First, are you using UMS, or are you simply trying to determine whether or not to buy it?
Second, it sounds like you have not fully read and understood the program's description.
Third, you are displaying a primary cause of poverty here: limiting beliefs.
Let's start with the third thing I said. You are here saying that you believe you are limited to having money OR creating art, but that you don't believe you can have both.
Why the hell not? If you do the right things and know the right people, you can make yourself very wealthy in the art world. All you need to do is create works which people are willing to pay insane amounts of money for. At first that sounds difficult, as if the art must be so incredibly exceptional that it demands those prices, but in reality that isn't the case at all. Art is subjective, emotional, irrational, and so are the people who buy it and the prices they are willing to pay for it.
Art does not have to be priced reasonably. It has to be priced according to the perceived value, and the perceived value is easily manipulated if you know how (or the people who do know how). Most artists allow the buyer to set the perceived value without attempting to influence that perception. Influencing that perception of value is in large part why many artists open galleries; just finding a piece in a gallery automatically and significantly increases the expected value. (Belief: "If it's important enough to be in a gallery, it must be exceptional work and very valuable!")
Then you can manipulate how it is displayed, among what other pieces, under what lighting conditions, and in what level of comfort and privacy. All of this increases perceived value. Further still increasing the perceived value is what the piece is made of, how big it is, what the subject is, the skill with which it was created, difficulty of reproducing it, rarity, fame and popularity of the artist and not the least of which is the skill of the gallery staff at salesmanship and advertising.
I know of an artist who I discovered wandering Duval Street in Key West. Her work is amazing to me, for three reasons:
1. Primarily, she is creating the artwork I want(ed) to create. Circumstances have so far dictated that I cannot do it myself, so...
2. It speaks to me. It evokes an emotional reaction and attraction. It is deeply aesthetically pleasing to me.
3. It's huge, and she uses some very expensive materials to create it, giving it some added value for both the creative aspect of having used that and the effect those materials give the piece's visual impact.
The result? She charges thousands and thousands of dollars for a single piece, and still sells her work quickly. As an artist who knows how to create this exact same type and level of art, you would think I would make my own instead of buying it. But I loved her work so much that I found a piece that I could afford and bought it anyway, not just to support her, but to also have this beautiful art in my home. Until I can find the time, equipment and money necessary to do this sort of artwork for myself, I can still enjoy it.
So why can't you have wealth and be a creative artist? Because someone told you that?
Whenever someone tells you why "you can't do that", you need to understand what they are actually telling you. They aren't telling you, "You can't do that, and that's a fact," (even if they think that's what they're telling you and swear up and down that it is what they are telling you!).
What they are actually telling you is, "You are trying to do something that I believe cannot be done, and because you are threatening to prove my limiting-but-comfortable beliefs wrong, I have to point them out to you so you can be limited by them too, and I can remain comfortable by limiting myself with these beliefs."
When people tell you what can't be done, IGNORE THEM. The only thing that "can't be done" is the thing you won't allow yourself to do, and then don't bother to actually do. Period.
No matter what it is, no matter how impossible it seems, the question is never "Can it be done?". The question is, "HOW can it be done?"
Think of all the things that "couldn't be done" until someone did them. Thinking machines. Computers. Cars engines being cast in one piece. Cars. Electric cars. Controlled powered human flight. Space travel. Self-landing re-usable rockets! Nuclear power. The Internet. Satellites. Cell phones. Radio. TV. We won't even start with the weirdness that quantum physics has allowed us to do. The list is endless! And in the near future, you'll see fully autonomous self driving cars, human level (and beyond) artificial intelligence, and things we can't even imagine today.
EVERYTHING is possible. The question is just... HOW do we do it?
The only limits you experience are the limits you place on yourself through your beliefs. If your beliefs are limiting you, then change them to beliefs that don't limit you. This is going to be one of the biggest things UMS does - it will change your beliefs to those that do not limit you financially. Silly beliefs, like "I can have my creative integrity or I can have wealth." Creative integrity doesn't exist. You are either creating, or your not. You are either creating for yourself, or you are not. But this belief that you must be a starving artist to be a "real artiste" is bullshit, and it's a self limiting belief. You can choose whatever reality you want, and whatever present and future you desire. UMS will make whatever changes are necessary to do so, as long as you use it properly.
