Money Talks Serve It Up File

You don’t just turn on this energy for a sales call. You embody it.

When you internalize “Money Talks, Serve It Up,” you stop feeling heavy about sales. You feel helpful. Because you are.


This is controversial, but honest. In dating or friendships, people often make promises: “I’ll help you move,” “I’ll cover dinner next time,” “I’ve got your back.” But when the bill arrives or the truck needs loading, suddenly their phone dies. money talks serve it up

When you adopt the “money talks, serve it up” mindset, you stop accepting future promises. You ask for the gesture now. Real relationships—whether business or personal—are built on exchanged value, not exchanged intentions.

If you undervalue yourself, money whispers. When you price based on results, money talks. You don’t just turn on this energy for a sales call

Let’s be balanced. A world where “money talks, serve it up” is the only rule would be sociopathic. Relationships, art, parenting, and friendship rely on non-monetary trust. You don’t ask your child to “serve up” affection. You don’t demand your spouse put a dollar value on emotional support.

The key is knowing the arena.

The wisest people know when to invoke the phrase and when to retire it.