

NVC Resources on Money Issues
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Money, Value, and Our Choices
How much money to pay? And how much money to ask for? The supply and demand logic basically say that we ask for the most that “the market can absorb” and pay “the least that we can get away with.” We can instead, we can engage in experiments that focus on connecting to and satisfying needs. We can also engage with our varying degrees of access to resources within the existing economy and...
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Money and the Web of Love
Our ability to reduce our reliance on money, or even exit the logic of money and exchange in our own thinking, is limited by the degree of trust we have that our needs will be met without it. The more we can enter into sufficient trust, the more we can enter into a web of sharing resources -- borne from a place of love. Read on for more. Read this article Keywords: resource allocation needs...
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Money, Needs, and Resources
way towards infusing the system with this level of empathy before it's too late. Read this article Keywords: extinction resource allocation empathy society Resource distribution consumption needs money systemic change social change Miki Kashtan
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Financial Integrity
Access this complete 6 session course This course recording is based on the Financial Intelligence, Financial Integrity and Financial Independence program from the best-selling book, Your Money or Your Life, by Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin. The purpose of the program is to help you create a relationship with money that is clear, empowered and non-stressful. In which money plays a purposeful...
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Financial Freedom and Integrity
do you feel peaceful and at ease? Do you have time to participate in things you believe are worthwhile? Do you spend as much time as you want with family and friends? Are you free of debt and money worries? Do you feel fulfilled with your work? If you lost your job today, would you see this as an opportunity or a loss? If you were to die soon, would you be satisfied with your contributions to...
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Matching Resources to Needs
We can create processes that encourage resources (particularly money) to flow to where they are most needed. Engaging in "money piles" is one new way that can refocus conversations on real, practical problems to solve -- rather than ideological or abstract discussions about who "earned", "deserved", worked "harder", or merits more. It can tilt conversations based on transaction and obligation...
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Relating to the Value of Things Rather Than the Cost
of my internship. Many times I paid him for the classes because I received so much value from them and because I wanted to contribute to his life. The exchange of resources, that is, exchanging money for an item or service, is enhanced and better appreciated when we are connected to its personal value. Consider shifting your focus from what something costs to the value it brings to your life....
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Abundance, Needs, Inequality and Privilege
Instead of allocating and gifting resources based on needs, we cling to having more money or privilege than others because its close enough substitute for our deeper longing. We may also cling to narratives that seem to legitimize this inequality as something we deserved -- such as earning it; being lucky; getting inheritance; having more talent or ability; or needing more to sustain the growth...
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Persisting vs. Demanding
with another. Demanding is the insistence that someone do something to avoid negative repercussions. Let’s imagine that you want to go on vacation with a friend. She says she doesn’t have enough money. A demand would sound something like this: “You never have enough money. This time you just have to go. It’s an opportunity of a lifetime and I don’t want to miss it!” Persistence may involve...
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Life, Interdependence, and the Pursuit of Meeting Needs
in need. Read this article Keywords: Limited resources finitude Resource management Finite resource Scarcity equity systemic change distribution Economic interdependence gift economy exchange money accumulation giving and receiving resource flow Allocation access extinction excess Miki Kashtan
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