Love is a fulfillment, a very highly fulfilling state,
Speaker:but not the love that most people think of, the puppy love.
Speaker:I'm talking about this love that I'm mentioning right now.
Speaker:Love's a synthesis and synchronicity of all complimentary opposites.
Speaker:Many people when they're very young, in their teens and twenties,
Speaker:are drawn impulsively with an infatuation
Speaker:to another individual where they're conscious of their upsides of that
Speaker:individual, and unconscious of the downsides. A bit blinded,
Speaker:a bit ignorant, a bit naive,
Speaker:and they get excited,
Speaker:almost manic and elated about what they're perceiving this individual to
Speaker:be. Now,
Speaker:while we're doing that and while we're blind to the downsides and we're
Speaker:infatuated like that, we get a lot of dopamine, we get a lot of oxytocin,
Speaker:a little serotonin, and some enkephalins and endorphins,
Speaker:and we start to imagine, 'oh my God, this is the one, the special one',
Speaker:start fantasizing and things. And this is an infatuation.
Speaker:I don't like to define that as love. It's a form of love,
Speaker:in the terminologies that people use, but I prefer to call it infatuation.
Speaker:Puppy love if you will. And this is inevitably,
Speaker:the more extreme the conscious upsides are and the more ignorant the downsides
Speaker:are, the higher the probability that you'll be vulnerable
Speaker:side. So in a day, a week, a month, maybe three months,
Speaker:maybe six months at the latest,
Speaker:the other side of the equation starts surfacing.
Speaker:And as you do if you're infatuated with this individual,
Speaker:you start storing up those little annoyances, those little peccadilloes,
Speaker:and you start kinda feeling like, 'Hmm,
Speaker:that's not who I thought it was going to be.' You know,
Speaker:it's kind of like a fatal attraction with Michael Douglas and Glenn Close,
Speaker:if you remember back far enough to that movie, and he was infatuated first,
Speaker:and then he realized, 'oh my God, I got a crazy one on my hands.' And and this,
Speaker:by the way, if you drink a little alcohol, sometimes this can be accentuated.
Speaker:I don't recommend too much alcohol, but, in the process of doing that,
Speaker:you can blind yourself to the downsides and then get hit broadsided by them
Speaker:because you're addicted to a fantasy. And you think it's love,
Speaker:but it's actually just a biological survival mechanism for
Speaker:procreation. And it's in the amygdala.
Speaker:The amygdala area of his subcortical area of our brain is firing off.
Speaker:And it's a primitive part of our brain in a sense, I wouldn't say primitive,
Speaker:but I mean, all species have it in the vertebrate lineage,
Speaker:but it's sort of a primitive response. It's a survival response.
Speaker:And we end up confusing that with true love. It's a puppy love,
Speaker:it's an infatuation.
Speaker:And this one eventually teaches us to start to think before we feel.
Speaker:See, our normal response is where we feel, and then we think,
Speaker:and that's a typical response for the average person that's, you know,
Speaker:in puppy love.
Speaker:But sometimes it's wiser to stop and get a little bit reasonable and think about
Speaker:what are some of the downsides before you do it.
Speaker:If you don't have a selective criteria for a mate that you're searching
Speaker:for, that's reasonable and that does align with what's important to you and also
Speaker:what's going to be important to that individual, you have a,
Speaker:usually a bit of a fantasy and you have to find out the hard way.
Speaker:Now that's one form of puppy love,
Speaker:and that's the more lower subcortical area of the brain that's firing off.
Speaker:And there's varying degrees of that,
Speaker:because sometimes you have a mild infatuation,
Speaker:which is a little higher functioning brain and more balanced and sometimes it's
Speaker:extreme and you think, 'oh my God,
Speaker:this is the one.' And you start fantasizing with
Speaker:things like this and think, 'oh my God,
Speaker:this is it.' And that's a sign of a puppy love.
Speaker:Then there is a deep, true,
Speaker:I guess you could say true love or divine love,
Speaker:some people have called it from theological background,
Speaker:where you actually love both sides of the individual and you see both sides.
Speaker:Now, let me just go off on a tangent here for this,
Speaker:because this is important component.
Speaker:If I was to come up to you and I was to say, 'You're always nice, never mean.
Speaker:Always kind, never cruel. Always generous, never stingy. Always giving,
Speaker:never taking. Always considerate, never inconsiderate. Always peaceful,
Speaker:never wrathful. Always positive,
Speaker:never negative.' Your own intuition would go
Speaker:BS and go. 'No,
Speaker:I'm not always that way.' And you would know that you have another side.
