Showing posts with label Book Summary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Summary. Show all posts

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Rich Dad Poor Dad in 2026 -- What Still Holds, What Doesn't


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Personal Finance · India · 2026

The Book That Shaped a Generation's Money Thinking — And Where It Falls Short Today

Twenty-seven years after it was first self-published, Rich Dad Poor Dad still tops Amazon's bestseller charts in India. But the world it was written for no longer exists. Here's what to keep, what to discard, and what to read instead.

Robert Kiyosaki's Rich Dad Poor Dad arrived in 1997 as a provocation wrapped in a parable. Two fathers, two philosophies, two outcomes — and somewhere in between, a reader left wondering why the "right" path (government job, stable salary, careful savings) seemed to produce so little wealth while the unconventional one produced so much. Over 32 million copies later, the book has become a kind of financial scripture for the upwardly mobile Indian middle class.

But scripture has a way of aging unevenly. What felt revelatory in second-year college — the asset-liability distinction, the critique of the rat race, the call to build instead of earn — now deserves a more critical reading. Not because the book was wrong, exactly, but because the country, the markets, and the math have all moved on.

Let's go through it carefully.

01

Your House as a Liability — and Why the Math Kills You in India

The most memorable idea from Rich Dad Poor Dad is deceptively simple: your home is a liability, not an asset. An asset puts money into your pocket; a liability takes money out. If you're living in the house you're paying EMI on, it's a liability. Full stop.

Conceptually, this is still correct. But the book went further — it implied that buying property through debt was a good way to build assets. And this is where India breaks the model entirely.

Consider a ₹1 crore flat in any Tier-1 Indian city today. With a 20% down payment, you're borrowing ₹80 lakh. At a minimum 8% interest rate over 20 years, your EMI works out to roughly ₹66,950 per month.

Now ask: what rental income could that same property generate? India's rental yields are notoriously thin — somewhere between 1.5% and 2% annually. That gives you roughly ₹12,500–₹14,000 per month in rent. Your EMI shortfall? More than ₹50,000 every single month, before maintenance, society charges, or property tax.

Compare this to the US, where rental yields are closer to 3–4%, and 30-year mortgages at historically low rates made the math work. That specific context — low borrowing cost, high rental yield — simply does not exist in India.

The advice worth keeping: don't rush to buy a home in your mid-twenties just because society expects it. The advice to discard: that debt-funded real estate is a wealth-building engine. In India's current rate environment, it rarely is.

02

Borrowing to Buy Assets Is No Longer Smart — It's Expensive

One of the book's central prescriptions is to take on "good debt" — borrow money to buy income-producing assets. In 1997 America, this was defensible. Interest rates were low. Financial products were limited. Real estate and small business were among the few vehicles available to ordinary people trying to build wealth.

In 2026 India, this premise collapses under its own weight.

Personal loans in India come at 14–15%. Secured home loans — the cheapest credit available — still cost 8–9%. Auto loans and education loans sit between 9–11%. Every one of these rates is higher than the post-tax, risk-adjusted returns you can reasonably expect from most conventional investments.

14–15%
Personal loan rate
8–9%
Home loan rate
10–13%
Reasonable equity return

The spread is thin at best, negative at worst. And critically, it ignores the range of investment options that simply didn't exist when Kiyosaki was writing. Large-cap and mid-cap mutual funds, Gold ETFs, REIT units, corporate bond funds, short-duration debt funds — these products give Indian investors a robust, scalable toolkit with no debt required. The 2026 investor has far less reason to borrow in order to build.

03

The Tax-Saving Business Structure — Mostly Irrelevant for Most Indians

The book advises setting up a corporation or business structure to run personal expenses through, thereby reducing taxable income before paying yourself. In the US, this is a legitimate and widely used strategy. In India, the advice misses the target population by a wide margin.

Only 5–10% of India's population pays income tax at all. Of those who do, many are salaried employees for whom running expenses through a corporate structure isn't practically feasible. The high-income self-employed and business owners who could benefit from this structure already have accountants doing it for them.

For the vast majority of Indian readers picking up this book — first-generation earners, young professionals, aspiring middle-class families — spending mental energy on tax optimisation through business incorporation is a distraction. The far higher-leverage move is to grow income itself, not to squeeze the margins of what you already earn.

