Practical Issues of the Day

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Live FAXL concert on Saturday Night as workshop participants Sort, Search & Enjoy!

Practical Issues… Number 1 FAQ question is, “I feel funny making extra income from my meditation practice. How can I justify it?”

ANSWER: You were raised and programmed to feel that way. If it’s an unbreakable habit, keep the Day Job and only do coinology part-time, tossing the good stuff directly back into circulation just as it comes to you…

SECOND OPINION: How about looking at the extra income as Feedback. The cash-flow will follow your karmic picture. That’s a fact, Jack. So let the cash-flow tell you the story and help you do better.

THIRD RESPONSE: Take the extra income and put it in a special account. Use it to travel to coinology workshops and to finance your coinology group meetings every Thursday.

FOURTH IDEA: Hey, why not program your eBay sales site to automatically donate some percentage — up to you what percentage it will be — to IDHHB, Inc. which you can find in the Approved Non-Profit section of eBay’s seller’s guide, thus making it possible for thousands of others to enjoy the benefits of Prosperity Path Coinology.

You may see our many ads on google for Prosperity Path. Be sure to tell your friends about it! They’ll thank you for hooking them up with coinology, you can be sure!

Just about everyone I tell about coinology has an immediate realization that they probably threw several million dollars out the door when they dumped their spare pennies into a pickle jar to be taken annually to the local spare-change dumping station at Raley’s.

I personally saw a shopkeeper friend of mine pull a wad of pennies out of her register and go through them as I’d told her to do and showed her a few tricks of the trade; she came up with an MS-64 1909-S!!! Okay, it wasn’t the Big One, but how close can ya get with a handful of pennies from a cash register on a busy Monday morning at the Old Curiosity Shoppe???

As you probably already guessed, she hasn’t sold the coin, nor is she planning to — it’s worth about $250 as is. I’ve suggested that she have it slabbed & graded, and offered to get it done for her, but it’s her little Quantum Pet, and she’s framed it and put it over her “standing place”, which all retailers know quite well. It’s where you stand around looking busy until a customer demands attention.

One more Practical Item: When shipping bank boxes of pennies out to coinology friends on the opposite Coast, follow Uncle Claude’s recommendation: ship one empty box between two full ones in the standard postal “fixed rate” box. Three bank boxes fit perfectly inside, and the coins don’t come smashing through the outer box as they do when you don’t do this. When you ship two full boxes with an empty in the center, the weight and size considerations are automatically met precisely.

If you want me to sort and locate search rolls for you, you will have to ship me the coins to search, unless it’s Denver Mint you want.

Here’s the general rule:

East Coast Bank Boxes — DDO — Most errors occur on the Obverse of the coin. No mint-Marks on the small cent, therefore no RPMs or OMMs on Philadelphia Mint coins. Minted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, East Coast.

West Coast Bank Boxes — DDR — Most errors occur on the Reverse of the coin, but all of the RPMs and OMMs will be on the coins with the mint-marks, which is Denver and San Francisco — that’s West Coast, to you.

There will generally be some mix of East and West Coast coins; the longer they’ve been in circulation, the more likely they’ll have traveled across country, at least once. 1980 Philadelphia you can find on both coasts equally well. Trucking error?

Depending on what you want to search, that’s the general idea. You’ll have to learn which coins can be found where — that’s part of your training. Don’t worry about it; you’ll be able to pick up the data as we go along. My Academy Training Program lets you learn as you go, no hassles, no worries, just pure fun and deep attention moving meditation.

See You At The Top!!!

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