- Title:
-
Mindful Money
- Written by:
-
Canna Campbell
- Read by:
-
Paige Gardiner
- Format:
-
Unabridged CD Audio Book
- Number of CDs:
-
8
- Duration:
-
9 hours 57 minutes
- Published:
-
August 06 2019
- Available Date:
-
August 06 2019
- Age Category:
-
Adult
- ISBN:
-
9780655614517
- Genres:
-
Non-fiction; Lifestyle - Wellbeing; Personal Wealth & Finance
- Publisher:
-
Bolinda/Penguin Audio Australia
Qty
Format
Price
Bolinda price
Bestselling author
A comprehensive, practical and accessible guide to holistic financial wellbeing from the YouTube star and bestselling author of The $1000 Project.
We’re always promising ourselves that we are going to get on top of our finances – finally pay down debt, start that investment portfolio, pay attention to our superannuation. But then life gets in the way. As we juggle the commitments and responsibilities in our busy lives, good money habits can quickly fade away.
Canna Campbell is an experienced financial planner, and also a mother, partner and entrepreneur. She understands the challenge of trying to maintain balance and motivation when you’re time-poor, and she’s used this experience to develop an inspirational and effective approach to personal finance management. She shows you how to look at your finances with holistic and powerful mindfulness, easily incorporating her step-by-step advice into your daily habits and routines. From new banking rituals and money mindsets to growing passive income through shares and property, she will help you shed the excess and embrace what you really love, value, use and appreciate – including your necessary luxuries.
Canna leads by example, sharing her personal tips and tricks for building, managing and protecting your money. No matter what you earn or what level of knowledge you have, Mindful Money will help you to see that financial independence is achievable.
‘Canna Campbell offers a glamorous vision of a life of minimalism and saving … Not spending feels more like a creative challenge connected to a sense of purpose, rather than deprivation.’
The New York Times