The false perfectionism taught by moral hypocrisies about you're trying to be
Speaker:one sided, and then thinking, 'Well, I'm not perfect yet, no,
Speaker:one's perfect.' That's because they have a false idea of what perfect is.
Speaker:When I was in professional school, I watched
Speaker:individuals try to do that.
Speaker:They would kind of act as if they were, you know,
Speaker:they'd play out the role in advance.
Speaker:Now I'm not against role playing and preparing and practicing and I think
Speaker:there's wisdom in that.
Speaker:But to exaggerate or fake and have some sort of an
Speaker:imposter dynamic. My experience is that it, it backfires.
Speaker:It eventually leads to people discovering that and realizing you had
Speaker:exaggerated. I always say that any time you exaggerate yourself,
Speaker:you attract humbling circumstances to get you back into authenticity.
Speaker:Just like any time you minimize yourself,
Speaker:you attract supporting mechanisms to get you back into authenticity.
Speaker:I think that every event in life is trying to get you authentic.
Speaker:And if you just be authentic, you have the least amount of resistance,
Speaker:least amount of feedback you have to deal with.
Speaker:Each individual can use their subtle physiology and
Speaker:psychology to assist them in providing feedback to get them authentic.
Speaker:And if they are not able to do that,
Speaker:they automatically have social political and theological religious, you
Speaker:might say constraints,
Speaker:put on them to eventually get back to fair exchange and authenticity.
Speaker:Authenticity means sustainable fair exchange, believe it or not.
Speaker:Let's elaborate on that and talk about what is fake and what's not fake.
Speaker:If you puff yourself up and exaggerate yourself relative to another individual
Speaker:and kind of narcissistically project your values onto them and expect them to
Speaker:live in your values, which most of us have done,
Speaker:you end up getting resistance and critique
Speaker:to bring you back down, pride before the fall, and resistance.
Speaker:And that is not a mistake. That's not some sort of a mean behavior.
Speaker:It's just a feedback to let you know that you're exaggerating yourself and out
Speaker:of equilibrium with the individual you're with.
Speaker:And so by projecting that on and expecting them to live in your values,
Speaker:you have futility. They're not going to live in your values.
Speaker:Anybody in relationships figure this out, hopefully by, you know,
Speaker:by the time they've had a few relationships. So anytime
Speaker:which is not you,
Speaker:and exaggerate and puff yourself up and kind of put on a fake facade,
Speaker:a persona, a mask, you attract humbling circumstances,
Speaker:in some cases tragedies if you get way up there and get really invincible and
Speaker:arrogant, attract a tragic event, in order to get you back in equilibrium,
Speaker:or at least distractions or challenges in your life to get you back in
Speaker:equilibrium. I really believe that the physiology, psychology,
Speaker:sociology and even theology, is trying to get us back to authenticity.
Speaker:And anytime we do that and narcissistically project
Speaker:to live in our values, we get futility, we get resistance,
Speaker:we get criticism back. And we eventually learn that doesn't work.
Speaker:It's a feedback system. And then if we minimize ourselves,
Speaker:imagine on ourselves minimizing ourselves in relationship or in business.
Speaker:If we do that to our staff, they end up having sort of chaos.
Speaker:If you do that to your customer and you sacrifice for your customer,
Speaker:you end up realizing that, hey, there's no profit margin. And eventually say,
Speaker:I deserve better than that.
Speaker:And you eventually try to get yourself to live in other people's values
Speaker:and try to please people all the time. And that's not going to work.
Speaker:Sacrificing for others is not where it's at, serving others is.
Speaker:So nature, and your physiology, psychology, sociology,
Speaker:theology around you is, in your business, is trying to get you authentic,
Speaker:is trying to get you an equilibrium. And so putting on a facade,
Speaker:backfires. Learning,
Speaker:when the nature of your existence is basically attempting to be authentic and
Speaker:be inspired by your life, just know anytime you're not doing that,
Speaker:you're going to get feedback. Now,
Speaker:you might fool some of the people some of the time, temporarily,
Speaker:but eventually backfires.
