I did not pick up The Richest Man in Babylon because I was looking for financial wisdom. I was between books and wanted something light. Something that would not demand too much of me. A fable, I had heard. Short chapters. Ancient Babylon. That sounded easy enough. I was not prepared for what it would actually say.
The Richest Man in Babylon was written in 1926 by George S. Clason. It reads like a collection of parables set in an ancient city, the kind of stories you might tell around a fire. Simple characters. Simple lessons. And yet I found myself reading slowly, not because it was difficult, but because I kept stopping to ask myself why nobody had ever said any of this to me before. The ideas were not complicated. They were just absent. Absent from school, absent from conversations, absent from everything I had been handed as I grew up.
Rich Dad Poor Dad came to me differently. A friend recommended it years ago when I asked him about money and how he seemed to have figured something out that I had not. He did not hesitate. He named that book immediately. I noted it, the way you note things you fully intend to get to and somehow never do. Life moved on. The book sat somewhere in the back of my mind, patient, waiting. Then one day I was sitting with my own finances, turning things over, feeling the familiar unease of someone who earns but never quite gets ahead. And it came back to me. His voice, that easy confidence, the name of the book. I finally picked it up.
Robert Kiyosaki writes very differently from Clason. There is nothing fable-like about it. He is direct, sometimes provocative, occasionally frustrating. But the thing that stopped me cold was not his arguments or his anecdotes. It was the diagrams. Simple little sketches that looked like they had been scribbled on a napkin. Boxes and arrows showing how money moves. A balance sheet. A profit and loss statement. An income statement. Concepts that accountants spend years mastering, laid out so plainly that you almost feel embarrassed it took this long to see them. That is the quiet genius of that book. It does not talk down to you. It just draws you a picture and lets you sit with what you are looking at.
Underneath all of it is the same quiet accusation that Clason makes in his gentler way. That most of us were never taught how money actually works. That the system we grew up in was designed to produce workers and consumers, not people who understood wealth. That the gap between those who build financial security and those who don’t is not always about income. It is about knowledge that was never passed on.
Two books. Two very different roads. The same destination. And I keep wondering how many people are still waiting to arrive.
This is Part 2 of The Money They Never Taught Us. Click here for Part 1. https://nonaspensieve.com/the-money-they-never-taught-us-part-1-the-errand-boy-problem/
Leave a Reply