Welcome!
If you are someone that came here because of a QR code, thanks for taking the time to have a look. I hope I can be of help to you. To all others, who by random circumstance or by recommendation are here, I say welcome as well.
The problem in America isn't so much what people don't know; the problem is what people think they know that just ain't so.
-Will Rogers
One of the causes of the troubles that beset us is the way our lives are guided by the example of others, instead of being set to rights by reason we're seduced by convention.
-Seneca
I believe, Becoming Your Own Banker by Nelson Nash should be read by every American. It offers a more hopeful financial future to us in these turbulent times.
To this end, I work.
What is 'becoming your own banker' about? It is quite simple. It teaches you how to take over the process of banking using a specially designed, dividend-paying whole life insurance policy with a mutual company.
The process we are taught is to go to a bank (or another lending institution) and have them sell us a product, say a mortgage, and then you begin the process of making payments back to the bank to pay off the mortgage. You build up equity this way in your home but the cash you worked for goes to the bank. In other loans, you might not be fortunate to build up equity at all. All loans from lending institutions lead to your impoverishment, over time, because the interest payments go back to them and not back to you.
Nelson Nash wrote, in Becoming Your Own Banker, "You finance everything you buy. You either pay interest to someone else or you give up interest you could have earned." 'Becoming your own banker' is about learning to finance everything in your life, whether it is a mortgage, a car loan, student loan, or anything you could think of, using your whole life insurance policy. You take policy loans from the cash values inside of your policy and use it to finance any thing you can think of, hence why it is called the infinite banking concept. This practice reverses the banking process by reversing the cash flow away from the banks or lending institutions and sending it back to you.
If you could still have all the interest you have paid to lending institutions via loan repayment, would that make a great difference in your life?
There is much more to say and much more to explain about why you might want to do this but in an effort to keep things concise, I will stop. For more information, my blog explores things in greater detail.
Who is 'becoming your own banker' for?
It's really for anyone that has discipline, can think long term, and wants to improve their financial situation.
If you have debt, mortgage(s), student loans, etc. We can help teach you how you can pay off your debt and build wealth while doing it. This is one of the most exciting parts of the work, we do.
If you are seeking more financial freedom and passive income, then becoming your own banker is for you.
If you want to leave an inheritance for your family, then becoming your own banker is for you.
If you want to escape the current monetary regime of banks and other lending institutions then it is definitely for you.
Here are a couple of steps that you can take to learn about how to become your own banker...
- Read Nelson Nash's book, Becoming Your Own Banker. This is the place to start. It takes time to grasp the concept, so be patient. 
- Call/email me if you are in the United States. I'd love to talk and see how I might be able to help you. 
- If you live in Northwest Arkansas come to a webinar that I host a couple of times a month with the company I work for- Life, Success, and Legacy in Lawrence, Kansas. You can find out about the webinar location here. If you would like to attend a webinar, please RSVP by either emailing me or texting me. 
- Even if you aren't in the Northwest Arkansas area, you can attend a webinar with Life, Success, and Legacy, here. Please let them know you heard about them from me. 
Phone - (479) 373-9864.
Email - doreanibc@gmail.com
For those outside the United States, except Canadians, I wish there existed mutual, dividend-paying, whole life insurance companies that people could use to 'become their own bankers' but as far as I know they don't exist. If that's not true, please, let me know.