Speaker:I've seen people put on a facade and make up a story and eventually get nailed
Speaker:by it. And that's just not in the long run, the best brand builder.
Speaker:So anytime you're in now equilibrium where you're seeing that the seer,
Speaker:the seeing, the seen, them are all the same,
Speaker:where you're not looking down on people or looking up at people,
Speaker:you're not careless or careful, but you're caring,
Speaker:which keeps the rings on the fingers if you're in relationship.
Speaker:When you do that, you're not sacrificing them,
Speaker:you're not getting them to sacrifice for you,
Speaker:you're serving them and yourself at the same time,
Speaker:because you're communicating what you want in terms of what they want. Now,
Speaker:that's not going to occur,
Speaker:that mastery and that authenticity, which I think we all want,
Speaker:we all want to be loved and appreciated for who we are,
Speaker:but that state is not going to occur unless we know what we really value.
Speaker:Now I'm going to go off on a tangent here,
Speaker:and you might want to take a note because every human being,
Speaker:this individual and this individual, and that could be a spouse,
Speaker:that could be a child, it could be an employee, an executive, a customer,
Speaker:a friend out there, they all live moment by moment,
Speaker:by a set of priorities, a set of values, that they run their life by.
Speaker:And these priorities are unique to them, they're fingerprint specific.
Speaker:And they're determining how they perceive, decide, and act. You know, I have,
Speaker:in my hierarchy of values, teaching's pretty high up there, it's the top.
Speaker:So you can rely on me to be teaching.
Speaker:Anytime you expect somebody to do something that's not
Speaker:you're going to probably be betrayed.
Speaker:It's not because they're actually really betraying you,
Speaker:it's because you have an unrealistic expectation for
Speaker:not. Their ontological identity revolves around what they value.
Speaker:And so does yours. And you want to be loved for that.
Speaker:And they want to be loved for that. And so they're reliable to do that.
Speaker:You can rely on me to be teaching, researching, and writing,
Speaker:but you can't rely on me to do other things. You know,
Speaker:you can't rely on me to be cooking, that's not going to happen,
Speaker:or driving a car or, almost anything else, but teach, research and write.
Speaker:So anytime you meet another individual, if you don't know what they value,
Speaker:you don't know what you value,
Speaker:you don't know your hierarchy of values and their hierarchy of values, you're
Speaker:probably going to have an unrealistic expectation on them to live in your
Speaker:values, if you look down on them,
Speaker:or you're probably going to have an unrealistic expectation to live in their
Speaker:values, if you look up at them.
Speaker:Think about the times when you've been highly infatuated with somebody and you
Speaker:sacrificed things that were important to you to be with them, temporarily,
Speaker:until eventually you said, well, I want my life back,
Speaker:you start resenting them and start going, Hey, I want my life back,
Speaker:I want to be able to be me.
Speaker:And other times when you've been so resentful to somebody
Speaker:and go, well, look, my way or the highway, babe.
Speaker:And both of those are ineffective communication mechanisms. And by the way,
Speaker:if you don't communicate in sustainable fair exchange manners,
Speaker:you create gestural communication and eventually violence.
Speaker:And violence is a byproduct of not knowing how to communicate effectively.
Speaker:And the way you communicate effectively is to care enough about another
Speaker:individual to communicate what you value at the highest of your values in terms
Speaker:of what's highest in theirs. When you do, both people feel fulfilled.
Speaker:They both feel loved for who they are.
Speaker:They both want to be engaged with somebody that's doing that.
Speaker:And there's no imposter. There's no faking it till you make it. So to me,
Speaker:that's the most efficient and effective pathway. Fermat,
Speaker:who's a mathematician's idea,
Speaker:he said light is the most efficient system,
Speaker:it always follows the most efficient path, the shortest route you might say.
Speaker:And Maupertuis said that all actions are, and reactions are most efficient.
