My first few months in my practice was spent more on reading pocketbooks and playing cellphone games. I would arrive early and sit down in my cubicle, wait for patients to come. I thought it's as simple as placing a signboard infront. Anyway my veteran partners in the clinic (who happen to be an OB-Gyne and Pediatrician) are being swamped with so many patients, maybe 3 or 4 might get "lost" and knock on my door. It was hard, it was depressing counting the nailheads on my ceiling while waiting for my lunch hour and "go home" time while my partners are counting their patients (and their pesos at home). It's a good thing I was single then and got to keep some savings while I was a resident MD with a fixed stipend. Literally I was a bum and I still depended on Dad.
To cut a long story short, I accepted a teaching job in the college while sitting in my clinics on the side. In 2-3 years, my practice began to build up, I was able to build up my savings, got married & got kids. And the patients began to come by.. Yes, two important virtues came in...patience (for me) and the patients' trust on me. My income stream was becoming more steady and we were being more comfortable...at least that's what we thought..
It was my 4th year of private practice as an IM then, I was relatively doing well. Yep, I had some money in my savings account in the bank and my wife who’s a newly graduated pediatrician was just starting out her practice, when it suddenly hit me early dawn of December 16, 2004. I had atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular rate, was confined in a local hospital (AUFMC), stayed there for a week, had CT angiogram and other expensive tests in Manila, and was placed on “house arrest” by my cardiologist for roughly more than a month. There were frequent withdrawals from the bank account then and by the time, I was able to resume my practice, there were many backlogs with our credit card payments and we were below the minimum balance.
Though some may not relate to my experience, the fundamental truth remains….if practicing as a medical doctor/ specialist is your only bread and butter, you’ll eventually realize the pitfall of this glamorous (yet noble) profession especially when you get sick…….. NO WORK, NO PAY.
My wife and I were blessed to discover thru my brother an eye opener book “Rich Dad Poor Dad” by Robert Kiyosaki 2 months after that awful experience and indeed, our perception of wealth changed and suddenly after all these years of “work hard, earn, save, and spend to look rich” would definitely be a thing of the past for us.
Since that time, I had been reading lots of books and articles on building true financial and personal wealth and had been setting and tweaking goals with my wife. Our objective is to have multiple sources of income from other avenues not only to secure ourselves’ and our kids’ future but more so, to pay back to GOD and forward to fellows in need. Eventually, our practice in the future as doctors would then be mainly for what it is intended to be as a noble profession, as charity work for the sick. Being “ma kwenta on your PF” should be something we should leave behind.
So with respect to this, I learned from Mr Kiyosaki from his book "Cashflow Quadrant" that there are basically four different methods by which income or money is generated.
As quoted in his book" Different methods of income generation require different frames of mind, different technical skills, different educational paths, and different types of people. DIfferent people are attracted to different quadrants. While money is all the same, the way it is earned can be vastly different. If you begin to look at the four different labels for each quadrant, you might want to ask yourself, "Which quadrant do you generate the majority of your income from?"
I'll be going into this further on the next post.
"Watch, listen, and learn. You can't know it all yourself...Anyone who thinks they do is destined for mediocrity." - Donald Trump
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