Speaker:

And the devaluation of ourself that we think we need fixing is a result of not

Speaker:

being true to ourself. You don't need to fix yourself when you're authentic.

Speaker:

This is a very interesting topic that we want to address today because

Speaker:

many people compare themselves to other people,

Speaker:

judge themselves in turn, and not appreciate themselves,

Speaker:

and they're trying to fix themselves.

Speaker:

So I'm gonna start with a story that may be applicable,

Speaker:

and then I'll branch it out to see the relationship of why we do this,

Speaker:

why we beat ourselves up, why we're not honoring our ourselves.

Speaker:

Now you may not be doing that,

Speaker:

but you may have friends that do that and so you can pass this information onto

Speaker:

them, but it may be also some moments in your life where you feel this way.

Speaker:

So I had a client who was a very beautiful, very attractive woman,

Speaker:

that I don't think that too many people, men or women,

Speaker:

would deny the attractiveness. But,

Speaker:

although all the people around her was recognizing her beauty,

Speaker:

both inner and outer, she wasn't.

Speaker:

And when we started to go down the rabbit hole, you might say,

Speaker:

and start to figure out what was driving this,

Speaker:

we found out that she was comparing herself to a variety of other women.

Speaker:

So there's one woman that she was looking and saw, wow,

Speaker:

what beautiful hair she has, thick, really gorgeous hair.

Speaker:

And because of that, she wasn't looking at the whole woman.

Speaker:

She was just looking at that portion of the woman, the hair,

Speaker:

and comparing her hair to that and noticed her hair was a little thinner,

Speaker:

little less shiny, little less full.

Speaker:

And so she was self-depreciating and comparing to somebody she put on a little

Speaker:

pedestal, not for the whole picture, but just that little piece, just the hair.

Speaker:

But she didn't stop there.

Speaker:

She also noticed that somebody else had a little flatter abs,

Speaker:

instead of a bit of a pooch, she had a flatter abs.

Speaker:

And so now she's comparing her abs to that and also a little self depreciation

Speaker:

on her abs. But she didn't stop there.

Speaker:

She also looked at her cheekbones and her jaw and noticed that there's a little

Speaker:

bit more sag in some other girl that she saw that had this really firm chin

Speaker:

line. And she kept going around to various women in her life,

Speaker:

and the individual woman that she was comparing herself to, the whole package,

Speaker:

was not as magnificent, probably to people's eyes than hers,

Speaker:

but in each of those parts, she was comparing herself to those people.

Speaker:

Now the whole, no, but those parts. And because of that,

Speaker:

she was putting them on a pedestal and minimizing herself in turn

Speaker:

and not honoring and appreciating herself and then trying to

Speaker:

fix herself and trying to be somebody she wasn't.

Speaker:

I've said before that everybody's been given the body that's required to fulfill

Speaker:

their mission in life. Now,

Speaker:

even though the world has acknowledged her as very beautiful,

Speaker:

she couldn't see it. And what's interesting is,

Speaker:

this subordination to the admiration of other people

Speaker:

can keep you from honoring and the magnificent of who you are.

Speaker:

Ralph Waldo Emerson said, envy is ignorance and imitation is suicide.

Speaker:

You'll destroy yourself, comparing yourself to other people,

Speaker:

because there's parts of you that are worthy of admiration just like hers,

Speaker:

but you're not honoring that. They have a different set of values,

Speaker:

a different set of structures, a different set of advantages and disadvantages.

Speaker:

I believe everybody has advantages and disadvantage. Sometimes you find very,

Speaker:

very attractive people that may not have the greatest personality,

Speaker:

or you may have somebody that may not be as attractive that has incredible

Speaker:

personality and vibrant. And everybody is given some sort of,

Speaker:

you know,

Speaker:

advantages to their behavior or their skill or their beauty or something that

Speaker:

allows them to compete in the marketplace you might say, in life.

Speaker:

But she wasn't honoring it.

Speaker:

So she was in a sense living in sort of a body dysmorphia syndrome.