Speaker:And Mach said the same thing, many great scientists knew this.
Speaker:So the moment we're authentic, we're most efficient.
Speaker:The moment we live by highest priority, which is highest value,
Speaker:which is our identity, we're most efficient. And
Speaker:and because we're most ourselves, authentic, we're most objective,
Speaker:we're less likely to look down or up on people.
Speaker:Because when we're not living by what's highest in our values,
Speaker:not living by priority, we get the blood, glucose, and oxygen into the,
Speaker:not the forebrain, but down in the subcortical amygdala area.
Speaker:And the amygdala is basically wanting to avoid pain and seek pleasure,
Speaker:avoid predator, seek prey.
Speaker:And in order to seek a prey and avoid a predator,
Speaker:it has to subjectively bias, false positives, false negatives,
Speaker:subjective confirmation bias, and disconfirmation bias, it's reality,
Speaker:and distorts reality. So when all of a sudden,
Speaker:if it's basically going after something, it has to, you know,
Speaker:accelerate the desire for it, with an impulse.
Speaker:And if it's going to avoid something,
Speaker:it has to accelerate the away movement in which is an instinct.
Speaker:And that means that they, you have to have a,
Speaker:an exaggeration of your own perception relative to the thing you look up at or
Speaker:down on. If you look up at it,
Speaker:you got to imagine it being really up there and you got to chase it.
Speaker:And that's why you see people that are infatuated with people chasing them and
Speaker:fearing the loss of them and being jealous.
Speaker:And people that resenting them avoiding them and not being jealous.
Speaker:And these are responses, and they're feedbacks.
Speaker:And almost all the symptoms in our life physiologically, psychologically,
Speaker:business wise, every area of our life,
Speaker:is nothing but a feedback system to guide us back to authenticity.
Speaker:So I don't think that faking it till you make it is really the smartest thing.
Speaker:I think the magnificence of who you are is far greater than any fantasies you'll
Speaker:impose on yourself.
Speaker:I know that when I was in professional school many years ago now,
Speaker:44 something years ago, I decided that I was going to wear a suit every day.
Speaker:Most of you know that I usually wear a suit. You probably laugh at it,
Speaker:but I decided I was going to wear a suit. I wasn't going to just some day,
Speaker:four years later after my formal education in profession,
Speaker:I'm now going to put on a suit and I'm now going to be a doctor kind of thing.
Speaker:I decided that I was going to do that from day one and develop a lifestyle and a
Speaker:way of thinking and doing it, because I noticed that the way I respected myself,
Speaker:the way I dressed, I got treated differently.
Speaker:So I wanted to prepare in advance that way. I didn't, it wasn't a fake,
Speaker:people weren't, they were thinking, well, why are you dressed up? And I said,
Speaker:because that's how I want to be perceived. And that's how I want my life to be.
Speaker:And that's who I am. I've been doing it now 50 years almost, 48 years or so,
Speaker:since well, 44, 46 years.
Speaker:So I'm a firm believer you don't need to fake it.
Speaker:You just decide how you really want your life revolving around how your values
Speaker:are, your highest value.
Speaker:If you live by priority and you fill your day with the very highest priority
Speaker:actions that you can do,
Speaker:you're going to increase the probability of being authentic,
Speaker:you're going to increase the probability of being objective,
Speaker:you're going to increase the probability of having sustainable fair exchange
Speaker:with people. And there's no faking. I don't, I don't think you,
Speaker:I don't know if that is even needed to, the faking it to try to put on a facade.
Speaker:I think that any time you go in into a social setting and you think you're
Speaker:arrogant, you eventually get rejected, alienated, put down, criticized,
Speaker:you get humbled. So why do it?
Speaker:Why would you want to exaggerate something you've done when you haven't,
Speaker:when you're going to eventually get caught by it?
Speaker:And it's not going to be advantage.