04

The Dismissal of Formal Education Is Profoundly Misplaced in India

This is perhaps the most damaging idea the book exports to its Indian audience. Kiyosaki is famously dismissive of formal education — degrees are for people who want to work for the rich, not become rich. He contrasts "school smarts" with "street smarts" and implies that the education system is a factory for the financially illiterate.

In a 1997 American context, this was a marketable contrarianism. In India in 2026, it borders on reckless advice.

India's education system — particularly its best government institutions — remains one of the most powerful social mobility tools available to ordinary families. A seat at a top engineering college, a central university, or a premier management programme changes the arc of a person's life in ways that no amount of "financial street smarts" can replicate, especially for those starting from modest circumstances. The peer networks, the credentialling, the exposure to ideas, the opening of doors — all of this is real and deeply understated by Kiyosaki's framework.

The child of a government employee who clears competitive exams and gets into a top college, studies with scholarship support, and emerges into a professional career is not living a "poor dad" story. They are doing something that most countries' populations would envy. Treating that path with contempt — or worse, convincing young Indians to skip it in favour of early entrepreneurship — can cause genuine harm.

It would be unfair — and inaccurate — to dismiss the book entirely. Some of its core intuitions remain genuinely useful, provided you handle them with care and context.

The Asset-Liability Framework Is Still Conceptually Sound

Whatever puts money in your pocket is an asset; whatever takes money out is a liability. This is a razor-sharp mental model that cuts through a lot of social noise — the pressure to buy a car because you "deserve" it, to upgrade your home before you're financially ready, to spend on symbols of status rather than instruments of growth. Applied as a lens rather than a rigid rulebook, it remains valuable.

The Critique of the Salary-Only Mindset Has Merit

The book's core narrative tension — the person who relies entirely on a salary versus the person who builds multiple income streams — still resonates. While the solution isn't necessarily entrepreneurship (and certainly not reckless debt), the underlying point that a single income source is fragile is as true today as it was in 1997. Building skills, side projects, and investment income over time is smart personal finance in any era.

It Sparked a Generation's Interest in Financial Literacy

At its best, Rich Dad Poor Dad is a gateway drug to better thinking about money. For countless readers, it was the first book that made personal finance feel urgent and interesting rather than tedious. The instinct to question received wisdom about money — to ask why the conventional path produces conventional outcomes — is worth preserving. The book's real legacy may simply be the conversations it started.

If you're building your financial thinking in 2026 — especially as an Indian investor — here are four books that will serve you far better than revisiting Kiyosaki.

Book I

Let's Talk Money

Monika Halan

Possibly the most practically useful personal finance book written for an Indian audience. Halan's central argument is deceptively simple: before you invest a single rupee, get your protection in order. Health insurance. Life insurance. An emergency fund. These aren't exciting, but in a country where a medical emergency can wipe out a lifetime of savings overnight, they are foundational.

In a financial landscape where trading apps and options strategies are marketed to people who have no business touching them yet, this book insists on sequencing. Protection first, then growth. It's the advice most Indians need to hear before anything else.

Book II

Just Keep Buying

Nick Maggiulli

Maggiulli's book delivers a counterintuitive but data-backed argument: when you're young and your investable corpus is small, obsessing over returns is less productive than obsessing over income growth. Investing ₹50,000 at 10% returns nets you ₹5,000 a year. That same energy spent levelling up your skills and doubling your income from ₹3 lakh to ₹6 lakh creates far more wealth than any market optimisation.

The implication for young Indian professionals is pointed: don't let the internet convince you to spend your twenties penny-pinching on coffee and Swiggy orders. Invest seriously, yes — but invest in your income first. The compounding there is faster and more controllable than anything the market offers.

Book III

The Psychology of Money

Morgan Housel

Housel's insight is that building wealth is not a knowledge problem — it's a behaviour problem. You already know you should invest regularly. The question is why you don't. His answer: because you're relying on motivation, which is unreliable. The solution is automation.

Set up a SIP. Pick a date — the 4th, the 5th, the 6th of every month. Treat it like your EMI: non-negotiable, invisible, automatic. The wealthy mindset, Housel argues, inverts the typical order. Rather than spending first and investing what's left, it invests first and lives on what remains. That discipline, automated rather than willed into existence each month, is the actual engine of wealth.