Speaker:If I was to go to you and I said, 'Well, you're always mean, you're never nice.
Speaker:You always cruel. You're never kind. You're always negative. Never positive.
Speaker:Always wrathful, never peaceful. Always stingy, never generous. Always taking,
Speaker:never giving, always inconsiderate,
Speaker:never considerate.' Your BS meter would go off again and go 'No,
Speaker:that's not true either.' You immediately intuitively be thinking of the opposite
Speaker:side. So if I point out all downsides, no upsides, you immediately think 'No,
Speaker:I've got nice sides.' If I point all nice sides,
Speaker:no downsides you'd probably think 'I'm sometimes a bear.' You would
Speaker:automatically intuitively know you have both sides.
Speaker:And so if you're in relationship with somebody and you're blinded into thinking
Speaker:they're going to have more upsides than downsides,
Speaker:and you're seeing the upsides and not seeing it, like the puppy love,
Speaker:your intuition is whispering and automatically saying something to you,
Speaker:whispering to you, but you're ignoring it.
Speaker:The whispering intuition is always trying to make you conscious of the
Speaker:unconscious and make you fully conscious and allow you to see both sides of the
Speaker:individual.
Speaker:So when you actually see both sides and you actually
Speaker:embrace both sides, now you have a lasting form of love,
Speaker:because I assure you, if you stay with somebody for any duration, significant,
Speaker:you're going to discover there's things you like and dislike,
Speaker:things you admire and despise, things. you are attracted to and repelled from,
Speaker:things you want to hug and slug. There's two sides to that relationship.
Speaker:And when you can embrace both of them equally,
Speaker:and know that both of them are necessary for your evolution and for your own
Speaker:development.
Speaker:The one side that supports your values typically makes you juveniley dependent,
Speaker:make altruistically sacrifice yourself for them.
Speaker:The part that's more challenging of your values, the sympathetic activator,
Speaker:the fight or flight side,
Speaker:automatically makes you precociously independent and keep your independence and
Speaker:make sure you end up following your own mission in life.
Speaker:So that you must have and they've shown that most growth occurs at the border
Speaker:of support and challenge, the positives and negatives, the two sides.
Speaker:So true love, the true divine love if you will, or agape love, if you will,
Speaker:is an appreciation and unconditional love for those two sides.
Speaker:And if you have that, you will think before you emotionally react.
Speaker:Instead of having impulses towards somebody and instincts away from certain
Speaker:people, you now have an appreciation for both sides,
Speaker:but that's a deeper love. That's a love that can last.
Speaker:That's a love that's meaningful. In fact, that is the mean,
Speaker:the mean is between the two polarities. And if you're seeing both sides,
Speaker:you have meaning in your relationship,
Speaker:meaning as the extraction out of the unconscious,
Speaker:and making you fully conscious of this individual, because the real truth is,
Speaker:whoever you're going to be with for any period of time,
Speaker:there's going to be things you like and dislike.
Speaker:And if you can embrace both of them, you have now love making if you will.
Speaker:Love making is attraction and repulsion, attraction and repulsion, you know,
Speaker:excuse the expression, but it's the integration of the pairs of opposites.
Speaker:I always define love as the synthesis and synchronicity of all pairs of opposite
Speaker:that you're going to have. And by the way,
Speaker:if you think that you're going to get a person that's going to be kind without
Speaker:cruel, then you have a delusion.
Speaker:They're going to be when you support their values,
Speaker:they're going to be very kind and nice and open to you.
Speaker:When you challenge their values, they're going to be cruel and mean,
Speaker:and closed down to you. Welcome to life. This is how life works.
Speaker:And so you want to be prepared for the real loving relationship.
Speaker:And by the way, that's including you when you look in the mirror.
Speaker:If you're basically trying to get a one-sided life and
Speaker:of yourself and have an impulse for the positives and try to have this instinct
Speaker:away from the negative, and walk around trying to be addicted to your pride,
Speaker:well,
Speaker:you will eventually get crumbled and humbled because pride before the fall.
Speaker:You're not here to get rid of half of yourself to love yourself.
Speaker:You're here to love both sides and the same thing for others. And,
Speaker:there's a difference between setting a goal, which is a fantasy,
Speaker:which is a one-sided thing without downsides, and a true objective,
Speaker:objectivity means balanced minded.
Speaker:And a true objective to love your life and to love your goals and to be
Speaker:sustainable, is to set goals that have both sides.