Speaker:I remember walking in one time to a seminar and
Speaker:people, one person said, oh, Dr. Demartini, you're, you know,
Speaker:they were praising me,
Speaker:and I kind of lowered my position and said, you know,
Speaker:talk to my girlfriend, she has a different view. And I kind of got,,
Speaker:I kind of comically put myself down below where the people in the audience
Speaker:wanted to put me. And the more I put myself down,
Speaker:the more they wanted to lift me up, it was quite interesting.
Speaker:And then if I went in there and I said, you know, I am great, in fact,
Speaker:you can't even comprehend how great I am, yeah,
Speaker:I'm more amazing than you can even comprehend.
Speaker:If I put myself into an arrogant position, they would immediately go,
Speaker:what arrogant, you know, they'd put me down.
Speaker:So what's going to happen is you're going to automatically get responses from
Speaker:people, praise and criticism, support and challenge,
Speaker:to try to get you authentic.
Speaker:And people sometimes get addicted to praise and think that's the way it's
Speaker:supposed to be. And there's a whole bunch of crap out there taught that,
Speaker:you know, be nice, be kind, be positive, you know, and that's not real,
Speaker:that's only half the equation of life.
Speaker:If you go and get to puffed up and supported and built up and started getting
Speaker:above equilibrium and started getting proud, you're going to attract criticism,
Speaker:challenge humbling circumstances to get you back in authenticity again.
Speaker:So praise without reprimand, or positive without negative is, you know,
Speaker:doesn't work.
Speaker:You want to make sure that you're stable and the way you're stable is to embrace
Speaker:both sides. And frankly, you're both sided.
Speaker:I'm not a nice person or a mean person. I'm not kind person or a cruel person.
Speaker:Those are labels and personas. I have moments when I'm kind,
Speaker:I have moments when I'm cruel, but I'm a human being with both sides. In fact,
Speaker:I' found that I have every one of the 4,628 traits
Speaker:that's in the Oxford dictionary. I found them all in myself. There's, I mean,
Speaker:I got all the traits you could imagine you can come up with.
Speaker:And there's different settings where I play out those roles and I have no desire
Speaker:to get rid of rid of any of them or gain some because they're already there.
Speaker:They're not ever lost. They're not ever gained.
Speaker:I always say a master lives in a world of transformation,
Speaker:never the illusions of gain and loss.
Speaker:And I don't have any desire to get rid of anything or gain anything.
Speaker:That's why I'm not a self-improvement guy.
Speaker:I'm here to help you realize that you already have it.
Speaker:There's nothing missing in you. You have all the traits. They're necessary.
Speaker:You don't need to get rid of any of them.
Speaker:And the false perfectionism taught by moral hypocrisies about you're trying to
Speaker:be one sided and then thinking, 'well, I'm not perfect yet, no one's perfect',
Speaker:that's because they have a false idea of what perfect is.
Speaker:The perfection is not one sided, not nice without mean and kind without cruel,
Speaker:positive without negative.
Speaker:That's a moral hypocrisy that nobody's going to live by.
Speaker:The real perfection is the embracing of both sides of your own life.
Speaker:And so there's no reason to put on a facade. You don't have to fake it.
Speaker:I don't think that that's a necessary component.
Speaker:What I would advise you to do is master your skill.
Speaker:If you know you want to do something and you want to be a professional speaker
Speaker:like myself, I figured I would take advantage of every opportunity to speak.
Speaker:When I was in professional school, the very first day in professional school,
Speaker:Dr. Moley, who was involved in teaching philosophy and a few other classes,
Speaker:he got up and said, all right,
Speaker:there's a sheet going around the room and everybody here has to pick a topic
Speaker:that they're going to do a presentation on over the next so many weeks and pick
Speaker:your topic and we'll give you agenda date and you'll have to do a presentation,
Speaker:which is at least a 20 minute presentation on the topic.
Speaker:We'll do three presentations per hour.
Speaker:And so at that time I was a little bit anxious. I had already been speaking,
Speaker:but I never really spoke in front of peers like that, highly intelligent kids,
Speaker:you know, professional school.