Book IV

I Will Teach You to Be Rich

Ramit Sethi

Sethi's often-overlooked contribution is giving people permission to enjoy their money. The typical personal finance book treats every non-essential expenditure as a moral failure. Sethi disagrees. His prescription: set a guilt-free spending budget — perhaps 20% of take-home pay — and spend it without apology on whatever brings you genuine joy. No spreadsheet justification required.

The logic is sound. If your financial plan requires you to live joylessly for thirty years in pursuit of a ₹3.5 crore corpus at 60, you've built a prison, not a life. The goal is to invest with enough discipline that you can also spend with enough freedom to make the whole thing worth it.

Every era needs its own financial scripture. Rich Dad Poor Dad served a purpose — for a time, in a place. But clinging to it in 2026 India, applying its prescriptions as though the interest rate environment, investment landscape, and social context haven't fundamentally shifted, is a mistake. Read it for the sparks it still produces. Then set it aside, and pick up something written for where you actually are.

Friday, April 3, 2026

A Psalm of Life


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Tell me not, in mournful numbers,
Life is but an empty dream!—
For the soul is dead that slumbers,
And things are not what they seem.

Life is real! Life is earnest!
And the grave is not its goal;
Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
Was not spoken of the soul.

Not enjoyment, and not sorrow,
Is our destined end or way;
But to act, that each tomorrow
Find us farther than today.

Art is long, and Time is fleeting,
And our hearts, though stout and brave,
Still, like muffled drums, are beating
Funeral marches to the grave.

In the world's broad field of battle,
In the bivouac of Life,
Be not like dumb, driven cattle!
Be a hero in the strife!

Trust no Future, howe'er pleasant!
Let the dead Past bury its dead!
Act,—act in the living Present!
Heart within, and God o'erhead!

Lives of great men all remind us
We can make our lives sublime,
And, departing, leave behind us
Footprints on the sands of time;

Footprints, that perhaps another,
Sailing o'er life's solemn main,
A forlorn and shipwrecked brother,
Seeing, shall take heart again.

Let us, then, be up and doing,
With a heart for any fate;
Still achieving, still pursuing,
Learn to labor and to wait.



The Enduring Wisdom of "A Psalm of Life"
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's "A Psalm of Life," first published in 1838, stands as one of the most widely read and memorized poems in American literary history. Composed during a period of personal grief following the death of his first wife, Mary Storer Potter, the poem emerged from darkness as a defiant affirmation of human purpose and agency. Its nine quatrains have since offered generations of readers a philosophical framework for confronting mortality without surrendering to despair.
The poem opens with a direct challenge to pessimistic worldviews. Longfellow rejects the notion that "Life is but an empty dream," arguing that such thinking belongs to souls that "slumber" rather than engage fully with existence. This opening salvo establishes the poem's central tension between passive resignation and active participation. For Longfellow, merely existing is not enough; life demands earnest engagement precisely because it is real and finite.
The second stanza introduces what scholars identify as the poem's theological anchor. By distinguishing the body ("Dust thou art, to dust returnest") from the immortal soul, Longfellow borrows from Christian tradition while redirecting its emphasis. The grave is "not its goal"—our earthly sojourn possesses meaning beyond mere preparation for afterlife. This repositioning allows Longfellow to celebrate worldly action as spiritually significant rather than spiritually distracting.
Perhaps the poem's most enduring contribution appears in the third stanza: "But to act, that each tomorrow / Find us farther than today." Here Longfellow articulates a philosophy of incremental progress, where value resides not in arrival but in movement itself. The metaphor of journey—"farther than today"—suggests that fulfillment emerges from sustained effort rather than final achievement. This proved particularly resonant in nineteenth-century America, where westward expansion and industrial transformation made progress both cultural obsession and lived reality.
The middle stanzas deploy striking military imagery. Life becomes "the world's broad field of battle," a "bivouac" where temporary encampment demands vigilance and courage. The comparison of hearts to "muffled drums" beating "Funeral marches to the grave" acknowledges mortality's inevitability while refusing morbid fixation. Longfellow's famous command—"Be not like dumb, driven cattle! / Be a hero in the strife!"—transforms existence from victimhood into vocation. Heroism, in this formulation, requires not extraordinary feats but conscious choice: the decision to participate rather than drift.
The poem's penultimate stanza contains its most quoted lines. The "Footprints on the sands of time" metaphor elegantly captures Longfellow's vision of intergenerational influence. We matter, he suggests, not because we endure but because we might inspire others who follow. The "forlorn and shipwrecked brother" who "shall take heart again" embodies poetry's own aspirational power—language as rescue, example as encouragement.
Longfellow concludes with practical synthesis: "Let us, then, be up and doing, / With a heart for any fate." The final line's apparent paradox—"Learn to labor and to wait"—reveals mature wisdom. Action and patience, striving and acceptance, prove complementary rather than contradictory virtues. This balanced closing distinguishes "A Psalm of Life" from mere motivational exhortation; it acknowledges that meaningful living requires both engagement and equanimity.
Contemporary critics sometimes dismiss the poem as overly didactic or sentimentally optimistic. Yet its enduring popularity across nearly two centuries suggests something more profound. In an age of unprecedented distraction and existential anxiety, Longfellow's call to "act in the living Present" retains urgent relevance. The poem asks neither for heroic sacrifice nor philosophical sophistication, but for the simple courage to participate fully in our finite days—to leave, however briefly, footprints worth following.
Tags: Poetry,Motivation,Book Summary,