Speaker:So that way you mitigate the risk of the downsides and you're prepared for them
Speaker:in advance with foresight to achieve.
Speaker:So if you really want to have love in a more, more profound way,
Speaker:you want to embrace both sides of life.
Speaker:That's one of the reasons why I teach the Breakthrough Experience program,
Speaker:where I teach people how to do that, and I teach them the Demartini Method,
Speaker:which is a science that many people, I mean, it could be coaches,
Speaker:it could be people that are involved in education, it could be rabbis,
Speaker:it could be, you know, priests, it doesn't matter,
Speaker:but I've got all kinds of people that are using the method on helping people
Speaker:turn to love, return to love. Now let's just take a look at this for a second.
Speaker:Let's say I meet somebody that I'm infatuated with and
Speaker:and I'm blind to the downside.
Speaker:In the process of doing it I'm now looking up to them and I'm too humble to
Speaker:admit what I see in them inside me,
Speaker:and therefore I'm disowning what I see in them inside me.
Speaker:And whenever I disown a part and see them having something I don't, there's
Speaker:a wall up there and there's no intimacy.
Speaker:Intimacy is pure reflective awareness, what you see in them,
Speaker:you see in you, and you own it in your own form. In the,
Speaker:in the Breakthrough Experience program,
Speaker:which I've been teaching for over 32 years and where I teach the Demartini
Speaker:Method,
Speaker:we go through there methodically with a science and show that whatever we
Speaker:perceive in other people is a reflection of a part of us. In other words,
Speaker:if we are infatuated with somebody and we're too humble to admit what we see in
Speaker:them inside us, we actually have what we see in them,
Speaker:but we're just too humble to admit it. We have it.
Speaker:And we admire that in ourselves and that's why they're reminding us of that and
Speaker:it's making us feel good about ourselves. That's why we want to be with them.
Speaker:The same thing on the thing we resent.
Speaker:We're too proud to admit what we see in them is inside us.
Speaker:But we actually have it, we feel ashamed of it, we're trying to avoid it.
Speaker:And when we see them, they remind us of it, we don't like that feeling,
Speaker:so we want to avoid them.
Speaker:But we actually have what we see in them in our own form expression,
Speaker:according to our values. But when we actually own those traits,
Speaker:in the Breakthrough Experience, I have people own those traits,
Speaker:the hero and the villain, the things they admire and despise,
Speaker:the things they like and dislike, when they can own both of them.
Speaker:And they're not too proud or too humble to admit what they see in others inside
Speaker:themselves, and they embrace both sides, they actually have the seer,
Speaker:the seeing, and the seen are the same, which is pure reflective awareness,
Speaker:which is intimacy.
Speaker:Many people think that intimacy is when you're infatuated and you're, you know,
Speaker:you're having lovemaking or something like that and you're infatuated.
Speaker:That's not intimacy.
Speaker:That's actually a fantasy of who they are and an assumption that they're giving
Speaker:you something you don't have. It's a disowned part, a missing part.
Speaker:And now you feel whole temporarily and you get this little oxytocin rush from
Speaker:it, dopamine rush, but that's not true love and intimacy.
Speaker:Love and intimacy is when you realize that what you see in others,
Speaker:you have it within yourself. And when you have perfect reflective awareness,
Speaker:you have intimacy.
Speaker:Because there's no too proud or too humble to admit you have it blocking you
Speaker:from connection. And in that love, in that state of love,
Speaker:if you can actually reach that state of love,
Speaker:you have a very profound openhearted experience.
Speaker:In the Breakthrough Experience I've been teaching people that science of how to
Speaker:open the heart for that level of love.
Speaker:And you can take people that you've never imagined you could open your heart to,
Speaker:and you can open your heart to them.
Speaker:I've seen people that have difficulties appreciating their mom, their dad,
Speaker:their loved ones, their spouse,
Speaker:I've seen people that want to throw in the towel in their relationship,
Speaker:do an exercise called the Demartini Method and go and write down whatever
Speaker:specific trait,
Speaker:action or inaction they perceive this individual displaying or demonstrating
Speaker:that they admire or despise most, that they admire or despise most.
Speaker:And then they go in there and go,
Speaker:go to a moment where and when they perceive themselves displaying or
Speaker:demonstrating that same behavior and they find it and that humbles them,
Speaker:and it makes them appreciate these people.