Speaker:And I was a little bit anxious and I was, I was preparing for that talk.
Speaker:I got the title, it was Referred Pain, it was a perfect title, referred pain,
Speaker:because I was referring, you know,
Speaker:pain every single day I was basically developing pain,
Speaker:anxiousness about putting on this presentation. And I studied and I mean,
Speaker:I devoured the information and I thought I was ready for the
Speaker:presentation when it came to be my day and they were doing it alphabetically.
Speaker:So they had what they called Ronda Deloche, Dr. Demartini,
Speaker:John Demartini and then Danny Dodd, who was next in line.
Speaker:And they had Ronda gets up there and does her presentation.
Speaker:And she said,
Speaker:wish me luck as she walked up because she sat right in front of me.
Speaker:Danny was right behind me. And Danny ended up, all of a sudden,
Speaker:when my time came up, I was all anxious and thinking, oh my God, here's my time.
Speaker:And they passed me by and went to Danny Dodd,
Speaker:and then I never got to do the presentation. I
Speaker:I got a good grade on it, but I never did the presentation.
Speaker:But that night I thought, wow,
Speaker:I had all this anxiety for all these weeks about doing this presentation,
Speaker:and I never even got to do the presentation.
Speaker:And literally that next night,
Speaker:well that night and the next morning I made a decision that I'm going to take
Speaker:advantage of every frigging opportunity to speak and not let this stop me,
Speaker:and the anxieties do it. So I basically prepared. I studied, I researched,
Speaker:I made sure I knew my material.
Speaker:I would much rather be masterful and knowledgeable and really know
Speaker:something and don't have to fake it. And you're clear,
Speaker:you don't have an anxiety, you can just be yourself up there.
Speaker:I found that was the key.
Speaker:Now I was interested at the time in health and personal development.
Speaker:And so I just devoured everything that was in the literature at the time,
Speaker:so I was more than prepared.
Speaker:So I eventually not because they asked me to do the presentation,
Speaker:but I went and did that presentation to a group of students just so I could get
Speaker:to share it. I wanted to learn the material. I found if I teach it,
Speaker:I'd learn it.
Speaker:So my advice is not to fake it as I said,
Speaker:but to go and do your due diligence and don't take on
Speaker:expertise that's not really yours. You know, when people call me and say, well,
Speaker:I want you to speak about this topic. Sometimes I just say,
Speaker:that's not inspiring to me. That's not where my expertise is.
Speaker:That's not really what I want to do. So thank you. But no thank you.
Speaker:Because I found out if I'm going and doing what I really am inspired to do,
Speaker:what's really high in my values, I don't have to have anxiety about it,
Speaker:I can just be myself, I'm inspired to go and study and read and learn,
Speaker:inspired to want to share the information.
Speaker:So that's also a feedback from the universe. Stick to your core competence.
Speaker:Find out what's truly highest on the values.
Speaker:That's why in my website I go and I have people go to the Value Determination
Speaker:process and do their value determination,
Speaker:because the number one value that you will discover by doing that exercise,
Speaker:determining your values, is your ontological identity.
Speaker:Your life revolves around that highest value. Mine revolves around teaching.
Speaker:But whatever is highest on your value, may be raising kids,
Speaker:it may be being pole vaulter, I don't know what it's going to be.
Speaker:But whatever's highest on your value, your life's identity.
Speaker:And that's also where you maximize your knowledge.
Speaker:Your brain is set up to maximize information in the
Speaker:value and your purpose is an expression of your highest value.
Speaker:So if you're doing something most purposeful,
Speaker:most meaningful and where you're most inspired and you're most knowledgeable,
Speaker:you don't have to fake anything. You're just knowledgeable about it.
Speaker:And you get to deliver the material or you get to be confident in your action.
Speaker:And I think that people can sense the authenticity and would rather do business
Speaker:with somebody that's authentic and they innately sense when there's a facade on.
