This Wednesday, And now Sonsoles has received Javier, a millionaire businessman who stands out for his peculiar thinking regarding the transmission of his assets. Coming from a humble family, whose income came from a livestock farm, the guest explained his decision not to bequeath his fortune to his childrendefending the importance of personal effort as the basis of individual development.
Javier, owner of a law firm that generates more than one million euros per month, has told how The 2008 crisis deeply marked his vision of life and moneyeither. “The beauty of earning money is the effort. We lost everything and had to start over,” he declared.
Since then, its purpose has been to their descendants achieve their goals through their own meritpreventing them from depending on their fortune: “They must be educated in effort (…) I would not like them to be ‘sons of’, who were wishing that I would die in order to collect a possible inheritance, nor that, on the day that I do not are not able to generate their own income. In my opinion, it is very sad.
Javier has also stressed that The most valuable lessons in life often come from failures. “You analyze more when you lose, because when you win you believe that you are the son of God, that you have been lucky, that you are so good that you always believe you are going to win,” he reflected.
Furthermore, his first-born son, present on set, He has defended his father’s positionreflecting the good relationship between the two, despite Javier’s controversial decisions: “He is going to leave the inheritance to me, but during his lifetime.”
Finally, the interviewee He has summed up his philosophy in one sentence that has caused laughter in space. “If when you die you have one euro left, you have done your calculations wrong,” he concluded.
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