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Khin Maung Nyo (Economics) - How much am I worth?
Khin Maung Nyo (Economics) - How much am I worth?
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How much am I worth?
If you have drawn up a list and checked it, one of the most common things you do in your business is to check your inventory, cash balance, and inventory. This is something you do at least once a year. If I were to ask you a question, have you ever calculated the net worth of your business? I would also like to ask you a question.
From a religious perspective, we can assume that becoming a human is not a trivial matter. No matter how small one thinks it is, becoming a human is not a trivial matter. Being able to see with your eyes, hearing with your ears, having full limbs, and being in good health are all valuable.
For example, if you are sick and need treatment for a certain part of your body, which costs 10,000 baht, try to calculate how much the other parts of your body that are not affected would cost. I don't think it would be less than a few hundred thousand baht.
We often get amazed when we see cars worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. We forget that we are worth millions, even billions.
Who is worthless to us? We cannot allow it if we are considered free people. Who likes us or not, we have the right to like ourselves as much as we like. If we are given more responsibilities, we can consider ourselves capable of fulfilling them.
Once upon a time, a woman used a certain lotion to wash her face. Unfortunately, the lotion got into her eyes and she lost her eyesight. As usual, she sued and was fined.
Please. Can we switch places with that woman?
You might suddenly think that even $100,000 is not a small amount. But our two eyes are worth more than $100,000 to read what we want to read, to see who we want to see, and to stand on our own two feet. We have discovered that we can do work worth more than $100,000.
An airline paid a woman over $1 million in compensation for her back injury in a plane crash. She will never be able to walk again. Would we trade places with her? Our backs, our legs, can do things worth over $1 million, right?
Surely, if we meet those two women, they will gladly give us $100,000 and trade us for them. Even if they are grateful, they will not stop. No matter how big or small the material things, wealth, positions, or money are, if they are truly good people, they will not trade them. They want money, but they cannot trade their health, which is more valuable than money.
During World War II, a famous actress insured her leg for a million dollars. Her leg wasn't worth a million dollars. Aren't our legs worth more than a million dollars? Should we just pay a million dollars and have it amputated?
It's your responsibility to protect this million-dollar self-worth.
