Scientology Outside of the Church

SE7EP14 - How Scientologists are Successful

January 25, 2024
Scientology Outside of the Church
SE7EP14 - How Scientologists are Successful
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Have you ever felt like something was holding you back from true success? Together with Scientologirl, we unravel how the philosophy of Independent Scientology, particularly the "be, do, have" principle, has been an invaluable tool in our personal and professional journeys. We share stories of overcoming doubts and building a life that's not just about surviving but thriving. Our candid conversation shines a light on the misunderstood elements of Scientology and how it can be a crucial catalyst for self-improvement and achieving your dreams. Dive into the nuance of 'havingness' and witness how a heightened sense of self-worth directly correlates with the ability to manifest abundance in your life.

We also dissect the crucial role self-determinism plays in carving your unique success story. By examining the power of auditing to break through self-imposed barriers, we provide insights into the profound changes that come from shedding life's metaphorical backpack. For the artists out there, we discuss how Scientology principles can amplify both your creativity and entrepreneurial spirit, detailing the journey of one artist's remarkable evolution. The impact of increased self-identification and cognitive enhancements gleaned from auditing sessions reveal how they pave the way for not just artistic, but personal growth, ultimately leading to a more fulfilled and successful life.

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Speaker 1:

Hey there, independent Scientologists. Discover a new perspective to your bridge by visiting aohyphengporg. Get in session with remote auditing using the Theta Meter. Are you curious about where you stand? Head on over to aohyphengporg now and take our free personality test.

Speaker 2:

Join the growing group of independent Scientologists today, hi and welcome to another Scientology Outside of the Church podcast brought to you by the bandstork of the Great Plains aohyphengporg. This is season seven, episode 14, and the title of this one is how Scientologists Are Successful. I'm here with Scientologist Girl this was the brainchild of hers to do a podcast on what I think is a really it's an in-depth look into how, in the world, scientology independent Scientology in our case helps one or one in their family or group be successful. Let's say yee, scientologist Girl.

Speaker 1:

So the reason why I wanted to do this podcast is because I know a lot of people starting out in Scientology. They see the glitz and glamour that is Hollywood and the celebrities that are becoming Scientologists and stuff, and they're like I want that. So I figure it was a good idea to kind of come on here and explain how independent Scientology can influence your success, if you allow it to. That's the most important thing.

Speaker 2:

And how do you allow it to?

Speaker 1:

Well, the first thing is the willingness to know. With Scientology there's a very big thing on be, do and have. So if you can be and do, then you can have. A lot of people just see the havingness and think, well, it's just going to magically let me have. But the thing is there's a lot of work that goes into being a Scientologist and getting those gains. We're not in the industry that kind of lets you just magically have things. It's a thing of doing and being as well.

Speaker 2:

Being probably the most important.

Speaker 1:

Absolutely.

Speaker 2:

How did that work out for you? How did it happen?

Speaker 1:

So I have been an independent Scientologist for about four years five years as a Scientologist and I can honestly say when I first started out things weren't going great in my personal life. Relationships were problematic, I was working minimum wage, I was staying in a very sort of negative area and I was allowing people in my life to, I guess, dictate and be other determined instead of having my self-determinism.

Speaker 2:

And how did you go about that?

Speaker 1:

So I started gaining awareness on these things. So, for example, the first thing was PTSD, which I'm not going to get into a whole lot, but I realized that I was being other determined instead of self-determined. And after that, by getting extensive auditing and training, I started realizing, first and foremost, that I can reach these higher levels. I remember when there was this situation that I had received a gift and this gift was crazy for me. It was just like this is too much. You see those videos where they're like no, no, you can't give this to me, it's too much.

Speaker 1:

Well, I was in that position and this person had given this item to me and I actually kept it in a cupboard for quite a long time because it was just. I couldn't fathom that I was even worth that much and I was so nervous upon using it that I was going to break it. In other words, I didn't feel worthy. So one of the things that Scientology independent Scientology does for you is that it increases your havingness, which means it also increases your beingness and doingness, because you start feeling worthy, because if you start feeling good enough to have things, then you will have those things. It's just automatic. If you're being and doing, your havingness is going to increase. So if anybody gets in Scientology and they're like, ah, it never did anything for me, chances are that they weren't being and they weren't doing in order to have.