Speaker:

But the body dysmorphia syndrome doesn't stop at the body.

Speaker:

The same principle holds in reverse.

Speaker:

You could look down on somebody and exaggerate yourself and puff yourself up

Speaker:

and then compare these same little parts and think, well, I'm better than that.

Speaker:

And we can end up being exaggerating ourselves or minimizing ourselves

Speaker:

and pride or shame, exaggeration minimization of self,

Speaker:

which is inauthentic. Our real self is not an exaggeration or minimization.

Speaker:

Those are facades and personas that we wear because we compare ourselves

Speaker:

to other people. And none of those

Speaker:

are really our true self.

Speaker:

We wanna be loved and appreciated for who we are as an individual,

Speaker:

but when we're not being who we are, it's hard to do that.

Speaker:

Hard to be loved for it when we're not even willing to do it.

Speaker:

So every time we put people on pedestals or pits and we don't put them equally

Speaker:

with equanimity in our heart, we don't have the ability to be loved who we are,

Speaker:

cuz we're not being who we are,

Speaker:

we're exaggerating or minimizing ourselves or minimizing or exaggerating

Speaker:

ourselves relative to other people and exaggerating or minimizing them.

Speaker:

Those women that she was comparing to didn't have an overall package greater

Speaker:

than hers, just happened to have some parts,

Speaker:

just like she had parts that were greater than somebody else's in their minds

Speaker:

probably. There're probably envious people looking up to her for her beauty.

Speaker:

But as long as we're sitting there and comparing ourselves to other people,

Speaker:

instead of comparing our own daily actions to what's deeply meaning to us,

Speaker:

what's really priority to us,

Speaker:

we're going to be distracted by these exaggerated minimized self.

Speaker:

And what's interesting is we only want to fix ourselves when we compare

Speaker:

ourselves to other people.

Speaker:

And we only think we make mistakes when we're trying to live in other people's

Speaker:

values.

Speaker:

And we only think that other people make mistakes when we are expecting them to

Speaker:

live in our values. In their own values they're making decision,

Speaker:

their perception, decisions,

Speaker:

or actions are based on their own values and they're not making a mistake in

Speaker:

their own values.

Speaker:

They're evaluating according to their information they're perceiving and

Speaker:

therefore making a decision based on the data that they have.

Speaker:

But we may expect them to live in our values and see a different world and then

Speaker:

they don't fit it and then we think they're making a mistake.

Speaker:

Just like if we expect to live in somebody else's values or try to be somebody

Speaker:

we're not, we'll beat ourselves up. Albert Einstein said it really nicely:

Speaker:

When you're cat expecting to swim like a fish,

Speaker:

you're gonna beat yourself up and think there's something wrong with you,

Speaker:

and you're gonna wanna fix yourself.

Speaker:

And when you're a fish trying to climb a tree like a cat,

Speaker:

you're gonna beat yourself up thinking there's something wrong with you,

Speaker:

you're gonna wanna try to fix yourself. What if you didn't need to fix yourself?

Speaker:

What if you could look in the mirror and realize that whatever you perceive in

Speaker:

other people you have in your own form according to your own values,

Speaker:

and that is the magnificent part of yourself that you may not be

Speaker:

honoring? Now,

Speaker:

this dysmorphic response is not limited to looks as I said,

Speaker:

it also deals with business, and this can happen in men and women.

Speaker:

You could compare yourself to somebody that you think is more achieving in

Speaker:

business,

Speaker:

and then minimize yourself and then judge yourself thinking I need to fix

Speaker:

myself, I need to be more like them in business.

Speaker:

Or you might be doing this in finance.

Speaker:

You might think they're wealthier than me and oh my God,

Speaker:

I'm lower in socioeconomics and then have a dysmorphia in finance

Speaker:

or dysmorphia in business, equivalent, like she had a dysmorphia in body.

Speaker:

And this could occur also in relationship.

