My father ran three businesses in Birmingham in 1955 and never put one of them in his own name. He kept a trust before most people knew what a trust was. He taught me the principles at fourteen — the same principles every family that keeps wealth for three generations operates by.
Nobody taught your father. Nobody taught you.
These volumes are that conversation — the one most families never had at the dinner table. Read them tonight. Start using them tomorrow.
None of this requires a different income. Every one of them is a decision — and each is set down plainly in the volumes that follow.
From the seven rules a family lives by to the reading list that carries it for generations — each rule made a full chapter, with the mechanism laid bare.
The full System tier adds the working tools — calculators, templates, trackers, the Family Wealth Constitution, the letters, the checklists — everything you need to turn the principles into a functioning estate.
Inaugural pricing. One payment — no subscription, yours to keep, with every future revision included.
I did not discover these principles. I was taught them — at a dining-room table in Birmingham, Alabama, in the summer of 1966, when my father sat me down and said: "Boy, I am going to tell you something Harold Pitts taught me that your grandfather never knew."
He talked for three hours. I have been thinking about that conversation for fifty-eight years.
My grandfather worked the mines and died with nothing. My father figured out the game — C-corps, trusts, separation, the wall — and kept it in the family. I was the first generation raised on the principles from the start. And I have spent the latter part of my life watching people work as hard as my grandfather and end in the same place — not for lack of effort, but for lack of what I was handed at fourteen.
These volumes are what my father told me. Written plainly, because you were never brought to that table — and someone should have shown you sooner.
Read the volumes. If what is inside does not change how you see your own situation, write to me within thirty days and I will return your payment in full. I would rather you keep your money than hold a thing that did not serve you — my father would have insisted on nothing less.
The seven rules my father never wrote down — introduced through the story of the 1966 table. I will send you one rule a day for seven days, the way he gave them to me.
One email a day for seven days. Leave whenever you like.