Saturday, March 28, 2026

Why You're Chasing the "Wrong Kind" of Security


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Money & Mindset

Why You're Chasing the Wrong Kind of Security

The silent trap that keeps smart, hardworking people financially stuck — and the quadrant shift that changes everything.

Imagine two fathers. Both educated, both hardworking, both genuinely wanting the best for their children. Yet one spends his life getting deeper into debt with every promotion, and the other grows wealthier — and freer — the more successful he becomes. Same starting point. Radically different destinations. The difference wasn't intelligence or effort. It was the quadrant they chose to live in.

Most of us were handed a financial script before we were old enough to question it. Go to school. Get good grades. Find a safe, secure job. It sounds reasonable — even responsible. But embedded in that advice is a quiet assumption that will quietly cost you decades: that job security and financial freedom are the same thing. They are not.

"Many of us are conditioned from our earliest days to think about job security, rather than financial security or financial freedom."

The Four Quadrants — and Why the Left Side Is a Trap

There's a simple but powerful framework for understanding how money flows in a person's life. Think of it as a four-box grid: on the left you have the Employee (E) and the Self-Employed (S). On the right, the Business Owner (B) and the Investor (I). The left side is driven by the desire for security. The right side is driven by the pursuit of freedom.

E Employee
B Business Owner
S Self-Employed
I Investor
← Security Freedom →

The vast majority of people — roughly 90% — spend their entire working lives on the left side. Not because they lack talent, but because that's the only side they were ever taught about. School trains you for the E quadrant: be a dependable, skilled employee. It doesn't teach you to own systems or make money work for you.

The Debt Script: How the Trap Closes Around You

Here's a story that will feel uncomfortably familiar. A young person graduates, gets their first paycheck, and the spending begins — a car, new clothes, a nice apartment. Then love, marriage, and a mortgage. Then furniture on credit. Then a child. Then another. Every milestone is beautiful, every purchase feels earned. And by the time they look up, they're less than three months away from financial collapse if their paycheck stops.

These people will often say, "I can't afford to quit. I have bills to pay." And just like that, a job has become a cage. Not because the boss put them there — but because the script did.

"They become trapped by the need for job security simply because, on average, they're less than three months away from financial bankruptcy."

This is the financial script of the Industrial Age, and it's still being handed to the next generation as wisdom. The problem isn't that people work hard. The problem is that hard work in the E and S quadrants — no matter how well rewarded — almost always leads to more debt and more taxes, not freedom.

The Success Trap: When Climbing the Ladder Becomes the Problem

Here's the brutal irony: the more successful you become on the left side of the quadrant, the worse your situation gets. A promotion brings a pay raise. A pay raise pushes you into a higher tax bracket. Higher taxes prompt your accountant to say, "Buy a bigger house — you can write off the interest." So you buy a bigger house, take on more debt, and work harder to service that debt. More success brings less time with the people you love and more financial stress.