Speaker:

I've seen this very often where somebody looks at somebody else and they're

Speaker:

seeing somebody else that's in a romantic mood,

Speaker:

even though they may be fighting an hour earlier or an hour later, and we think,

Speaker:

oh my God,

Speaker:

what's wrong with my relationship somehow I'm not getting that and then they

Speaker:

punish the person they're with,

Speaker:

because they're comparing 'em to a fantasy person that may not even be long term

Speaker:

or lasting. And the same thing socially,

Speaker:

you think somebody's got more Facebook connections or more social media

Speaker:

connections or something and you think, oh my God, I don't have it,

Speaker:

I'm a nobody. Or you might exaggerate yourself, again, dysmorphia.

Speaker:

And then of course physically the same thing we've already discussed.

Speaker:

And spiritually you could do it too, you think, well,

Speaker:

they're more spiritually aware or more enlightened or something or more quoted

Speaker:

of great philosophy or something.

Speaker:

Anytime you compare yourself to other people and put them on a pedestal or pit,

Speaker:

you just lost your true identity.

Speaker:

And the magnificence of who you truly are is far greater than any fantasies

Speaker:

you impose on yourself.

Speaker:

And it's a fantasy to try to live in somebody else's values and try to be

Speaker:

somebody you're not. It's a fantasy to expect yourself to be like them.

Speaker:

I know a lady that actually didn't like the way her cheeks and her face quite

Speaker:

was and decided to go get a little face done, her face lift.

Speaker:

The only problem is that the outcome was not what she expected.

Speaker:

And she was now minimizing herself to somebody else. When she got through,

Speaker:

she got the lesson that was needed. I wish I'd had kept it the way it was,

Speaker:

I actually looked better that way.

Speaker:

Cuz now she's lost her identity with this new look and it really wasn't her.

Speaker:

By the way, if you ever go to a plastic surgeon,

Speaker:

you might wanna look at the ladies that they're creating.

Speaker:

Sometimes it's their idea of what beauty is.

Speaker:

And if that doesn't match who you are and what you believe it is,

Speaker:

or somebody else that you're dating is or living with or something like that,

Speaker:

you might wanna pay a price there, you might wanna check.

Speaker:

Because sometimes what they imagine beauty to be, they'll be filtering it,

Speaker:

cuz I watched one plastic surgeon that had 14 women that almost looked identical

Speaker:

when they got through.

Speaker:

And it was the person that they believed was beautiful in their own image.

Speaker:

Everybody's got a different search image so be aware of that.

Speaker:

We sometimes pay a price for trying to be somebody we're not.

Speaker:

I really believe that all the symptoms in our physiology, psychology,

Speaker:

sociology and events in our life are feedback mechanisms to get us to be

Speaker:

authentic, where we love ourselves and appreciate ourselves for who we are,

Speaker:

instead of who we think we're supposed to be. I think as Einstein said,

Speaker:

when you're a cat trying to swim or a fish trying to climb a tree,

Speaker:

you're gonna beat yourself up and not honor the magnificence of who you are.

Speaker:

So you wanna give yourself permission to do that.

Speaker:

And one way to help you do that, I'd like to share this,

Speaker:

because you don't need to fix yourself,

Speaker:

is to actually identify those people that you find yourself looking at admiring,

Speaker:

instead of admiring them and minimizing yourself,

Speaker:

which I found very unproductive, I found out as a public speaker,

Speaker:

working with people in the speaking industry,

Speaker:

that the only fear of speaking is not speaking,

Speaker:

because people speak to people one-on-one all the time,

Speaker:

it's the second you get up in front of a stage and you speak to somebody that

Speaker:

you think is more knowledgeable or more successful or more

Speaker:

achieving or wealthier, you're

Speaker:

subordinating to something you think they have that you don't.

Speaker:

And as long as you perceive that they have something you don't,

Speaker:

you're gonna play a little bit smaller. You're gonna self depreciate.

Speaker:

You're gonna minimize yourself. You're gonna wanna change and fix yourself.

Speaker:

And then you're gonna judge yourself and hold yourself back from opportunities

Speaker:

in life that you can be shining with.

