarrassed by the evident sweat stains that inevitably show up on our clothes. We worry in regards to our body odor and if we take place to be offending anybody with it. And at times when it comes time to do something like shake hands or to hug (heaven forbid) it sends us into a panic. That is the life of those of us who have a problem with sweating. So we know how we feel when we have it, but what causes it and how in the world may we stop sweating so much?

The difficulties that cause us to sweat so profusely vary from person to person, but understanding why you sweat is one of the introductory steps in living a life free from over sweating. Sometimes it is an overactive gland that causes our problems, other times it may just be the symptom of an underlying problem. Understanding what causes you to sweat will help you to not only come to terms with the problem but may, in fact, just be what you need to heal the problem.

Although there are some dissimilar ways to heal exuberant sweating galore of them are not a heal at all. All that things like deodorant or exuberant showers tend to do is to mask the problem or treat a symptom and not heal the problem. My personal bestloved way to treat any problem, from exuberant sweating to major health issues is to do it the natural way, and then you don’t need to worry regarding destructive side effects from medicine.


Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved

The bestselling author of The Millionaire Next Door reveals easy ways to build real wealth

With well over two million of his books sold, and big praise from galore media outlets, Dr. Thomas J. Stanley is a recognized and highly valued authority on how the wealthy act and think. Now, in Stop Acting Rich ? and Start Living Like a Millionaire, he details how the less affluent have fallen into the elite luxuriousness brand trap that keeps them from acquiring wealth and details how to get out of it by emulating the working rich as opposed to the super elite.

  • Puts wealth in perspective and shows you how to live rich without spending more
  • Details why we spend lavishly and how to stop this detrimental cycle
  • Discusses how being “rich” means more than just big houses and lavishness cars

A defensive system for tough times, Stop Acting Rich shows readers how to live a rich, happy life through accumulating more wealth and using it to achieve the type of financial freedom that will formulate true pleasure and fulfillment.

Review”Now Millionaire co-author Thomas Stanley is back with a dose of financial tough love for high-spending wannabes in Stop Acting Rich … and Start Living Like a Real Millionaire.” (Better Investing Magazine, January 3, 2010)

“This is all arousing and attention holding stuff and Stanley presents it in a very readable style. Stanley has written two other best-sellers on millionaires. It seems he’s done it again.” (The Star-Ledger, January 3, 2010)

“…not only is this a book that everyone must buy, it’s a book that each parent who loves his or her kids must buy for them—and bribe them to read it.” (WalletPop, October 7, 2009)

“Contains galore surprising info that makes for a convincing argument supporting a simple lifestyle as a path to security.” (Associated Press)

“After reading through Stanley’s engaging anecdotes regarding how the other America actually lives, you may come to feel that perhaps you don’t need to impress the other guy so much. This in itself is no little thing. Your wallet will thank you. And you may end up happier.” (Smartmoney.com)

“Thomas Stanley has written a arousing and attention holding book that is based on years of exploration into how the genuinely wealthy live. Stanley’s main contention is that those with millions aren’t among the nation’s hyper consumers. Rather it’s the “aspirationals,” those seeking acknowledgement as members of the moneyed set, who are loose with a buck. It’s a hypothesis offered often, but the divergence is Stanley’s research. He has packed his book with oodles of stats — and not just the standard numbers. For example, 75 percent of millionaires pay $19.79 or less for a bottle of wine. When it comes to a dinner, 75 percent recompense $24.53 or less and 95 percent keep the tab to less than $40. This is all arousing and attention holding stuff and Stanley presents it in a very readable style. Stanley has written two other best-sellers on millionaires. It seems he’s done it again.” (The Star-Ledger)

“If you’ve read the 1996 best-seller The Millionaire Next Door, you already know it’s hard to distinguish the genuinely affluent based on appearance. . . Now Millionaire co-author. . .Stanely is back with a dose of financial tough love for high-spending wannabes. . . offers surprising insight. If your goal is long-lasting wealth and not just the aspect of affluence, begin reading ASAP.” (BetterInvesting magazine)

“Stanley is right in advising persons to have a re-look at their spendthrift ways and to refrain from getting trapped by symbolism. “If you spend in anticipation of getting rich, you are improbable to become genuinely wealthy,” he quips.”(Personal Finance Magazine Moneylife)

“Stanley’s exploration does a outstanding occupation of proving there’s a huge divergence amongst income and net worth. Many pretenders have become very good at generating income and enjoying a high standard of living. But take this Stanley gem to the bank: ‘Those who are among the least procreative in transforming their incomes into wealth are in the higher-status occupations.’ Don’t be a outstanding pretender, pretending you’re doing well when you only look the part. Read this book and find out how to emulate real-deal millionaires.” (The Washington Post, Michelle Singletary)

From the Inside FlapWith the financial crisis, high unemployment, and tight credit, you may be saying to yourself: who is acting rich these days? We’re hardly making ends meet.

You would think that our wastrel ways are over, we’re erasing debt, and stocking up on savings. The reality is that not only are we spenders who hardly grasp the conception of frugality, we are huge spenders on costly elite brands, and we do it in an try to emulate the rich people we see on television, in magazines, and down the street. The recession may have caused us to take a breather, but each indication is that we will pick up right where we left off when gentler economic winds blow again.

Before you spend another dime, read this book and understand how to become rich rather of act rich. Stop Acting Rich . . . And Start Living Like a Real Millionaire will upend each assumption you have regarding wealthy people: where they shop, what they buy, and most shockingly, where they live (it’s not where you think).