Think of the father who leaves for work at 7 a.m. and comes home after the children are already in bed. He is succeeding by every conventional measure. He is failing by the one that matters.

The two biggest financial expenses for most working people are taxes and interest on debt. Every promotion on the left side tends to increase both. The conventional wisdom to "buy a bigger house for the tax break" is advice that makes perfect sense from inside the trap — and no sense at all from outside it.

The wealthy, by contrast, build income in the B and I quadrants — where the tax code is written to reward business creation, investment, and asset accumulation. They earn their money from assets, not from hours worked. When one investor sold three pieces of real estate through a legal tax-deferral mechanism and reinvested the proceeds, he made a million dollars while legally paying nothing in taxes. A reporter called it a scandal. From the right side of the quadrant, it's just financial literacy.

The S Quadrant: Freedom's Most Exhausting Detour

When the employment script stops working — layoffs, stagnation, disillusionment — many people make a brave pivot: they start their own business. This move from E to S feels like liberation. You're your own boss. You work your own hours. You build something that's yours.

The reality is that the S quadrant may be the hardest quadrant of all. The self-employed person typically becomes what you might call the "chief cook and bottle washer" — handling every role that a larger company delegates to entire departments. Sales, accounting, customer service, operations, HR. All of it, all at once.

The statistics are unforgiving: nine out of ten small businesses fail within five years. Of the survivors, nine out of ten fail in the following five years. That means 99 out of 100 small businesses disappear within a decade. The first wave fails from lack of experience and capital. The second wave fails from something less discussed — sheer exhaustion.

Consider the couple who spent 45 years running a liquor store, eventually forced to conduct business through a slot in the wall as crime rose around them. Wonderful, dedicated people — but effectively prisoners in the business they'd built. That is S-quadrant success taken to its logical conclusion.

The Right Side: Where People Work for You and Money Works for You

The B and I quadrants operate on an entirely different logic. In the B quadrant, you build a system — and the system generates income whether you show up or not. In the I quadrant, your money generates income. Together, they create what genuine financial freedom actually means: the choice to work or not to work.

Consider two firefighters — government employees with steady salaries, good benefits, and a two-day work week. They spend the other three days as professional investors. One owns 45 rental properties generating $10,000 per month net after all expenses. His firefighter salary adds another $3,500 a month. Total: over $150,000 per year, growing. The other has built a stock and options portfolio worth more than $3 million. Both had enough passive income to retire by 40. Both chose to keep working because they enjoy it — not because they have to.

That is the difference between financial security and job security. One depends on your continued labor. The other does not.

"True security and freedom are only found on the right side."

Knowledge Is the Bridge — Not Just More Hard Work

The path forward isn't to abandon your job tomorrow and declare yourself a business mogul. It's to begin building knowledge and competence in the right-side quadrants while continuing to earn on the left side. Think of it as having two legs instead of one. A person who only knows their profession has one leg. Every time the economic winds shift — a recession, a layoff, an industry disruption — they wobble. Two legs means stability in both directions.

The recommended path is to start as an employee, learn the fundamentals, then deliberately work toward building a business system (B) and then investing from the cash flow that business generates (I). This is the path that many great entrepreneurs have walked — moving from the safety of a salary to the scalability of ownership, then letting invested capital work independently.

Financial intelligence — the ability to understand how money actually works, how to read financial statements, how to distinguish an asset from a liability — is what makes this possible. It cannot be outsourced to your accountant or banker. It has to be learned, practiced, and internalized.

"The only difference between a rich person and a poor person is what they do in their spare time."

Your job is not going to make you rich. Your boss's job is simply to make sure you receive your paycheck. What you do with that paycheck — and with your hours after work — will determine your financial future far more than the size of your next raise.