Speaker:It makes them realize that 'who are they to judge?' And when they transcend the
Speaker:judgment and then find out what's the downside of the thing they infatuate with,
Speaker:what's the upside to the thing that they are resenting,
Speaker:they realized it had incomplete awareness,
Speaker:and they were biased and subjective in their viewpoints.
Speaker:And when they finally go back and re balance it,
Speaker:they're liberated and they feel a tremendous amount of
Speaker:have an unconditional love.
Speaker:The soul is a state of unconditional love or the spirit of unconditional love.
Speaker:And that is the authentic self. The authentic self is one,
Speaker:whenever we live by our highest values where we're most objective,
Speaker:where we're most inspired spontaneously, where we're most fulfilled,
Speaker:and we see both sides of things,
Speaker:we have the highest probability of unconditional love,
Speaker:the highest probability of a real lasting divine love, some people call it.
Speaker:In that state you're having reflective awareness. That's where all of a sudden,
Speaker:you don't have a desire, you see,
Speaker:when you're an underdog you have a desire to fix yourself relative to them,
Speaker:you want to change you relative to them. When you're resentful of them,
Speaker:you want to change them relative to you.
Speaker:When you want to change you relative to them,
Speaker:you altruistically sacrifice what's important to you to be with them and you
Speaker:eventually resent that. When you resent them,
Speaker:you want them to change their life to be more like what you want,
Speaker:and they resent that. So neither one of those are sustainable models.
Speaker:And that's why infatuations usually turn into resentments.
Speaker:The greater the infatuation, the greater the resentment eventually comes.
Speaker:But if you see both sides,
Speaker:embrace both sides and have no desire to change them relative to you or you
Speaker:relative to them, you get to unconditionally love them.
Speaker:And that's what people want.
Speaker:People want to be loved and appreciated for who they are.
Speaker:And who they are is an expression of what they value most.
Speaker:And if you live according to your highest value and live by priority,
Speaker:and you live objectively, you get to experience that and people get to give,
Speaker:fulfill that.
Speaker:And how are we going to love ourselves if we're not willing to be ourselves?
Speaker:Every time we judge another person and put them down and put ourselves up,
Speaker:that's not ourselves. That's a facade, a persona,
Speaker:mask that we wear called pride.
Speaker:And anytime we look up to somebody and minimize ourselves, that's a shame mask.
Speaker:That's a high or low self-esteem instead of a true self-worth.
Speaker:But when we actually love somebody with reflective awareness,
Speaker:we're not having to exaggerate or minimize ourselves or minimize or exaggerate
Speaker:them. We get to put them in our heart. In that state, we have love.
Speaker:And that's trainable. That's duplicatable. That's a science you can make.
Speaker:There's a science of love. I've been teaching it for over 30 years, 32 years,
Speaker:actually 36 years.
Speaker:And I'm absolutely certain that if you ask the right questions,
Speaker:you can become aware of the unconscious information that you're hiding from
Speaker:yourself. Become fully conscious. Get to see both sides.
Speaker:See the reflection, open your heart, love the individual,
Speaker:while you love yourself.
Speaker:You can't love another individual without loving yourself.
Speaker:In the Breakthrough Experience I've taken people through that process.
Speaker:And at the end of the process,
Speaker:when I have them sitting there with tears of gratitude in their eyes for this
Speaker:individual that they were judging ahead of time,
Speaker:whether they were infatuated or resentful, because I've taken from both sides,
Speaker:all of a sudden they have tears of gratitude, their heart feels open,
Speaker:and they feel present with this individual. And then
Speaker:in fact, when you're actually really loved somebody, they're present,
Speaker:it doesn't matter where they are in space or time,
Speaker:they're right there with you in your mind. And that is very fulfilling.
Speaker:Love is a fulfillment, a very highly fulfilling state,
Speaker:but not the love that most people think of, the puppy love.
Speaker:I'm talking about this love that I'm mentioning right now.
Speaker:Love's a synthesis and synchronicity of all complimentary opposites.
Speaker:And if you look very carefully, whoever you're with in a relationship,
Speaker:they're going to have every imaginable trait. And you're going to think, 'Well,
Speaker:this time I got one that's better than not.
Speaker:This one's going to give me more upsides than downsides.' No,
Speaker:you discover there's some other downsides there that you didn't anticipate.
Speaker:You find out that there's somewhere in spiritually or mentally or career or
Speaker:financial or family or social or physical areas of life,
Speaker:there's some little glitch, that you go, 'Oops.
Speaker:Now I got to deal with this.' But the reality is you need both sides to grow.
