DAVID ALEXANDER
No-Nonsense – Real Estate Creative Finance – Be the banker, not the borrower.
Most people are taught the wrong thing first.
They’re taught to save money before they understand how wealth is actually built.
They’re taught to chase income instead of creating assets that produce income 24/7.
They’re taught to work harder—trading hours for dollars—inside a system that was never designed to reward them, no matter how many hours they put in.
Once those ideas are baked in, everything else becomes harder to unlearn.
I didn’t set out to teach anyone anything. I was trying to solve my own problem: how to stop trading time for money and still sleep at night knowing my income wasn’t dependent on permission—from an employer, a lender, or a market cycle.
What I learned over time is simple, but rarely taught:
Wealth is not created by working harder.
It’s not created by saving and waiting.
And it’s not created by trading time for money.
Wealth is created when you learn how to build and control assets that produce income.
Most people are never taught how money is actually created, how assets are used by the wealthy to generate income, or why banks make money even when borrowers struggle. Instead, they’re given surface-level advice and told to “just get started”—usually right before being sold something.
I’ve spent decades doing the opposite.
I buy assets creatively.
I structure deals that don’t rely on credit—I’ve never used mine.
And I don’t wait for “perfect timing” to get started.
Most people stay stuck chasing short-term wins and paychecks, running on the hamster wheel year after year. I’ve taught hundreds of people how to build real wealth in three to five years—not because I’m smarter, but because I’ve failed more times than most.
You could even say I’m a slow learner.
But mistakes are expensive teachers, and because of mine, I understand the shortcuts—how to get off the hamster wheel, build income-producing assets, and create real financial freedom.
If you hang around long enough, you can learn them too.
Or not.
This isn’t for everyone—and it was never meant to be.