Speaker:I don't think it's hard to catch the facades. Most people,
Speaker:if you look carefully,
Speaker:you can see the facades in people and respond accordingly.
Speaker:When I was in practice again,
Speaker:I would go and I would have doctors come into my office and we would train the
Speaker:doctors on some procedures. And if they really weren't astute,
Speaker:the patient can sense it. The patient would feel that there's not a confidence,
Speaker:there's not a certainty, there's not a presence,
Speaker:there's not a real inspiration to do it and not a love for what they're doing,
Speaker:it wasn't clear.
Speaker:And so they're being inauthentic and they're not really inspired because
Speaker:whatever really inspires them is where they want to gain their specialized
Speaker:knowledge. That's where they want to go and be of service.
Speaker:So I'd much rather identify what your highest value is.
Speaker:And I'd much rather have you do that and then stick to that and build momentum,
Speaker:incremental momentum in the area that you're a master and build it up until
Speaker:you're just, you're masterful.
Speaker:I know some people don't like Donald Trump and he's a character for sure.
Speaker:But one thing I did learn from him many years ago, nearly 30 now was he said,
Speaker:find that one thing, John,
Speaker:that thing that you want to master and stick to it, build a brand around it,
Speaker:do it repeatedly, until it's just automatic,
Speaker:and then you'll eventually be known for that. And so I did.
Speaker:I've taught, I've been teaching the Breakthrough
Speaker:I've done it about 29,000 hours I put into that.
Speaker:I've done it consistently and people know me by it and I'm quite proficient in
Speaker:it. And that's what I love.
Speaker:So you don't have to be somebody you're not, you want to be yourself.
Speaker:I've said for years that the magnificence of who you are is far greater than any
Speaker:fantasies you'll impose on yourself. So give yourself permission to be yourself.
Speaker:You know, if you're anything other than your real true, authentic self,
Speaker:you're going to be second at somebody else's. You're going to try to, you know,
Speaker:force yourself to be something, you're going to need willpower.
Speaker:When you're doing something that's truly inspiring and based on your highest
Speaker:value and you love doing it, doesn't feel like it's work, it's highly efficient.
Speaker:I don't, when I research and write and study, I don't think it's a lot of work.
Speaker:It's just doing what I do. I love it. And when I'm teaching,
Speaker:if I'm teaching what I'm inspired by, it flows and people are there.
Speaker:And when they see that this is an authentic state, they
Speaker:They typically want to tell people and the growth of business occurs and you
Speaker:magnetize people around you because they go, well,
Speaker:here's a person that's walking their talk.
Speaker:Here's an exemplification of what's inspiring to them.
Speaker:Einstein said the greatest teacher's exemplification.
Speaker:So I think that that's the key to exemplify what's true for you and stick to
Speaker:what your core competence is and master that skill and become greatest at it.
Speaker:You want to be the greatest at you instead of being second at somebody else.
Speaker:Why would I want to imitate somebody else and envy somebody else and be a second
Speaker:Elvis? When I was in speaking in Las Vegas many years ago,
Speaker:I've been speaking there for 39 years I think, when I went there, there,
Speaker:you see these Elvis's play all over the place. And I thought, you know, I,
Speaker:I can't imagine wanting to be a fake Elvis and you know, somebody else.
Speaker:I got asked by Vogue magazine one time,
Speaker:a few years back, and they said to Dr. Demartini,
Speaker:they asked me 17 questions and the last question was,
Speaker:if there's anybody in the world that you would love to be, who would it be?
Speaker:And I thought, what a weird question.
Speaker:And I said to them I have no desire to be anybody but me.
Speaker:Why would I want to be somebody else? And they were kind of puzzled, they go,
Speaker:oh, well, most people, you know, think, oh, I wish I could be this person.
Speaker:My experience is if you were to be that person you'd have their problems.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:if we all brought our problems to the center of the square in the city or
Speaker:whatever,
Speaker:and everybody would dump their problems into a bag in the center.