Speaker:

But what's interesting is I had a woman that was having a major fear about

Speaker:

presenting and I had her go through there, I rolled up a piece of paper,

Speaker:

made it into a tube and I had her look in the audience who it was she was

Speaker:

intimidated by and we identified three women. I said,

Speaker:

what is it about that woman?

Speaker:

I went up on stage and when she froze and helped her, I said,

Speaker:

what is it about that woman that you're intimidated by? She says, well,

Speaker:

she's got more education than I do. Great. You have,

Speaker:

you're about to speak about your own life,

Speaker:

you have more knowledge about your own life than she'll ever have,

Speaker:

but you're assuming that she has more education in the field that you'll be

Speaker:

talking sort of around. So I asked her, I asked the woman who's speaking,

Speaker:

I said, where do you have what you see in her? The seer,

Speaker:

the seeing and the seen are the same.

Speaker:

Whenever you look inside and find out what you see in others, inside yourself,

Speaker:

in your own unique form,

Speaker:

you level the playing field and you don't sit there and inject their values and

Speaker:

try to inculcate them in your life and try to be somebody you're not,

Speaker:

you honor yourself for being who you are.

Speaker:

So I had to go in there and identify where she had education and where she had

Speaker:

knowledge that this lady didn't have,

Speaker:

and where she was empowered in her knowledge.

Speaker:

And when she finally leveled that playing field,

Speaker:

that lady was no longer intimidating. She went to the next lady and said, well,

Speaker:

this lady looks more successful. And I said, but where are your successes?

Speaker:

Your achievements are in your values. Her achievements are in her values.

Speaker:

If you think her values are more important than yours,

Speaker:

you're gonna think she's more achieving than you.

Speaker:

And I made her stop and look at where her achievements were and list those right

Speaker:

there in front of the group, until they were equal. Once they were equal,

Speaker:

she was no longer intimidated by that person.

Speaker:

And then the other one was more socially savvy,

Speaker:

more socially connected and influential.

Speaker:

And I asked her where her social savvy is, and I said isn't it interesting,

Speaker:

you're the one up on stage, not the lady in the audience.

Speaker:

So obviously they're acknowledging you.

Speaker:

And I started to make her look at where did she have the social influence,

Speaker:

in the own form in the individuals,

Speaker:

because then she realized that she was influencing individuals that have massive

Speaker:

influence in the world. And when she did, she stopped,

Speaker:

she got a tear in the eye and she looked out and the lady out there wasn't

Speaker:

intimidating. And I said, now is anybody here in the room that's intimidating?

Speaker:

And she goes, no. I said, I'm now gonna step off the stage, you can now proceed.

Speaker:

She did an amazing job at presenting without any anxiety and fear because she

Speaker:

was no longer subordinating to somebody else and comparing herself.

Speaker:

She was now focusing on her mission of what the message was,

Speaker:

those with a mission have a message, to the audience.

Speaker:

And she got a standing ovation at the end,

Speaker:

because they realized where she started,

Speaker:

where she started in the talk and what she achieved.

Speaker:

And when she got through the very three women that we picked out,

Speaker:

are the ones that gave her the starting of the standing ovation.

Speaker:

And then one of them turned around and said to her and said,

Speaker:

you may think that I am more intelligent and because I have a degree,

Speaker:

but I haven't done anything with my degree. Yes, I have a degree,

Speaker:

but I never did anything with it. And I'm sitting here looking at you and going,

Speaker:

you didn't have that, but look what you've accomplished.

Speaker:

And when she heard that, she got tears in her eyes, they hugged each other.

Speaker:

They literally hugged each other right on the spot.

Speaker:

Cuz sometimes the first appearance is sometimes not the truth,

Speaker:

it's the facade that we make up in our mind.