Speaker 2:

Would it be safe to say that at that point you couldn't have that gift? Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 1:

I couldn't have it. I struggled with this concept for a lot early on. In the beginning I was like what is this having thing? Like, why do people say that you can't have something? And then, obviously in my own life I started realizing oh well, that's what it means. There's so many different scenarios where I can't have it. I remember us first renting this place. I almost couldn't have it because it was way more havingness than I'd ever had before Having a pool, having the responsibility of a full-fledged home with I mean, it's the nicest home I've ever been in, quite honestly. And at that point in time I didn't feel worthy. I was worried that I was going to be irresponsible and kind of just do things to destroy it, as crazy as it sounds. But eventually my havingness increased with my beingness and my doingness and I think I told you the other day I said I was having some issues I can't remember what it was with, but I had said to you that, if I can remember it verbatim, I had said getting money is easy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I pointed out to you and I said something to the degree of of. You remember not that long ago, when you didn't feel that way.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, exactly, there was this. This, this desperate must have, can't have need for success and for for for having this. But then when you attain it you just you kind of realize, oh, that's pretty easy to get. Of course I have been in Scientology for a few years so obviously that has contributed, but it it definitely has helped me because obviously before I was doing minimum wage and stuff and I was always trying these other practices. Before Scientology, like I was very much into Buddhism and I still love the subject. You know, especially when you come to beingness, you try and get to that point of beingness. Buddhism doesn't really necessarily have anything to do with having this, but you figure, well, if, if, if you can get to a point of beingness, maybe the other things will follow. But within Scientology I think the whole thing is really about improving yourself so you can improve your other conditions.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and it all starts with your first dynamic yeah, which is you? You and your body, and and and what your, your decisions are what your, what your goals are and things like that. So when did things start kicking into high gear for you?

Speaker 1:

I think it was about on grade four and I was walking across the one day and I had seen some some of the conditions around me in that area at that point in time. I mean we are talking about gunshots in the middle of the night. We are talking about people getting stabbed on the stairs like three doors away from us, not houses. We were all living in a flat at that point. So I mean it was literally like not even 30 seconds of walk and he was like right there. So the conditions of of of that area were not ideal at all.

Speaker 1:

And I was walking across the street, I had just gotten something from the shop across the road and I was just like if, if this is as good as it is, if I'm not trying, imagine how it could be if I did actually try. And something in me realized that everything that I had currently up to that point was as a result of my efforts or not efforts. And that's when I was like I was like I can control my dynamics, I can control my life. I am 100%, completely responsible for everything that has happened and everything that is going to happen in this life.

Speaker 2:

Would you say that that was a shift in viewpoint or a decision, or both?

Speaker 1:

Both because I remember when I was younger, especially my 20s, even late in my 20s, I had the viewpoint that things would just happen to people and you know if, if something had to happen because of somebody else, it was not necessarily my fault. And now, don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that bad things don't happen to good people and that it's always that person's fault. But what I am saying is is that underneath that, there's always this awareness that I could have done something different, that that is what keeps a person stuck.

Speaker 1:

So, it's not that we're good girls or bad girls, it's that we consider that we are. And I had considered for a very long time a lot of different things underneath my awareness. I knew that I was doing things that were contrary to to the survival of my dynamics, but I had always made excuses. But if they didn't always knows. So it might seem sort of contradictory to say things like I am responsible, but I knew I wasn't responsible. But it's that. It's the difference between subconscious belief and conscious belief.

Speaker 2:

So you, you know, considerations are seen to the physical universe. You considered I am not this and that you were holding yourself back.

Speaker 1:

Yes, absolutely. Another thing also was the, the other determinism. When you are not when, when you take on the viewpoint that you are not 100% accountable, responsible and in control of your life, your life becomes other determined. So people bask at the thought of like people. People don't like the thought of other people controlling them and their life not being their own, but at the same time they also don't like the word responsibility, because the word responsibility has almost become other determined, like when people tell you, especially when you're young people, adults above you, they always, you know, imprinting you be responsible, be responsible. So that becomes other determined instead of helping you to do that.