Finally, "wealth" isn't just money. I am an incredibly wealthy man because I have a woman who genuinely loves me, takes care of my emotional needs, is faithful to me, appreciates me and what I do for her, and who I can trust completely. I am an incredibly wealthy man because I have a business that allows me to make my living doing what I love, and the only limits I have are the limits of my imagination. I am an incredibly wealthy man because I can appreciate the good things in my life, right down to things as small as waking up to my warm, soft, loving cat purring loudly as he lays on my face and stops me from breathing until I wake up and love him back. I am wealthy because I can find joy in simple things, like taking a walk on the beach with my girlfriend at night, or sitting on a dock and enjoying the night sky, the sounds of the water and the warm summer Florida breeze with her.
I am also incredibly wealthy because I have a circle of great customers who trust me and value my work so much that they are always eager for the next program, and provide me with crowd-sourced help in designing them.
I am wealthy because I have a wonderfully loving pet posse, my two Yorkshire terriers and my cat, who frequently all come to love me at the same time. Last night, I had Danni (my bigger Yorkie) and Mowgy (my cat) sitting on my lap at the same time, both loving me as I played Skyrim. And I didn't put them there.
I mean there's no end to the ways you can be wealthy. The people you know, the things you know, the skills you have, the things you have, the money you have, the connections you have, the gratitude, happiness and contentment you have, the love you have, the trust you have, and on and on. It's not just money.
But UMS will certainly take you in the direction of unlimited monetary wealth. It just won't stop you by limiting the definition of wealth to money or physical assets.
So where's the problem again?
Second, it sounds like you have not fully read and understood the program's description.
Third, you are displaying a primary cause of poverty here: limiting beliefs.
Let's start with the third thing I said. You are here saying that you believe you are limited to having money OR creating art, but that you don't believe you can have both.
Why the hell not? If you do the right things and know the right people, you can make yourself very wealthy in the art world. All you need to do is create works which people are willing to pay insane amounts of money for. At first that sounds difficult, as if the art must be so incredibly exceptional that it demands those prices, but in reality that isn't the case at all. Art is subjective, emotional, irrational, and so are the people who buy it and the prices they are willing to pay for it.
Art does not have to be priced reasonably. It has to be priced according to the perceived value, and the perceived value is easily manipulated if you know how (or the people who do know how). Most artists allow the buyer to set the perceived value without attempting to influence that perception. Influencing that perception of value is in large part why many artists open galleries; just finding a piece in a gallery automatically and significantly increases the expected value. (Belief: "If it's important enough to be in a gallery, it must be exceptional work and very valuable!")
Then you can manipulate how it is displayed, among what other pieces, under what lighting conditions, and in what level of comfort and privacy. All of this increases perceived value. Further still increasing the perceived value is what the piece is made of, how big it is, what the subject is, the skill with which it was created, difficulty of reproducing it, rarity, fame and popularity of the artist and not the least of which is the skill of the gallery staff at salesmanship and advertising.
I know of an artist who I discovered wandering Duval Street in Key West. Her work is amazing to me, for three reasons:
1. Primarily, she is creating the artwork I want(ed) to create. Circumstances have so far dictated that I cannot do it myself, so...
2. It speaks to me. It evokes an emotional reaction and attraction. It is deeply aesthetically pleasing to me.
3. It's huge, and she uses some very expensive materials to create it, giving it some added value for both the creative aspect of having used that and the effect those materials give the piece's visual impact.
The result? She charges thousands and thousands of dollars for a single piece, and still sells her work quickly. As an artist who knows how to create this exact same type and level of art, you would think I would make my own instead of buying it. But I loved her work so much that I found a piece that I could afford and bought it anyway, not just to support her, but to also have this beautiful art in my home. Until I can find the time, equipment and money necessary to do this sort of artwork for myself, I can still enjoy it.
So why can't you have wealth and be a creative artist? Because someone told you that?