Speaker:If you get nothing but prey and support and things that you like,
Speaker:you become like an animal eating prey without a predator,
Speaker:you get glutinous and fat and you become dependent. But if you get challenged,
Speaker:you end up keeping yourself fit. You need both support and challenge,
Speaker:the positives and negatives to make relationships to
Speaker:I want to find my soulmate.' Well, the soulmate,
Speaker:believe it or not is the one that allows you to open up the soul,
Speaker:the state of unconditional love, which is the balanced state,
Speaker:not the one-sided state.
Speaker:But so often as we were young in our twenties or whatever, teens,
Speaker:we have this idea that, okay, I'm going to get this little infatuation.
Speaker:I certainly did. I remember I was very infatuated with this girl one time,
Speaker:and I had this, I was going out of my way.
Speaker:I was doing stuff I normally didn't do.
Speaker:Normally I was studying physics and mathematics and chemistry and pre-med and
Speaker:all this stuff that for school,
Speaker:and all of a sudden I meet this girl and she was this beautiful Spanish model
Speaker:right, and I thought, 'Oh my God,
Speaker:I'm so infatuated.' I found myself doing pompom dancing.
Speaker:If you can imagine me doing pompom dancing.
Speaker:I was pompom dancing and watching halftime entertainment football situations.
Speaker:And so in the process of doing that, I realized I wasn't being me,
Speaker:but I was so afraid to lose that individual because I was infatuated,
Speaker:that I didn't want to have a, you know, a loss of that person.
Speaker:Cause whatever you infatuated with, you fear the loss of, whatever you resent,
Speaker:you fear the gain of.
Speaker:So you live in fear and anxieties all the time when you're sitting in that
Speaker:polarized amygdala response.
Speaker:And so I basically was sacrificing what was important to me,
Speaker:which is my physics until the last week before a test.
Speaker:And then I realized I need to tell her I can't be at the pompom
Speaker:performance.
Speaker:So I basically went back to my studies and I realized that I want to be loved
Speaker:for who I am and who I was was a student of life.
Speaker:And so I wanted to make sure I was able to be loved for that.
Speaker:So anytime you're infatuated and you find yourself sacrificing what's most
Speaker:important to you in order to be with them for fear of losing them,
Speaker:that's puppy love.
Speaker:Whenever you feel that you can be yourself as yourself and love yourself and
Speaker:love being with them, and you feel like they're a companion,
Speaker:you feel like there's a best friend or whatever, and just like,
Speaker:you don't have to worry about it.
Speaker:And when you have a bantering mechanism where you can, see,
Speaker:if you're highly infatuated, you're afraid to upset them.
Speaker:If you're highly resentful, you're afraid to encourage them, because you know,
Speaker:you want to make sure that you have a balanced orientation.
Speaker:People that actually that are the underdogs in relationship,
Speaker:want to tie the person down. Person that is the overdog in the relationship,
Speaker:you know, want to be freed. So nature forces things back into fair exchange,
Speaker:back into authenticity.
Speaker:All the symptoms in relationships are designed to try to get you to have true
Speaker:unconditional love. That's it, that's all that's going on as a mechanism.
Speaker:But we confuse that dopamine rush.
Speaker:And many times we get caught having intimacy or quote sexual
Speaker:activities, not intimacy,
Speaker:but sexual activities with people that we're infatuated with and then we go,
Speaker:'Oops. Now we got a fatal attraction.' So my advice is stop.
Speaker:Come to the Breakthrough Experience and learn how to do the Demartini Method in
Speaker:advance and calm down the infatuations because I guarantee you every
Speaker:time you infatuate with somebody and you're too humble to admit what you see in
Speaker:them is inside you,
Speaker:you're going to end up sacrificing things that are important to you and
Speaker:eventually that's going to lead to resentment to the very person you're
Speaker:infatuated with, to eventually balance the equation,
Speaker:to get yourself back into authenticity. And the same thing.
Speaker:If you resent somebody,
Speaker:eventually they're going to teach you the same thing on the opposite side.
Speaker:Both sides are there to get you to be authentic.
Speaker:And when you actually walk the path of an unconditional love of your own center
Speaker:and live by priority and be objective,
Speaker:you liberate yourself from a lot of crazies and you
Speaker:the one you love, and you get to be yourself and get to love yourself.
Speaker:You're not going to love yourself,
Speaker:sacrificing for others or trying to get others to sacrifice for you.
Speaker:Those are both futile. They're eventually fatal and they're not utile.