Speaker 2:

So help becomes betrayal Right.

Speaker 1:

So as as a person you know, discovering life and stuff. I had just come to the realization that responsibility is a good thing because it allows you so many more options than having other determinism. Being told you have to do this or this, or this or what?

Speaker 1:

people expect of you and even in terms of the personality test that we have when you'll be column is low. That's your happiness. It says there that to the degree somebody's happy is basically to the degree that the goals are personal goals. So when you're being self determined in your goals in life, that is fundamental to not only your happiness but your havingness as well.

Speaker 2:

So what you're saying is is that if your your goals are your own, you can be successful.

Speaker 1:

Yes, yes, absolutely. How driven is a person working retail at sticking labels on, on, on, like cardboard boxes or something? A person can be? I'm not saying they, they can't be, but a lot of people hate retail. I'm one of those people. So I I think, when you are self-determined, it also means that you're going to be more on fire. You're going to have more passion for your goals and your dreams.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, sure, if you're interested in what it is that you're doing and it parallels your goals, you can be a lot more happy. And if you're happy, your ethics are in so that you can achieve more goals, depending on what you've laid out for yourself.

Speaker 1:

And I tell you let me just tell you that thing that everybody says you can be everything you want to be. It is goddamn true. You can do anything you want to and be anything you want to if you don't listen to others. Because there's a lot of people in life that might seem like they have your best interest at heart but really they're afraid of your success. And I'm not talking about just suppressive people, I'm talking about even people who might not be suppressive necessarily, but have suppressive qualities because they themselves were suppressed technically PTSD people. So you look at the child who wants to be an astronaut and the mom says gives every reason why it's a bad idea. You need to have these grades, we don't have the money to send you to this, maybe you're not efficient enough or you can't concentrate, how you're going to do this, etc.

Speaker 2:

They buy into it.

Speaker 1:

Right, so it's an agreement, and we make these agreements constantly with other people.

Speaker 2:

Right. So to the degree that you don't keep your own counsel is to the degree that you're not being true to your own goals.

Speaker 1:

Absolutely. I also wanted to mention what the state of clear has to do with being successful. So a person along these lines, a person, is a lot more likely to be influenced by others and go into agreement with these other determinisms and not be self-determined because of their own reactivity. So if you've ever been in a situation where you just wanted this person to stop arguing with you and you're relented and we're like you know what, I'll keep the peace, I'll just, I just won't do this, that's giving into other determinism, and you see this especially obviously in the second dynamic, whether it's a parent, whether it's not wanting to do things because you have kids or because your partner says no, and they're not necessarily being suppressive. I'm not saying that they are bad for a person. What I am saying is that your self-determinism is key in every situation and obviously it's a compromise, and this is why it's important to choose your people wisely, because if you are choosing to be with people partners that don't have the same goals as you, that can be detrimental to your success as well.

Speaker 2:

So can you talk to me a little bit about how things changed for you as far as counterintention went when you started getting auditing and everything like that? But what happened to these counterintentions, these things that were stopping you from doing the things that you wanted to do?

Speaker 1:

Well, I would think that first, as I mentioned, getting auditing necessary to remove the PTSD was a good start, but the most important thing was rehabbing my abilities, so taking away all of those preconceived ideas that I wasn't good enough, that I needed to rely on other people, that I would never make it on my own, especially as a woman. But even if you're a guy, if you have people telling you what you should or shouldn't be, that's not necessarily pro-survival. You have to determine for yourself what is going to be the right way, moving forward.

Speaker 2:

And did it decrease that you bought into these things as you got more training and more auditing?

Speaker 1:

Yes. So as my awareness grew, let's take some of the grades. For example, on grade two, you learn about overt and withholds. The reason why it's important is because when you create an overt, you automatically withhold. So you're withholding from life. So you're also withholding from yourself because you have created a false sort of belief, postulate, etc. And that stops you from moving forward. So if you do the whole grade, you'll realize hey, yeah, I did some things, but those ideas were false. And in that you increase your awareness and that also increases your beingness and by increasing your beingness, your doingness and your havingness goes up because you don't have all these withholds.

