I really appreciated Richard Carlson's logical, down-to-earth advice in his short essays collected into the book Don't Sweat the Small Stuff (and it's all small stuff) so I knew I would enjoy this subsequent collection called Don't Worry, Make Money: Spiritual and Practical Ways to Create Abundance and More Fun in Your Life . This time, Carlson's main themes are: show gratitude, realize there is enough abundance to go around, "get out of your own way," and don't say, "This isn't my nature" or "This is out of my comfort zone." Money is "circulation," he says. It needs to flow. When you are frightened, selfish, or when you hoard everything for yourself, you literally stop the cirtculation and create "clogged pipes," making it difficult to keep money flowing back in your direction. "Give back, and watch what happens! Things will start popping up out of nowhere . . . Everything you give away will return, with interest!" (9). Another favorite concept is "Pay yourself first: "If you are worried about having enough, you never will. Invest in yourself. Trust yourself. You will have enough for everything else" (17). Carlson is also a big proponent of the concept "feel the fear and do it anyway" (based on a book of that title by Susan Jeffers that he really likes). "Fear is the single, most defeating emotion in our lives" (45). Be willing to change, he states. "If you go on doing what you've always done, you'll go on getting what you've always got" (51). He advises us all to stop worrying about the flagging economy and to go ahead and keep investing in the current market because statistics show it will get good again . . . sometime. He also advocates choosing a career for which one has true passion. (Carlson once started a sane and logical personal plan--an MBA program--but he hated it and quit). "Without passion, your odds of success are minimal . . When you follow your heart, when you discover what is truly nourishing to your soul, an abundant, joyful life is just around the corner" (44). Carlson cheers those thinking of branching out into a personal business. "Chose a credible, financially solid, ethical, home-based or multi-level marketing business. You can become financially independent in as little as one hour a day. You don't have to quit your job, change careers or take on a risk. [But:] you must spend the hour a day without fear!" (45). Some other advice is "sock away two years of living expenses" (if you can), find a mentor, cheaper is not always better, delight in the success of others, resist the temptation to continually raise your standard of living, have a plan, dive in, persevere, be willing to take advice, start a car pool, don't give away your power (to doctors, financial planners, insurance salesmen, etc.,), and get rid of the notion that "opportunity only knocks once." "Nonsense!" he says. "Opportunity exists virtually everthwere you look" (123). I could go on and on because Carlson has 100 short chapters, all of them pithy, realistic, and fascinating, but I'll stop here and simply recommend this book as highly as I can.