Life Lessons from Billionaires
April 6, 2009 by Iyabo Asani
Filed under Happiness
I woke up this morning to hear that German billionaire Adolf Merckle committed suicide after he faced huge financial losses. He was 74 years old and survived by a wife and four children.
Later in the day, I watched Oprah’s first show of the year that I had previously recorded. Oprah discussed her recent weight gain and her desire to make an authentic change about her body.
She said that all her success and visibility meant nothing if she could not fit into her clothes. Ouch!
I was startled as to how negative her self talk was initially but she got better and eventually said, “God blessed me in THIS body” so she was going to spend more time loving herself.
Mr. Merckle’s family issued a statement: “The distress to his firms caused by the financial crisis and the related uncertainties of recent weeks, along with the helplessness of no longer being able to act, broke the passionate family businessman, and he ended his life.”
I was struck as to how two of the world’s billionaires have still not figured out how to be happy. Given the media report and constant status updates about the world’s current state of financial affairs, it is a little baffling to read about this. Or is it?
However both billionaires are going to have different outcomes.
Power and Money:
First of all, people that have made a lot of money tend to also enjoy, and many times, abuse, the perceived power that comes with it.
Abuse? Yes, abuse. If you wield that perceived power over others, it is abuse. If you somehow believe that your power is equal to money or your financial status, then you are abusing your own self.
Truth: Money does not equal true power and does not equal happiness.
Let me say this again in case you are not perfectly clear. If you think that your value as a person is based on how much you earn, you can easily end up like one of these billionaires. Unhappy!
Does that level of financial accrual bring a sense of power? Yes. That power comes from feeling accomplished and probably feeling that you have met or exceeded some of your goals. That feeling, consistently over time, becomes a belief that you can do anything.
Is anything wrong with that? No.
I am talking about the abuse of power.
The belief that you can do anything is good. Its great. But when you are faced with a situation where you now have to yield your resistance and let go, it is more difficult for those at the “top,” the billionaires in this case, to yield and let go.
Different outcomes:
I commend Oprah for asking for help from Bob Greene. I commend her for going public about what she perceives as a personal failure. What excited me the most was Bob Greene said he had a theory that he had not discussed with Oprah and that he believed that Oprah had never learned to be happy; she had only learned to survive.
Billionaire Adolf does not appear to have asked for help. His body was found by the railroad tracks. He was alone and not in a familiar place when he died. His children and wife were left with anguish. I believe that given his long expertise in business, that this opportunity of financial challenge could have opened new doors for him.
Who do I identify with?
I can identify with Billionaire Adolf as he obviously did not believe in himself that he could pull through this and be better for it in the end. I have been there. I did not know how to ask for help. I did not know how to say enough is enough. In many ways, I committed little acts of suicide. When my father died, I felt a piece of myself go with him. I never talked about it. I hurt a lot about it. In a sense, an act of cutting myself off. That is a form of emotional suicide.
When my mother died, I experienced the same thing. I did not ask for help.
When my 14 year old law practice died, I cut off a piece of myself as well.
I identify better with Oprah though because I did come around to asking for help. I asked for help and I got help. I realized that my problems were really not that bad and that I could turn lemons into lemonade. I realized that my self talk was feeding that part of me that wanted to give up instead of finding my authentic self. I worked on myself. I got a coach. I got my family involved. I leaned on my husband somemore. I spent more time alone. I self nutured more. I cared more for my soul.
That is how I became the authentic change coach. When I embraced authentic change in my life and made those changes, I tapped into happiness, got a hold of it and soared. Now, it is not just lemonade, it is champagne and caviar for me. I started to see myself as a person that I valued far more than my title as an attorney, far more than money or any of these accomplishments. I started to see myself as who I am: Precious.
That is how I gained more happiness in my life.
That is why these two billionaires and what happened to both of them matter to me.
I hope it matters to you too.
Seven Lessons learned:
1. Know when you are in trouble
2. Ask for help.
3. Get it. Money does not preclude you from life’s problems.
4. Happiness solves a lot of problems.
5. Money does not buy happiness.
6. You are precious. Not what you are or what you do. Who you are is precious.
7. From this place of value, you can get a proper perspective of what you are and what you do.
Questions:
Oprah asked four questions at the end of her show. Whatever your issue is, substitute it for the weight issue and see what comes up with you and please share.
Why are you overweight? Ask yourself what you are unhappy about.