Did you know that three times more millionaires live in homes valued at beneath $300,000 than over $1 million? Would it stun you to learn that more millionaires drive Toyotas than BMWs? How when it comes to a second home? Not for the millionaire.

Bestselling author of The Millionaire Next Door and The Millionaire Mind and leading authority on the wealthy, Dr. Thomas Stanley uncovers the truth when it comes to spending to show you how you may genuinely live rich.

It all starts with where you live. Live in a prestige neigh?borhood and you will spend more on everything from your car to your watch. Real millionaires grasp that living in communities where their neighbors have less net worth than they do naturally leads to spending less. It’s posing no difficulty to be rich when keeping up with the Joneses hardly costs anything.

Dr. Stanley’s exploration also uncovers what makes rich humans happy. Life gratification comes not from cruising down the highway in a chunk of your net worth, but from having the financial resources to choose—to spend time with family and friends, to volunteer, to pursue interests.

Stop Acting Rich . . . And Start Living Like a Real Millionaire rips the lid off just when it comes to each assumption we have with regards to what rich looks like. Few people become rich by way of a high income, and even less high-income people are veritably rich. The good news is that closely any person may become wealthy—even without a super high income—if you would just stop acting . . . and rather commence living like a rich person.

From the Back Cover

PRAISE FORSTOP ACTING RICH. . . AND START LIVING LIKE A REAL MILLIONAIRE

“Stanley’s exploration does a outstanding occupation of proving there’s a huge differencebetween income and net worth. Many pretenders have become very good atgenerating income and enjoying a high standard of living. But take this Stanleygem to the bank: ‘Those who are amid the least generative in transformingtheir incomes into wealth are in the higher-status occupations.’ Don’t be agreat pretender, pretending you’re doing well when you only look the part.Read this book and find out how to emulate real-deal millionaires.”—Michelle Singletary, The Washington Post

“Contains some surprising selective information that makes for a convincingargument supporting a simple modus vivendi as a path to security.” —Associated Press

“After reading through Stanley’s engaging anecdotes in regards to how theother America in truth lives, you may come to feel that perhaps you don’tneed to impress the other guy so much. This in itself is no little thing.Your wallet will thank you. And you may end up happier.” —Smartmoney.com


Most helpful customer reviews

422 of 425 people found the following review helpful.
5Illuminating insights, backed by empirical data. The best personal finance book I have read.
By Avinash Sharma
I read Thomas Stanley’s The Millionaire Next Door three years ago and was thoroughly impressed by the insights and research. While reading it I wished the author had published a revised edition with updated numbers – the book was published in 1998. This book (Stop Acting Rich…) covers similar themes as the book I previously mentioned. However, it has updated numbers and includes insights gained from the financial crises of 2008-2009.
The central theme of this book is that there is a difference between those that are genuinely rich and those that act like they are rich. This book details the differences between these two groups of people – what they wear, drive, eat, drink, etc. These differences, presented throughout the book in the form of several tables and lists, are backed by empirical data that are drawn from the author’s extensive research on the affluent.
We live in a culture of hyperconsumerism. It is far easier to act rich than to become truly rich. All we have to do is to buy the luxury goods/services that we think the rich buy and we get the feeling that we are rich. But this kind of excessive consumerism is detrimental to our net worth. The author explains that most rich people become wealthy and stay that way by being frugal and by being investment oriented as opposed to consumption oriented. As for wealth and happiness he warns, “those who think that acting rich must be predicated on hyperconsumerism are likely to end up on the short side of both the wealth and happiness scales”.
Throughout the book many myths about the rich are dispelled. Their consumption habits are described and compared with those of the pretenders. What brands of shoes, suits, watches, etc do they wear? What wines and spirits do they consume? What motor vehicles do they drive? Where do they shop? And how much do they pay for the goods listed above? The insights are illuminating and thought provoking.
During the financial crisis of 2008-2009, many articles were published regarding the benefits of frugality and the dangers of excessive consumption. In many ways the root of this crisis (sometimes referred to as the Credit Crisis) was excessive borrowing and consumption. I share the author’s belief that as soon as the economy improves, people will resume their spendthrift ways. This is most unfortunate since it could lead to a repeat of the crisis we just experienced.
Bottom line – I highly recommend this book as the single best personal finance book I have read. You cannot save the whole of society from this disease of hyperconsumerism. But by educating yourself, you can simplify your lifestyle so that you can be truly rich as opposed to just acting like you are rich. If my review was helpful to you, I request you to select “Yes” so that the rating is improved and more readers will get to read it.

168 of 172 people found the following review helpful.
4Stop Acting Rich: The Paradox Of This Book
By Dan Danford
I’m a big plan of Tom Stanley’s research and books. I first encountered Stanley at a trust conference many years ago, and I’ve read and recommended his books to dozens of clients and prospects. His insights are helpful and entertaining.

98 of 106 people found the following review helpful.
3Great message but too repetitive
By T. Murphy
I looked forward to reading “Stop Acting Rich” but I found it to be too repetitive. Although the book is 200+ pages, I felt as though the first chapter covered the ultimate message and the remainder of the book only served to reiterate the concepts without significantly furthering them. Sure, some examples and data in later chapters further reinforced the message but one could easily get the message within the first few pages, skip the rest of the book, and still understand the point that less consumption, decreased spending, and more frugal living is more likely to help you gain wealth than buying fancy cars, expensive clothes, and enormous homes. I liked the book but felt a bit short-changed when I found the chapters to be so repetitive.

See all 44 customer reviews…

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved Photo

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved Pic

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved Pic

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved Image

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved Image

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved

Stop Sweating And Start Living Sweat Problems Solved Picture

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