Speaker:

That's why we're not here to compare ourselves to other people,

Speaker:

we're here to compare our own actions, to our own values and our own dreams,

Speaker:

and look at how congruent we are. When we live by our highest value,

Speaker:

we live by filling our day with the highest priority actions,

Speaker:

we're most objective, least judging,

Speaker:

most equitable with other people,

Speaker:

most resilient and adaptable to whatever happens,

Speaker:

and we end up honoring ourselves and whenever we're doing something that's

Speaker:

highest on our value, we're spontaneously acting, we're disciplined, reliable,

Speaker:

we're focused, we wake up our leader,

Speaker:

we do amazing things and we honor ourselves and our self worth goes up.

Speaker:

When we're living by our highest value, our self worth goes up.

Speaker:

But if we try to live in somebody else's values because of comparison and trying

Speaker:

to be somebody we're not, we automatically devalue ourself.

Speaker:

We're not designed to do that.

Speaker:

And the devaluation of ourself that we think we need fixing is a result of not

Speaker:

being true to ourself. You don't need to fix yourself when you're authentic.

Speaker:

You don't need to fix yourself when you're inspired by what's priority in your

Speaker:

life and you're living congruently with that on a daily basis.

Speaker:

You don't need to sit there and, you know,

Speaker:

fix yourself or repair yourself when you're not judging somebody,

Speaker:

you're just loving those people. In fact,

Speaker:

just go and think about the moments you've had the most fulfillment,

Speaker:

it's when you made a contribution to people's lives and appreciated doing what

Speaker:

you love in the way that they appreciate it. And if you fill your day with that,

Speaker:

you're not gonna have self depreciation.

Speaker:

You're gonna have an appreciation and probably an economic capital appreciation,

Speaker:

cuz people are gonna value you. And when the world values you,

Speaker:

it's because you value you. But you can't value you when you're not authentic.

Speaker:

You can't value you when you're playing the "imposter".

Speaker:

And the "imposter" is when you exaggerate or minimize yourself and not be

Speaker:

yourself. And that's why I'm taking the time to go over this little topic.

Speaker:

I'm not here to teach you how to have dysmorphia.

Speaker:

I want you to dissolve dysmorphia.

Speaker:

I've been teaching the Breakthrough Experience,

Speaker:

which is my signature program around the world for 32, almost 33 years now,

Speaker:

it's going on 33 years in a couple months.

Speaker:

And I've taught it thousands of times, 1,140 times, pardon me,

Speaker:

to thousands of people, in fact, hundreds of thousands of people.

Speaker:

And one thing I'm absolutely certain of, is the majority of people,

Speaker:

majority of people out there,

Speaker:

are distracted by their comparisons to other people. You know,

Speaker:

we're not here to live in the shadows of anyone. We're not here to, you know,

Speaker:

be somebody we're not, be second at being somebody else,

Speaker:

we're here to be first at being us.

Speaker:

We're here to stand on the shoulders of giants and be an unborrowed, visionary,

Speaker:

and realize that what we see out there is a reflection.

Speaker:

And if we're honoring it,

Speaker:

the only reason why we're honoring them and putting 'em on a pedestal is because

Speaker:

they're reminding us of something we're too humble to admit we have,

Speaker:

but we already have it. Nothing's missing in you. When I was in Nepal,

Speaker:

I met with the Bonpo lama many years ago,

Speaker:

we had a dialogue for about an hour and we had a discussion about nothing's

Speaker:

missing. I always say at the level of the most authentic self,

Speaker:

sometimes called the soul, the state of unconditional love within us,

Speaker:

where we're in state of equanimity, nothing's missing.

Speaker:

But when we're down in our senses and we compare ourselves to other people,

Speaker:

we in our world of judgment, the terrestrial world of judgment,

Speaker:

we tend to be too proud or too humble to admit what we see in others inside us.

Speaker:

And then we end up minimizing ourself instead of empowering ourself.

Speaker:

So instead of sitting there and putting people on pedestals,

Speaker:

the wisest thing to do, and I teach in the Breakthrough Experience program,

Speaker:

which I want,

Speaker:

wish everybody could experience so they could know how to use this tool,

Speaker:

the Demartini Method, but to go in there and identify what specific trait,

Speaker:

action, or inaction do I perceive in this individual that I admire,

Speaker:

what specific trait, action,

Speaker:

inaction do I perceive them displaying or demonstrating that I admire most?