Conclusions

  • Most people seek job security because that's the only financial path they were ever taught — at home and in school — not because it's the best one.
  • The CASHFLOW Quadrant has two sides: E and S (left, driven by security) and B and I (right, driven by freedom). Most people spend their lives entirely on the left.
  • Debt traps people on the left side — mortgage, car payments, credit cards, and lifestyle inflation combine to make the paycheck feel irreplaceable.
  • Conventional "success" in the E quadrant — promotions and raises — actually worsens the situation by increasing taxes and encouraging more debt.
  • The S quadrant (self-employment) feels like freedom but is statistically the riskiest path, demanding the most labor for the least leverage; 99 out of 100 small businesses disappear within 10 years.
  • The two biggest expenses for left-side earners are taxes and interest on debt. Both increase automatically with income in the E/S quadrants.
  • The wealthy legally minimize taxes by earning income through B and I quadrants, where the tax code offers far more advantages.
  • True financial freedom means income that continues whether or not you work — this is only possible through business systems (B) and invested assets (I).
  • Financial security is achievable by developing knowledge in at least one right-side quadrant while working on the left — having "two legs" creates resilience.
  • Your boss's job is to pay you, not to make you rich. Taking responsibility for your own financial education — especially in investing — is the critical first step.
  • The recommended path: build competence and income as a B (business owner) first, then use that cash flow and experience to become a skilled I (investor).

Taken from Chapter 3 of the book: "Cashflow Quadrant" by Robert Kiyosaki

Financial literacy · The Cashflow Quadrant · Building wealth on the right side

Tags: Book Summary,Finance,Investment,

Friday, March 27, 2026

It is time to go home...


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I often feel that death is not the enemy of life, but its friend, for it is the knowledge that our years are limited which makes them so precious. It is the truth that time is but lent to us which makes us, at our best, look upon our years as a trust handed into our temporary keeping. We are like children privileged to spend a day in a great park, a park filled with many gardens and playgrounds and azure-tinted lakes with white boats sailing upon the tranquil waves.

True, the day allotted to each one of us is not the same in length, in light, in beauty. Some children of earth are privileged to spend a long and sunlit day in the garden of the earth. For others the day is shorter, cloudier, and dusk descends more quickly as in a winter’s tale. But whether our life is a long summery day or a shorter wintry afternoon, we know that inevitably there are storms and squalls which overcast even the bluest heaven and there are sunlit rays which pierce the darkest autumn sky. The day that we are privileged to spend in the great park of life is not the same for all human beings, but there is enough beauty and joy and gaiety in the hours if we will but treasure them. 

Then for each one of us the moment comes when the great nurse, death, takes man, the child, by the hand and quietly says, “It is time to go home. Night is coming. It is your bedtime, child of earth. Come; you’re tired. Lie down at last in the quiet nursery of nature and sleep. Sleep well. The day is gone. Stars shine in the canopy of eternity.”

~ Joshua Loth Liebman

Taken from the book: Light From Many Lamps (Lillian Eichler Watson, 1951)
Chapter: Courage and The Conquest of Fear
Tags: Motivation,Emotional Intelligence,Book Summary,

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Humbly we prayed for food...


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HUMBLY WE PRAYED FOR FOOD... WITHIN AN HOUR A SEA GULL CAME AND LANDED ON MY HEAD

The men in the rubber life rafts were in a pretty bad way. Their plane, on a war mission in the Pacific, had been forced down eight days ago; and they had been drifting helplessly ever since, without food or water, in the scorching tropic sun. Their feet were blistered, their faces burned, their mouths and bodies parched. For eight days they had lived on four small oranges—no other food, and no water. The heat, the hunger, the exhaustion, had brought them close to the breaking point.

But not Captain Eddie Rickenbacker! He had been in tight places before, had come face to face with death several times in the past. And he alone refused to despair; he alone never gave up faith that they would be found and picked up, that somehow they would be saved.

For Eddie Rickenbacker believed in prayer. He had learned to pray as a child at his mother’s knee; and in all the crises of his life, prayer had given him comfort and courage, prayer had helped him through his difficulties. He firmly believed it would help him again in this emergency.

Most of the men in the rubber life rafts were young and inexperienced, facing their first great trial. They needed the strength and understanding he could give them out of his own experience. They needed the example of his great faith and trust, those unfailing resources that buttress a man from within and give him the endurance to face what he must. They needed the calming, comforting influence of prayer.

One of the men in his boat had a small Bible, and they took turns reading aloud from it every day. It was a reassurance from the very first that they were not alone, that God knew where they were and would take care of them.