Speaker 1:

Consider it like having a backpack on your back and over the years, as you do these overrids and stuff, you're just filling them more and more and more with these rocks of overrids and eventually you're just so slow and sluggish and you don't want to move forward because you've got all this stuff back and all these beliefs that oh no, I'm not strong enough to go forward. And then as you get auditing, the backpack gets lighter and lighter and lighter, to where you're like hey, you know. I mean, if anybody has ever lost weight, you can really feel the difference between when you were heavy and how much more energy and stuff that you have when you have the weight lost. So in essence, it's the same with auditing. You start realizing there's all this crap that you think about yourself and about life et cetera, and when you release that it just becomes so much better.

Speaker 1:

And then on grade four you realize some of the things, some of the reasons why you couldn't be responsible. So service facsimiles basically prevent you from having this because they give you reasons why. They basically give you excuses. So it makes and this whole universe is made obviously of other beings and stuff like that but they give you reasons to make others wrong and make yourself right. Now, that's not something that's really a good idea, because you're not trying to look at life in the form of opponents, but rather allies.

Speaker 2:

Make others wrong and make yourself right. Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 1:

And when you have excuses for all these things, like I remember having a boss that I really, really disliked and it was only after grade four that I realized you know that person was pretty much right and the reason why was because I was goofing off a lot.

Speaker 1:

I wasn't very responsible, but I'd always, had always had an excuse for why I was right in whatever I did and they were wrong in whatever they did, and that can set you back, because if another boss does a similar thing which they pretty much all kind of do when it comes to rules and regulations and stuff and you're not following them, you stunt your growth. And, of course, even if okay, even if you don't have that and you don't have a boss and you want to be an entrepreneur, there's also this thing of okay, my clients, how can I make my clients wrong? There's all these things I mean I could probably mention 10 just right off the bat of ways that you stop yourself through irresponsibility and the thing is, you subconsciously know you're lying to yourself, but you won't allow yourself to go further because of that anger, that resentment, that whatever emotion you're using to get a desired result.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and and it ultimately, in the end, what did you realize as far as what was Preventing you from doing the things that you wanted to do? What? Where did it? Where did it head?

Speaker 1:

It began and end with me Realizing that I was my own worst enemy, was probably the best realization that I had. I once had a cousin say to me I think was about 21 at the time he was like you are your own worst enemy because he could see that I had a not not that I'm trying to be egotistical or anything, but he had seen that I had potential in Sort of my mind, my thinking this, etc. And I would always find a way to screw it up. So I I Didn't understand. At that point I was like what does he mean? I'm fine, like everything's fine, like it's everybody else. But then, as you do Scientology, you realize, no, that you play a definite part in how your life turns out.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you're not just an onlooker.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so that was. That was the big thing for me was realizing I am responsible for my fate.

Speaker 2:

Are you responsible for your fat too? Yeah, you are, you are you're responsible for your fatty, for your thinness or for for anything else I mean. So what? Ultimately? What happened with, with all of these these Realizations and changes in your life? What, what? What was the culmination of it for you, as far as your business?

Speaker 1:

so I had Began exploring the possibility that I was not Looking at life from a Rational, sane viewpoint. Obviously, reaching clear, you get rid of your own reactive mind and, as a result, you you Realize when you are Not thinking sanely. So I'm gonna be honest, I still have reactive moments. A lot of people in Scientology. I remember this one guy. He was like you're being so reactive, are you sure you're clear? And that was Something that I had struggled with for a little while before I realized a few things.

Speaker 1:

Most importantly, when you are clear, you are able to look at things and and and self-correct, either before something happens or after, so more so before. So instead of Getting to that reactive place where you're just totally screwing things up and because, let's be real, not all of us wake up giddy and happy for the day and excited and willing to take on any task and deal with people's BS and all of that Not even Scientologists. So it's important, when you do get to this level, that that you remember that, because otherwise you just can invalidate yourself. So what I'm essentially saying is that because that reactivity was gone because of my state of clear, or at least I Would say, manageable- it's put it that way, it's a really good start, yeah it's a really good start.