Speaker:

And pin it down, write it down, be very specific.

Speaker:

And then go inside yourself and ask the question, go to a moment me,

Speaker:

go to a moment, John, where,

Speaker:

and when you perceive yourself displaying or demonstrating the same or similar

Speaker:

behavior as you perceive in them, and where was it, when was it,

Speaker:

who did you do it to, and who perceives you that way?

Speaker:

And then go the next time you've done it. And the next time you've done it.

Speaker:

And the next time you've done it, and identify where it was, when it was,

Speaker:

who'd you do it to, and who perceived it.

Speaker:

If you keep doing that and keep doing that and keep looking, I guarantee you,

Speaker:

you cannot see something in others that you don't have.

Speaker:

You may not be aware of it. You may be too humble to admit it, but it's there.

Speaker:

And by holding yourself accountable to see it,

Speaker:

you will then not look them up and put them on pedestals.

Speaker:

You will look across and thank them from revealing to you

Speaker:

what has been unconscious in your life that you've been too humble to admit that

Speaker:

you have,

Speaker:

and you'll honor that you have what they have in your own form and you'll level

Speaker:

the playing field. And now,

Speaker:

instead of trying to fix yourself and change yourself to be like them,

Speaker:

you'll realize that, thank you,

Speaker:

you will respect them and appreciate them for revealing to you what you have

Speaker:

that you've been not honoring.

Speaker:

And if you go even a step further and then go and ask,

Speaker:

what's the downside of their form?

Speaker:

So you're no longer infatuated with their form.

Speaker:

And you'll find out that every trait that people have,

Speaker:

have advantages and disadvantages.

Speaker:

And think about a guy that you first go out and date or a girl you date,

Speaker:

at first you're a little blinded by an infatuation.

Speaker:

You're conscious of the upside, unconscious of

Speaker:

a week, a month or maybe six months, you start to see, oh,

Speaker:

that trait's got some peccadillo sides. It's got some problems that, you know,

Speaker:

they may be really good looking,

Speaker:

but maybe everybody's looking at 'em and they're constantly in the center of

Speaker:

attention and high maintenance.

Speaker:

Or they're highly intelligent and they always wanna be right, they wanna argue,

Speaker:

or they wanna always talk and not listen or something.

Speaker:

Or they might be really good in business and they're preoccupied with business,

Speaker:

but there's now downside, cuz you hardly see them.

Speaker:

Every trait has advantages and disadvantages. Otherwise

Speaker:

It has benefits and drawbacks.

Speaker:

So that's why if you admire with somebody or infatuate with somebody,

Speaker:

that's because you're blind to the downsides of those

Speaker:

to where you have those behaviors.

Speaker:

Once you own it by reflection and realize that you have it and other people see

Speaker:

it and you're transparent,

Speaker:

and then you go and find the downside to the trait you admire in them and take

Speaker:

them off the pedestal and level the playing field and see both sides,

Speaker:

you don't sit there and put 'em on a pedestal, you put 'em in your heart.

Speaker:

Because everybody's got two sides. Every trait's got two sides.

Speaker:

Every trait on the planet,

Speaker:

even the things that you think are terrible and evil traits, aren't,

Speaker:

or they would've gone extinct. If they're here, they serve,

Speaker:

or they would've gone extinct in human behavior.

Speaker:

And the traits you admire has downsides. The traits you despise has upsides.

Speaker:

If you balance it out and level the playing field, you

Speaker:

not upon pedestals or pits. And when you put 'em on pedestal pits,

Speaker:

you've got dysmorphia. Dysmorphia by minimizing or exaggerating yourself.

Speaker:

And that's not you. When you're proud or shame,

Speaker:

those are personas and masks and facades you wear covering up the real authentic

Speaker:

you. You wanna give yourself permission to be you.