Whenever someone tells you why "you can't do that", you need to understand what they are actually telling you. They aren't telling you, "You can't do that, and that's a fact," (even if they think that's what they're telling you and swear up and down that it is what they are telling you!).
What they are actually telling you is, "You are trying to do something that I believe cannot be done, and because you are threatening to prove my limiting-but-comfortable beliefs wrong, I have to point them out to you so you can be limited by them too, and I can remain comfortable by limiting myself with these beliefs."
When people tell you what can't be done, IGNORE THEM. The only thing that "can't be done" is the thing you won't allow yourself to do, and then don't bother to actually do. Period.
No matter what it is, no matter how impossible it seems, the question is never "Can it be done?". The question is, "HOW can it be done?"
Think of all the things that "couldn't be done" until someone did them. Thinking machines. Computers. Cars engines being cast in one piece. Cars. Electric cars. Controlled powered human flight. Space travel. Self-landing re-usable rockets! Nuclear power. The Internet. Satellites. Cell phones. Radio. TV. We won't even start with the weirdness that quantum physics has allowed us to do. The list is endless! And in the near future, you'll see fully autonomous self driving cars, human level (and beyond) artificial intelligence, and things we can't even imagine today.
EVERYTHING is possible. The question is just... HOW do we do it?
The only limits you experience are the limits you place on yourself through your beliefs. If your beliefs are limiting you, then change them to beliefs that don't limit you. This is going to be one of the biggest things UMS does - it will change your beliefs to those that do not limit you financially. Silly beliefs, like "I can have my creative integrity or I can have wealth." Creative integrity doesn't exist. You are either creating, or your not. You are either creating for yourself, or you are not. But this belief that you must be a starving artist to be a "real artiste" is bullshit, and it's a self limiting belief. You can choose whatever reality you want, and whatever present and future you desire. UMS will make whatever changes are necessary to do so, as long as you use it properly.
Finally, "wealth" isn't just money. I am an incredibly wealthy man because I have a woman who genuinely loves me, takes care of my emotional needs, is faithful to me, appreciates me and what I do for her, and who I can trust completely. I am an incredibly wealthy man because I have a business that allows me to make my living doing what I love, and the only limits I have are the limits of my imagination. I am an incredibly wealthy man because I can appreciate the good things in my life, right down to things as small as waking up to my warm, soft, loving cat purring loudly as he lays on my face and stops me from breathing until I wake up and love him back. I am wealthy because I can find joy in simple things, like taking a walk on the beach with my girlfriend at night, or sitting on a dock and enjoying the night sky, the sounds of the water and the warm summer Florida breeze with her.
I am also incredibly wealthy because I have a circle of great customers who trust me and value my work so much that they are always eager for the next program, and provide me with crowd-sourced help in designing them.
I am wealthy because I have a wonderfully loving pet posse, my two Yorkshire terriers and my cat, who frequently all come to love me at the same time. Last night, I had Danni (my bigger Yorkie) and Mowgy (my cat) sitting on my lap at the same time, both loving me as I played Skyrim. And I didn't put them there.
I mean there's no end to the ways you can be wealthy. The people you know, the things you know, the skills you have, the things you have, the money you have, the connections you have, the gratitude, happiness and contentment you have, the love you have, the trust you have, and on and on. It's not just money.
But UMS will certainly take you in the direction of unlimited monetary wealth. It just won't stop you by limiting the definition of wealth to money or physical assets.
So where's the problem again?
Subliminal Audio Specialist & Administrator
The scientist has a question to find an answer for. The pseudo-scientist has an answer to find a question for. ~ "Failure is the path of least persistence." - Chinese Fortune Cookie ~ Logic left. Emotion right. But thinking, straight ahead. ~ Sperate supra omnia in valorem. (The value of trust is above all else.) ~ Meowsomeness!
The scientist has a question to find an answer for. The pseudo-scientist has an answer to find a question for. ~ "Failure is the path of least persistence." - Chinese Fortune Cookie ~ Logic left. Emotion right. But thinking, straight ahead. ~ Sperate supra omnia in valorem. (The value of trust is above all else.) ~ Meowsomeness!