1. The lesson I enjoyed the most when indulging in this book of knowledge and strategies on obtaining wealth was the reasoning behind how even people who are finically literate still fall prey to fear and doubt. I enjoyed this mostly because it was what I felt like I could relate to this the most. Nobody ever wants to lose money, but taking that risk to go get it, then learning from it if you end up failing is what creates winners. 2.The conflicting ideals of the two dads both had connected with my own ways. The poor dad’s ideology of always telling his son to “stay in school and get good grades for your dream job” was constantly echoing in my household, which created the mindset that that was it. Education or nothing. But the rich dad challenged these ideals and backed them up with visible facts. For a while I have also been introduced to the idea of making your money work for you is the key to success, just never really given the guidelines as to how to create that for myself. 3. This book has opened my mind to new ideas on how to make money for myself, keep my brain moving on ways to attain more and how to also sustain it for long periods of time. As far as education goes, my belief hasn’t changed very much, but I will say the book has further enhanced my belief that school isn’t the end all be all. 4.I now have a broader understanding of assets and liabilities and how people often perceive things as valuable so it encourages people to buy it, mistakably believing that it’s an asset and vise versa. (Not buying an asset because they believe it to be a liability) 5.I would recommend this book to anyone who hasn’t read it honestly. I wouldn’t lock this to any particular age or anything like that. This is knowledge that I feel everyone should learn about, take notes from, to then put to practice in which they see fit.