Speaker:

And so by going and doing the Demartini Method,

Speaker:

which I explain in the Breakthrough Experience,

Speaker:

which are just three questions out of many, many questions I teach you there,

Speaker:

I show you to level the playing field.

Speaker:

And the second you level the playing field and don't have them on a pedestal,

Speaker:

but have them in your heart,

Speaker:

whatever opportunities that they're resonating with,

Speaker:

you get the same opportunities. And this is very powerful.

Speaker:

I've seen people do this that envied singers,

Speaker:

all of a sudden do the method on 'em and all of a sudden realize, wow.

Speaker:

And they started getting opportunities to singing engagements and raise their

Speaker:

fees and opportunities and get notoriety. I've seen this in sports and golf.

Speaker:

I've seen this in business. I've seen this in almost every field.

Speaker:

In speaking industry. The second you are honoring yourself,

Speaker:

see at the level of your soul, nothing's missing in you,

Speaker:

at the level of your senses things appear to be missing in you.

Speaker:

The things that appear to be missing in you are the things you're too proud or

Speaker:

too humble to admit you have.

Speaker:

Putting people on pedestals or pits and not putting 'em in your heart cost you,

Speaker:

and you end up going to want to fix them or fix you. And by the way,

Speaker:

when you try to fix them,

Speaker:

if you've ever been in relationship where you're trying to get them to be more

Speaker:

like the way you want them and trying to fix them to live in your values,

Speaker:

it's futile. And if you try to live in somebody else's values, it's futile.

Speaker:

And the reason it's futile is because you're not designed to be somebody you're

Speaker:

not, you're designed to be you.

Speaker:

The magnificence of who you are as far greater than any of those fantasies

Speaker:

you'll put on yourself. So you wanna give yourself permission to be you.

Speaker:

You know, I was interviewed by Vogue magazine a number of years back,

Speaker:

and they had 17 questions that they were thrown at me to answer.

Speaker:

And the very last question is, Dr. Demartini,

Speaker:

if there's anybody you could be in the world, who would you like to be?

Speaker:

And I thought to myself, I have no desire. I told them, I said,

Speaker:

I have no desire to be anybody but Dr. John Demartini. And they go, oh really?

Speaker:

Well, most people put down, they wanna be like this, or they wanna be this.

Speaker:

I said, I have no desire to be somebody else. I don't wanna be the second Elvis.

Speaker:

I don't wanna be the second at anybody else. I wanna be the number one,

Speaker:

numero uno of me. And I want you to be able to look in the mirror and go,

Speaker:

you know what? I love you. Wow. You're amazing.

Speaker:

And I don't mean in exaggerated forms.

Speaker:

I don't mean in fake form and imposter form.

Speaker:

I mean actually realizing that you are amazing person because you have a very

Speaker:

unique set of values that lead you to a very unique path in life.

Speaker:

And that is your own destiny. And the hierarchy of your values is dictating it.

Speaker:

And they,

Speaker:

although they change in your destiny's migrating and moving through a life's

Speaker:

journey,

Speaker:

the magnificence of that journey is unique and yours and anything you can't say

Speaker:

thank you for along that journey is because you compared yourself to other

Speaker:

people. You never judge yourself in your own values.

Speaker:

You judge yourself through other people's values. Whenever you yourself saying,

Speaker:

I should, I ought to, supposed to, I got to, I have to,

Speaker:

I must - that's not you speaking,

Speaker:

that's somebody else that you got in your head or some tradition, convention,

Speaker:

mores in your head, some moral hypocrisy that you're trying to live by

Speaker:

that's not you. I'm not here to teach you how to live that way.

Speaker:

I'm interested in you being authentic to yourself. You're both nice and mean,

Speaker:

kind and cruel, positive negative, happy and sad,

Speaker:

you're gonna have the pair of all opposites.

Speaker:

And when you finally embrace the whole of you, you don't need to fix yourself.