Now, on the eighth day of hunger and thirst, the men were desperate. There was no sign of a boat or plane anywhere—nothing but the wide, empty, shining expanse of sea. One of the men was violently sick from drinking sea water. Some were beginning to show the first alarming signs of delirium. It was suggested that the following passage from Matthew be read to the men that day:

Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat? or, What shall we drink? or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed? . . . for your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things.

But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.

Take therefore no thought for the morrow; for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.

What happened next seemed like a miracle to the suffering men, seemed like a direct answer to their prayer. And who can say it was not? A gull flew in out of nowhere and landed on Rickenbacker’s head. He reached up and caught it—and they had food. They ran into their first rainstorm—and they had water for drinking. Food and water! Their prayers had been answered! The experience filled the men with awe and astonishment, and there were no longer any unbelievers in the life rafts. From then on they prayed with new confidence, with strong new faith. From then on they believed with “Captain Eddie” that God was with them and that they would be saved.

And they were! They drifted for nearly two weeks longer—weak, emaciated, and in the end more nearly dead than alive—but still believing, and still expecting to be saved. And at last, on the twenty-first day of their ordeal, they were located by searching planes and picked up. It was a truly miraculous rescue, for the rafts were less than dots on the ocean’s surface and impossible to see from a distance. The planes had to fly almost directly above them to find them.

When news of the rescue was flashed around the world, people everywhere were thrilled and excited, for nearly everyone had given the men up for lost. But what moved people most was Rickenbacker’s simple, unaffected explanation: “We prayed.” The story, as told in his own words, went straight to the hearts of millions of people:

After we got going naturally we got to thinking about our food and water, but we didn’t dare go back to the ship for fear she would sink and suck us down with it. Then we ran into a five-day calm, which left the ocean like a mirror. It was beastly hot. . . . Our hands, face, and feet suffered particularly. . . .

We saw nothing in the way of searching planes or ships. The boy in my boat had an issue Bible in the pocket of his jumper, and the second day out we organized little evening and morning prayer meetings and took turn about reading passages from the Bible. Frankly and humbly we prayed for our deliverance. After the oranges were gone, we experienced terrific pangs of hunger, and we prayed for food.

We had a couple of little fish lines with hooks about the size of the end of my little finger, but no bait. Were it not for the fact that I have seven witnesses, I wouldn’t dare tell this story because it seems so fantastic. Within an hour after prayer meeting on the eighth day, a sea gull came out of nowhere and landed on my head. I reached up my hand very gently and got him. We wrung his head, feathered him, carved up his carcass and ate every bit, even the little bones. We distributed and used his innards for bait.*

Captain Cherry caught a little mackerel about six or eight inches long and I caught a little speckled sea bass about the same size, so we had food for a couple of days. . . .

That night we ran into our first rainstorm. Usually you try to avoid a black squall, but in this case we made it our business to get into it and catch water for drinking. . . . Later we were able to catch more water and build up our supply.

*There were originally eight men in the three tiny rubber lifeboats, which were fastened together with rope. One man died on the thirteenth day; but the other seven came safely through the ordeal.

The day this story appeared in the newspapers, people everywhere were noticeably affected by it. For it was far more than a story of courage and physical endurance, of which there were many in those tragic war years. It was an amazing demonstration of the power of prayer, one of the most thrilling sagas of faith in action to come out of World War II.

Every paper in the land picked up Rickenbacker’s story. Ministers preached sermons about it. Writers wrote glowing articles and editorials about it. Public figures discussed it from the lecture platform and over the radio.

“We prayed.”

There was almost a Biblical feeling to Rickenbacker’s words. He and his companions were lost at sea . . . they prayed . . . they were saved. It was as simple as that, and as inspiring. People who hadn’t prayed in years began to do so again. Some who had never prayed in their lives began to search their souls with a new questioning. Many who were anguished, bitter, and despairing, who had suffered profound grief during the war, felt the pain of their hearts ease and the bitterness leave them. It was as though something wonderful and fine had happened to everyone, everywhere . . . as indeed it had! Eddie Rickenbacker’s story enormously increased and intensified the feeling of faith in millions of hearts, and gave people courage and hope when they needed it most.

“I consider the story of how we prayed and how our prayers were answered the most important message I ever gave to the people of this country,” wrote Captain Rickenbacker in a personal communication with the author of this book.