Speaker 1:

You can then take an external, more bandit term in a stick Viewpoint in that okay, so if this person, this customer, is disgruntled or whatever, instead of, like in the past, I would be like, yeah, well, you should have done this and why don't you talk? You know, I would instead try to get them, get get an understanding of why they are frustrated and work with them with that frustration, instead of just yeah, and anybody who's a business owner is going to 100% Experienced disgruntled customers at some point or another, but it's how you deal with that. That is key.

Speaker 1:

And it doesn't necessarily just have to be customers. It can be also the people who you Are associated with your peers, your work colleagues, your any of those people, your bosses, etc. They also human. They also have their own frustrations and stuff. But it takes a logical mind to be able to solve problems and when you are reactive You're not thinking logically. You're thinking from the viewpoint of I want to be right, so this is what I'm gonna do and you will do. Whatever it takes doesn't matter if you turn on the tears, if you Start, you know behaving aggressively, or you're covered to hostile or you have unexpressed resentment, any of those lower tones. Those are reactive states to be in and when you are clear, you make the conscious decision not to be in those terms.

Speaker 2:

And how'd that help your business? I mean, you know what was, what was the end result? Besides dealing with customers and and and and their own reactive minds, I mean what? What got easier.

Speaker 1:

Well, I would say that, In being able to better communicate with customers which is a whole new subcategory of Scientology, which is the TRs, and you learn how communication affects things and, at the basic level, the ARC triangle, etc. But with, in terms of reactivity, when you're working with people and you can get them to a place of I want to say appeasement, but I don't when you can lower their own reactivity, where you can both find a solution to something, that really helps, because instead of making the other person wrong and losing a customer and possibly having that person damning your business, you can then go and be like okay, okay, this, I've had so many people that were customers that our customers stole because of being effective in communication and be like you know what? I understand your viewpoint. Let's work something out instead of just you know, pushing them away, because if you push somebody away, that's you've burnt that bridge. Customers always right and they know it. And also to anybody else, if it's not a customer, you can obviously settle disputes and and and people being annoyed and angry and frustrated Through just simple communication, which you do learn in Scientology.

Speaker 1:

Acknowledgements are so important. There was this one girl that I used to work with when I was working retail and I always used to before a new Scientology, always used to find that I was. I had I didn't know what it was at the time, but I had a RC brakes. It was just so annoying for me to talk to her that eventually led me to not talk, to not want to talk to her at all, because Whenever I used to speak to her, she would never give me an acknowledgement, not a nod, not a uh-huh, not a okay nothing, it was just dead, and that used to frustrate me, so that that is an example of improper communication that causes our C brakes.

Speaker 1:

And if you cause our C brakes with another person or they cause it with you, effective communication can't happen, obviously. And then what ends up happening is well, who knows, who knows what could happen down the line, because it builds If you have an air, a sea break, it can build on to the point that you start resenting the person, to the point that you Will start doing over it's against this person or, you know, third partying them, etc. So there's just all kinds. The bottom line is there's all kinds of insanity that can happen from your side and their side that Can stop you from growing as a person and if you can't grow as a person, you can't have the things that you want.

Speaker 1:

There's so many people that that that are considered quite, I'm gonna say a bit shallow, because they are Desperate for that having us, but they have absolutely no Intention of putting in the work in themselves. They do not want to change, they don't want to be any different than they are. They would rather just. Somebody solve it for them, yeah exactly, and that's the thing with Scientology it doesn't solve it for you. It gives you the tools that you can use to help yourself. That is it.

Speaker 2:

Now talk to me a bit about you. What did you see as far as your success in your business? Because it's a creative business. How did Scientology help you with your creativity?