Speaker:You, when you went back, you wouldn't want somebody else's problems.
Speaker:You'd want your own problems. So I'd much rather take on, be myself,
Speaker:have no desire to be somebody else.
Speaker:And so you don't need to fake it till you make it,
Speaker:I don't know if this is making sense, but. Now some people say, well,
Speaker:you want to, you want to act as if, to be as act as if. Okay.
Speaker:But if you know you want to be a great teacher like in my case,
Speaker:a great speaker whatever, I don't need to fake it, I just do it,
Speaker:practice in between your performance. That's not faking it.
Speaker:That's just doing it. There's a difference. You don't fake speaking.
Speaker:You just practice it. You just do it every single day.
Speaker:I do it most every single day, I'm doing some sort of presentation.
Speaker:And if I do that, I become masterful at it. You know,
Speaker:Gladwell said 10,000 hours. I think that's, that's too little.
Speaker:I think it's more like thousands of hours.
Speaker:I had a gentleman who was in my program, the Breakthrough Experience,
Speaker:where I teach people how to live authentically and I
Speaker:their executive function so they're more masters of destiny instead of this
Speaker:amygdala run,
Speaker:highly volatile individual that's trying to be somebody they're not.
Speaker:I I had this young man there who was 23 years old and I said, you know,
Speaker:you're a concert violinist, one of the world's greatest. He said, yeah,
Speaker:I've been blessed by my love for what I do. And I said,
Speaker:just outta curiosity, how many hours have you put in there to get where you are?
Speaker:You're 23 years old. How many hours would you put in?
Speaker:So he sat there for probably 30 minutes and he calculated all of his
Speaker:performances and all of his practice hours, training,
Speaker:educational hours, everything else. And he came with 43,000 hours.
Speaker:43,000 hours. He was 23 years old, 43,000 hours.
Speaker:And everybody in the room was just like, whoa, no wonder he's a master.
Speaker:I say that I'd rather go and find out what it is that I spontaneously love to do
Speaker:and just keep doing it and just do it and do it and do it and do it and become
Speaker:masterful at it. So you're not faking anything, you're mastering it.
Speaker:And just keep doing it.
Speaker:People that want to put on a facade eventually get caught.
Speaker:People that want to be on an inspired path usually get known.
Speaker:You want to leave a legacy and you want to make a difference, be yourself.
Speaker:That's unique, you're unique in your hierarchy of values.
Speaker:The second you try to subordinate to somebody else
Speaker:not,
Speaker:you just diluted your uniqueness and you lost your ability to make more of a
Speaker:difference.
Speaker:You now made yourself more like the herd instead of somebody that actually gets
Speaker:heard. I'd rather be a an unborrowed visionary than a borrowed visionary.
Speaker:An unborrowed visionary is somebody that goes within and follows their own path
Speaker:and blazes a trail that's unique to them.
Speaker:So I'm a firm believer that just being authentic is probably the most powerful
Speaker:thing you're going to be able to do in your life.
Speaker:I really believe that everything that goes on in your life is trying to help you
Speaker:get there, get to that state.
Speaker:In my Breakthrough Experience program I do my best to try to
Speaker:show you,
Speaker:point out that everything that's going on in your life is trying to give you
Speaker:feedback to do that. When you get to see that you realize,
Speaker:it's the most efficient and effective thing to do is be yourself.
Speaker:So I'm not promoting fake it. I'm promoting master it.
Speaker:I'm promoting put the hours in. I'm promoting,
Speaker:get over the fantasies of immediate gratification and get clear.
Speaker:You know, with wealth building,
Speaker:you don't get wealthy by immediate gratification,
Speaker:you get wealthy because you have long term vision and you patiently invest and
Speaker:you buy quality companies that serve ever greater numbers of people,
Speaker:and you do it with fair exchange in a non-zero sum exchange.
Speaker:And you do that and you build momentum. And compound interest is your favor.
Speaker:It's one of the great wonders of the world.