Speaker:

I don't need to get rid of any half of myself in order to love myself,

Speaker:

and neither do you. So you wanna give yourself permission to be whole,

Speaker:

and the way you do it is not put people on pedestals or pits and put yourself in

Speaker:

pits or pedestals in turn. Give yourself permission to be you.

Speaker:

That's what my Breakthrough Experience program is for is to dissolve all that

Speaker:

baggage,

Speaker:

cuz all the baggage we have in our life that's stored in our subconscious mind

Speaker:

are result of those judgments that we have towards other people and events in

Speaker:

our life. And anytime, we actually get a moment of grace,

Speaker:

a moment of tears of gratitude for ourselves, which was when we're authentic,

Speaker:

when we're authentic, we get tears of gratitude. And that's the time,

Speaker:

that's when we wake up our super conscious mind,

Speaker:

our spiritual awareness you might say, where we're inspired from within,

Speaker:

doing what we love, loving what we do, waking up as a leader of culture,

Speaker:

not a follower of culture. Not subordinating to the culture around us,

Speaker:

but leading the culture within us.

Speaker:

The culture within us is all the parts of ourselves working in a unity towards

Speaker:

our objective, and that's what's possible.

Speaker:

So I just wanted to take a few moments to go over some of these ideas with you,

Speaker:

because I really believe that some of these are good to stick in your head and

Speaker:

to think about. You're not here to compare yourself to others.

Speaker:

You're here to compare your daily actions to your own highest values.

Speaker:

So you can fulfill the most inspiring dreams that you that are yearning to

Speaker:

express themselves naturally innately from within. The calling you have inside,

Speaker:

the calling of your own soul,

Speaker:

the state of unconditional love you have for yourself and others when you're

Speaker:

authentic. So, to go along with this little class today,

Speaker:

the special class that I just gave you, on you don't have to fix yourself,

Speaker:

I want you to also to come join me on this free on demand masterclass,

Speaker:

it's called Increase Your Deserve Level and Finally Get What You Want in Life.

Speaker:

Go on there, grab this masterclass, take advantage of this. It's free.

Speaker:

Just go listen. If you got something out of this little class,

Speaker:

you're gonna get something out of this class, this free masterclass.

Speaker:

Take advantage of it.

Speaker:

You can't put your hand in the pot of glue without some of the glue sticking.

Speaker:

You can't hang out and listen to these classes every week, and by the way,

Speaker:

if you know somebody that could have benefited by hearing this,

Speaker:

if that went through your head, I wish so and so could have heard this,

Speaker:

please pass this torch and let people know about these weekly presentations I

Speaker:

do, or these little masterclasses we do or our website or doing our Value

Speaker:

Determination process online on our website, it's free and private,

Speaker:

or come absolutely to the Breakthrough Experience,

Speaker:

that's where I can actually make a difference,

Speaker:

literality I'll be working with you for 24 hours to help you do something

Speaker:

extraordinary with your life. You deserve to do a life that you dream about,

Speaker:

and I'm a firm believer that it's totally possible.

Speaker:

I didn't start out in the way I live today.

Speaker:

I started out on the streets as a kid, I started out with learning problems,

Speaker:

dyslexia, speaking problems, an arm deformity and leg deformity,

Speaker:

had to wear braces a child. It doesn't matter where you started.

Speaker:

It doesn't matter what you've been through.

Speaker:

It doesn't matter what you're going through.

Speaker:

What matters is are you doing the very things that help you do something

Speaker:

extraordinary with your life?

Speaker:

And that's something you can take command on and nobody's getting up in the

Speaker:

morning and dedicating their life to your fulfillment. It has to be you.

Speaker:

So I want you to think about that. You don't need to fix yourself.

Speaker:

It's time to love yourself. Take advantage of the masterclass, please.

Speaker:

And I'll see you at the Breakthrough Experience or

Speaker:

and please pass the torch and let people know if this is valuable to you,

Speaker:

please pass the torch.

Speaker:

Cuz there just may be somebody out there that needs this today.

Speaker:

And if so you made a difference in their life. I'll see you next week.