Speaker:When you're actually having sustainable fair exchange and a beautiful
Speaker:communication with a matching bantering mechanism where you keep each other in
Speaker:check.
Speaker:There's a utility that both grow and both achieve their greatest potential.
Speaker:That's the kind of love and intimacy that I rather educate you on and teach you
Speaker:how to do.
Speaker:That's why I have people come to the Breakthrough Experience to learn how to do
Speaker:that and learn the Demartini, whether you're a coach or as I said,
Speaker:a rabbi or a priest or general population, doesn't matter who you are,
Speaker:that science can help you with yourself and the people you care
Speaker:about, your clients and your loved ones.
Speaker:So this same thing applies to your children, it applies to your colleagues.
Speaker:There's no relationship in this world that's not being impacted by that
Speaker:principle. So the question is is,
Speaker:everything that's going on in your life in all the relationship dynamics you
Speaker:face, are trying to teach you how to have that kind of love.
Speaker:That deep reflective love.
Speaker:Now you may not make love with somebody in that way,
Speaker:you may have a deep love for them,
Speaker:but not necessarily have a sexual love with them,
Speaker:but at the same time you'll have a great open-hearted feeling.
Speaker:And it feels just as fulfilling. I, in fact, I think that's,
Speaker:when I've asked people in the Breakthrough Experience after they've experienced
Speaker:this state and they've had tears of gratitude coming
Speaker:feel extremely present with somebody, and I ask them,
Speaker:compared to a happiness moment, a little infatuation moment of the puppy love,
Speaker:would they take puppy love over that? And I've not once seen them say,
Speaker:'I'll take puppy love.' They understand the profoundness and fulfillment of true
Speaker:divine state of unconditional love, centered state.
Speaker:So I just wanted to cover those distinctions because
Speaker:a difference in your life.
Speaker:And I know that if you will take the time to either come to the Breakthrough
Speaker:Experience, learn the Demartini Method,
Speaker:or if you have people that you care about that may need some help on that,
Speaker:let them know about it,
Speaker:because I'm absolutely certain that where I teach you how to do that, you do it.
Speaker:It's not just theory You actually do it and experience it and know how to do it
Speaker:so you can take that home and use it the rest of your life.
Speaker:You deserve to have authenticity. You deserve to have fulfillment.
Speaker:You deserve to have love.
Speaker:You deserve to have this true reflective awareness and intimacy.
Speaker:It's profound. And it's a science.
Speaker:You can actually recreate that state almost anytime,
Speaker:anywhere with almost any individual that you want. And the more you do,
Speaker:the more fulfilled you have in your life.
Speaker:And the more love you get to have in your life.
Speaker:As Kahlil Gibran says 'love is its own reward'.
Speaker:And I really believe that it speaks for itself,
Speaker:but be aware of the difference between the puppy love and the gradations up to
Speaker:true divine love. True real openhearted love. It's very profound.
Speaker:Anyway,
Speaker:in order to help you with that and to help you apply this in any area of your
Speaker:life. I have a program called Balancing Your Emotions because watch this now,
Speaker:if you're infatuated, that's an emotion. If you're resentful, that's an emotion.
Speaker:If you synthesize them, that's love.
Speaker:Love's a synthesis of both sides of the emotional scale.
Speaker:So Balance Your Emotions for Greater Achievement,
Speaker:what I'm going to do in this particular masterclass, it's a free master class.
Speaker:Please take advantage of it,
Speaker:because what it does is it can give you some ways to empower your intellectual
Speaker:development, your career, your business, your finances, your relationships,
Speaker:social life, physical fitness, to be inspired.
Speaker:It's how to go and apply and empower those areas by having this love
Speaker:and intimate love that I'm just talking about.
Speaker:So how to Balance Your Emotions for Greater Achievement, grab it,
Speaker:take advantage of the free masterclass. I promise you,
Speaker:you will listen to it multiple times and it will be applicable and take some
Speaker:notes and get ready to go and apply it.
Speaker:It's the application of the knowledge that makes a difference and just know that
Speaker:you deserve to be loved for who you are. You want to be loved for who you are.
Speaker:You have a way of doing it now, you have a science of doing it. I teach it.
Speaker:I've been teaching it for many, many decades,
Speaker:and I'm absolutely certain that you can use it and apply it in your life and
Speaker:make a difference in life. You deserve to be loved for who you are.
Speaker:You don't need to be anybody else and you don't need to get rid of half and half
Speaker:of yourself or some part of yourself to love yourself.