Speaker:So you do that by consistently staying focused on an outcome that's a service to
Speaker:people. Most fulfilling thing we can do is be of service to people.
Speaker:So don't fake it. Just find out that service,
Speaker:find out what's your highest value by going online to the Value Determination
Speaker:process, come to the Breakthrough Experience
Speaker:and let me show you how to be clear about that and lay out a purpose for that.
Speaker:And so you know what your service is, so you can start to prioritize your life,
Speaker:so you don't have to fake anything. You know, if you exaggerate yourself,
Speaker:you're going to set too big a goal in too short a time frame, to humble you.
Speaker:If you minimize yourself,
Speaker:you're going to set too small a goal in too long a time frame, to lift you up.
Speaker:But if you're really your authentic self,
Speaker:you're going to set real goals in real time frames,
Speaker:and you're going to end up manifesting,
Speaker:and then you're going to have more certainty and you're
Speaker:talk,
Speaker:and you're going to be magnetizing people to you because they can trust you to
Speaker:live according to your highest values. You want to be trusted,
Speaker:you want the oxytocin vasopressin to be excited in your, you know,
Speaker:elevated in your physiology, then do what's priority.
Speaker:That's the key.
Speaker:So I just wanted to take a few moments to talk about the importance of being
Speaker:yourself. You don't need to fake it to make it.
Speaker:You can be your magnificent self and just build momentum doing it.
Speaker:And I think that's the key to this. So also to help you on that path,
Speaker:I've got, you know,
Speaker:I've been teaching the Breakthrough Experience program for 33 plus years now,
Speaker:we're going on 34 years. And if you want to master your mind,
Speaker:you want to master your life,
Speaker:if you want some proven tools that help you master your life and develop
Speaker:yourself and expand, not just in one area,
Speaker:but I'm interested in helping you wake up your genius,
Speaker:helping you build your business, helping you end up with wealth,
Speaker:helping you in stabilize relationships, and loving, intimate relationships,
Speaker:I'm interested in helping you socially lead and make the difference you want.
Speaker:I'm interested in helping you have wellness factors
Speaker:and also be inspired.
Speaker:The Breakthrough Experience is an experience that, you know,
Speaker:when I was 17 years old, I met a teacher that changed the trajectory of my life.
Speaker:And ever since that night I met him,
Speaker:I had a dream to do the same for other people. So,
Speaker:when I put together the Breakthrough Experience 30 something years ago,
Speaker:34 years ago almost, man I was inspired, because like a tiny acorn,
Speaker:within the acorn lies the mighty Oak. There's a mighty Oak inside all of us.
Speaker:So I want to share with you the Breakthrough Experience
Speaker:mind, master your life, master your authenticity,
Speaker:so you can walk an authentic life. You don't have to fake it.
Speaker:I don't want you to fake it. I want you to be you.
Speaker:You want to be loved for who you are,
Speaker:how you ever going to be loved for who you are. If you're faking who you are?
Speaker:You can't. You're going to attract people that match the fake,
Speaker:instead of attracting the people that are honoring you.
Speaker:And I look forward to seeing you there.
Speaker:I can't wait to help you do something extraordinary with your life.
Speaker:And just know that in the Breakthrough Experience,
Speaker:it doesn't matter what area issue you have in life,
Speaker:whether it's intellectual or business or finance, whatever,
Speaker:I'm there to help you break through whatever you feel
Speaker:go and see everything on the way. Your perception, decisions,
Speaker:and actions are what you have control over.
Speaker:I'm going to teach you how to have mastery over those. So join me,
Speaker:because I can help you there.
Speaker:I know I can make a difference there and I can help you recognize your
Speaker:authenticity and live it. So that's it for the week. Just until next week,
Speaker:I just want to share my webinar. You don't need to fake your life to achieve.
Speaker:You can be yourself. You want to be loved for that.
Speaker:Let's let's learn that art come to the Breakthrough Experience.
Speaker:Let me help you master your life and be authentic. The authentic you.