It is far more than that. Captain Rickenbacker’s famous saga of the Pacific, revealing the power of faith to help men endure an almost unbelievable ordeal, is one of the truly great stories of the war . . . and one of the most inspiring.

Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you. — Matthew 7:7

All things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive. — Matthew 21:22

All who call on God in true faith, earnestly from the heart, will certainly be heard, and will receive what they have asked and desired. — Martin Luther

*
More things are wrought by prayer
Than this world dreams of. Wherefore, let thy voice
Rise like a fountain for me night and day.
For what are men better than sheep or goats
That nourish a blind life within the brain,
If, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer
Both for themselves and those who call them friend?
— Alfred Tennyson

*
Prayer is not only worship; it is also an invisible emanation of man’s worshiping spirit—the most powerful form of energy that one can generate. The influence of prayer on the human mind and body is as demonstrable as that of secreting glands. Its results can be measured in terms of increased physical buoyancy, greater intellectual vigor, moral stamina, and a deeper understanding of the realities underlying human relationships.

If you make a habit of sincere prayer, your life will be very noticeably and profoundly altered. Prayer stamps with its indelible mark our actions and demeanor. A tranquillity of bearing, a facial and bodily repose, are observed in those whose inner lives are thus enriched. Within the depths of consciousness a flame kindles. And man sees himself. He discovers his selfishness, his silly pride, his fears, his greed, his blunders. He develops a sense of moral obligation, intellectual humility. Thus begins a journey of the soul toward the realm of grace.

Prayer is a force as real as terrestrial gravity. As a physician, I have seen men, after all other therapy has failed, lifted out of disease and melancholy by the serene effort of prayer. It is the only power in the world that seems to overcome the so-called “laws of nature”; the occasions on which prayer has dramatically done this have been termed “miracles.” But a constant, quieter miracle takes place hourly in the hearts of men and women who have discovered that prayer supplies them with a steady flow of sustaining power in their daily lives.

Too many people regard prayer as a formalized routine of words, a refuge for weaklings, or a childish petition for material things. We sadly undervalue prayer when we conceive it in these terms, just as we should underestimate rain by describing it as something that fills the birdbath in our garden. Properly understood, prayer is a mature activity indispensable to the fullest development of personality—the ultimate integration of man’s highest faculties. Only in prayer do we achieve that complete and harmonious assembly of body, mind, and spirit which gives the frail human reed its unshakable strength.

— Alexis Carrel

*
Oft have I seen at some cathedral door
A laborer, pausing in the dust and heat,
Lay down his burden, and with reverent feet
Enter, and cross himself, and on the floor
Kneel to repeat his paternoster o’er;
Far off the noises of the world retreat;
The loud vociferations of the street
Become an undistinguishable roar.
So, as I enter here from day to day,
And leave my burden at this minster gate,
Kneeling in prayer, and not ashamed to pray,
The tumult of the time disconsolate
To inarticulate murmurs dies away,
While the eternal ages watch and wait.
— Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

*
The sovereign cure for worry is prayer.

— William James


Taken from the chapter: "Humbly We Prayed for Food" by Eddie Rickenbacker from the book "Light from Many Lamps"


End Notes


"Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof" is a biblical phrase (Matthew 6:34) advising against worrying about future problems
. It means each day brings enough troubles, challenges, or "evil" (adversity) to handle on its own, so one should focus only on present difficulties rather than borrowing future anxiety.
Key Aspects of the Phrase:
  • Origin: Spoken by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount, found in Matthew 6:34.
  • Meaning of "Evil": In this context, "evil" does not mean evil in a moral sense, but rather trouble, worry, pain, or adversity.
  • Core Message: Do not borrow trouble from tomorrow. Focus on the present moment, as today has enough challenges to deal with, and tomorrow will bring its own challenges
    .
Usage Examples:
  • "I know you're worried about next year's budget, but sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof," meaning focus on current issues.
  • "Let's not stress about the upcoming move; sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof
  • "The deadline is weeks away. I'm focusing on today's tasks; sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof
Synonyms & Related Phrases:
  • Live in the moment / Live in the present.
  • One day at a time.
  • Don't borrow trouble.
  • Take no thought for the morrow (from the same verse).
  • Cross that bridge when you come to it.