What are you hungry for? Nurturance, acceptance?
Why have you been unable to maintain weight loss in the past?
Why do you want to lose weight? If you say you will be happy at a particular size or weight you are on the wrong track.
I am looking forward to your responses.




Mitch on Tue, 6th Jan 2009 10:58 pm
Society teaches us to ask what we want to “be”? Wrong question. In fact, 90% of grads are in a business not directly related to their undergraduate degree. The better question to ask is How do you want your life to be? Money is not the answer. Time freedom to pursue your life ambition. That comes with financial independence. Time without money is no good. Money without time is worthless. The day I no longer had to chase money to pay bills I became a new man. Not a billionaire but happy and engaged with life!
Mitch’s last blog post..Evaluating Home Business Opportunities
Maria Lavis on Wed, 7th Jan 2009 12:39 pm
Your article is a good reminder to people about the important things.
Radical self acceptance, as well as acceptance of your reality as it is handed to you is not an easy practice, but a necessary one to being able to weather the storms in life, tha inevitably will come.
I find the analogy of winter, or pruning, to be helpful. It makes it easier to let go of what you need to, and there is always the practice of starting over. One can always, always, always, start over again, with every new day. With every new breath, with every heart beat, impulse of the mind. Fresh is always there for us.
In this way, if life hits you hard, you can find ways to cope and increase your capacity for resiliency. The battered pine that has survived many staggering storms, leaning out over a cliff, still & strong, is a beautiful site, but not the kind of beauty we usually celebrate in this society.
Best to you.
Maria Lavis’s last blog post..Facebook’s not in my good books today
Lola Fayemi / Nourishment for your spiritual awakening on Wed, 7th Jan 2009 12:54 pm
Hi Iyabo
Interesting post and good for many of us wanting more money to be reminded that it is something different from happiness and the 2 do not necessarily go hand in hand.
Everyone has issues, rich or poor. Someone who was want you want may not have what you have. Why? Because these issues are simply opportunities to heal and to raise awareness.
My upcoming teleclass series ‘Healing Your Relationship with Food’ is about healing the weight issue by dealing with the underlying issue which has nothing to do with food and everything to do with healing your relationship with yourself.
In peace, love and prosperity x x x
Lola
Lola Fayemi / Nourishment for your spiritual awakening’s last blog post..What Are Your Daily/Weekly Practises?
Christopher on Wed, 7th Jan 2009 9:12 pm
Great reminder that happiness is mostly being at peace with yourself, not acceptance from others.
Christopher’s last blog post..Twins Born On Different Days, Years
Dr Wright on Tue, 20th Jan 2009 3:26 am
I think the what are you hungry for question was the most interesting. Most people are not good at comforting themselves.
I started thinking about that. Simple things like Soft think socks make me feel comfortable and secure. I plan on ‘investing’ in the kinds of socks I really like instead of buying bargain socks just to get by, because I know when I feel stress, this is one of the things that can comfort me. The problem or challenge with that question is, even if we KNOW what we are hungry for and you can not take care of that hunger, how does that knowledge help you? Right now, I can only think that you can find a substitute to handle that hunger.
Dr. Wright
The Wright Place TV Show
http://www.wrightplacetv.com
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Dr Wright’s last blog post..Twitter is not Cattle!
Angela Chen Shui on Mon, 16th Mar 2009 6:42 pm
Iyabo,
Thank you for working through the Oprah and Adolf happiness and asking for help issues. Choices, self worth, and learning from and through the lives of others is so satisfying, intriguing.
As a way to re-create how I connect with others I hardly ask ‘what do you do?’ when I meet someone new. It’s more ‘who are you’, ‘who are you Being today?’, ‘through what daily activity do you express who you are choosing to Be?’.
Today, in this Now Moment, if I embrace my innate Joy, unhappy thoughts, feelings, experiences one minute from now affect me differently than they would if I had not first been centered in my Joy.
My heartfelt desire is to always let more of Me in, so that there is more of Me to dance, sing, laugh and play with in each Now Moment. And hence, more of Me to share dances, songs, laughs, play during interactions with You, All Others and Life Itself into the infinity of all Now Moments.
Thank You, again. And Namaste….
cheap pest control on Wed, 23rd Dec 2009 3:57 am
Most of all Billionaires suffer due to money and power.The great example is Micheal Jackson.