Speaker 1:

Well, that's interesting, that's very interesting. So, as I said earlier on, there was this thing about my self-worth, and that creeps into every area, not just, you know, a person's appearance or anything. That creeps into your abilities as well. Your do. I would say that when I first started out, I thought I was an OK artist, and then, as I went on, I realized that there's more to this, there's more to my abilities, and that I can create anything that I want to. I remember at one point I created a realistic baby. Don't know if you remember that picture.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

But, and when I was done, I looked back and I was like I did that. So in terms of Scientology helping me with that, again, for me it began and ended with self-worth, which is beingness, and then it goes over onto doing this and then, because you know, you can't do art unless you, in some way, shape or form, consider yourself an artist as be. So the things that contributed to that, I would say there was the art series that helped quite a bit, but that's more in line of, you know, doing this. I would say auditing as a whole helped me because, again, it increased my self-worth.

Speaker 2:

And in what way did that help you improve as far as your you know, the skills and things like that and you know, hey, I can do this type of a thing. Was it something like that? Or was it just your ability to learn new tools and stuff like that with the Procreate app on the iPad and you know? I mean there have been lots of times I've heard you say things about you know I didn't know I could do that type of thing.

Speaker 1:

So, overall, the awareness is key. I also noticed that when I started Scientology, versus now, my IQ has increased, and if your IQ increased, that means you're your, your logical reasoning and perception increases. So in that way you can, you can learn things. For example, if you just want to be right, which is reactive, of course, if you just want to be right and you have no regard for anything else, it can really mess up your business, because at that point you look at things just from a self determined viewpoint instead of a pan determined viewpoint. So when you're doing art, you might want to just do like flowers, but your target audience is masculine. How's that going to help you? Now, that's obviously an extreme viewpoint. But even even even the subtle ones for example, most of my customers are from Texas or the Western world, the Western part of the Wild West, whatever, I don't know.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the West South, yeah the South yeah.

Speaker 1:

So it was challenging for me to get in it, but I decided that I was going to push myself and do all these things that they wanted and continue to do those things, because that was going to to to be good for my business. And obviously, if I was just set in my ways and was like, well, you know, I would rather just be doing pet portraits for the rest of my life, I would have missed this opportunity, and I had actually, when I was younger, missed lots of opportunities because of that viewpoint, because I was just, well, I don't want to do this, I just want to do that. I tell you when, when you decide that you want success and that it is absolutely crucial and necessary for your survival, you'll do what it takes. Now, I'm not talking about illegal stuff, because that's not, that's, that's crazy, that's, that's not what we're talking about here, but you will know how to sort of bend your own rules in order to achieve something.

Speaker 1:

So my role was always that I wanted to be an entrepreneur. I got that. Another rule was that I wanted to just do a certain thing like pet portraits in the beginning, and then I was like, well, you know what, if I can't have both, I at least want to have one, because if, if I just want to do portraits and that's not doing well, then it's better to just go with the entrepreneurship.

Speaker 1:

Right and basically what happened is at the end of the day.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and instead of sticking hard and fast to this is what I do, you inadvertently sit somewhere at some point, said you know, like I'm willing to do anything, and then one day somebody contacted you and said, hey, you know you'd be good at this, and that open, I mean, you know, the doors opening and things like that change when you, you, you change as far as what you can or you can't, and this is, this is a different kind of have. But when you can have that and instead say, well, I can't have that, I only do strictly, I do this. Yeah, and that's why people never go anywhere, because they have to be pan determinist about it. And we were just talking about this today to one of our auditors in training.

Speaker 2:

Is that pan determinism is? Is you know? Well, you know, this is what somebody? Somebody says I would be good at this. Is they say that I'd be good at it, I'm willing to give it a shot, instead of be closed-minded and put blinders on. You went in full bore and and it took off, and took off, and took off, and now you've got more business you can handle.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and, and there's something to be said. I watched a movie a while back and that often reminds me of my success when this guy man I wish I could remember what the movie was, but it might have been, yes, man. Mm-hmm where this guy was, went to this, I guess, motivational speakers conference thing or something, and it was a little bit cultish in a way, but he had, he, he had Completely transformed his life just by saying yes thanks, yeah, the Jim Carrey movie.

Speaker 1:

Yeah With me, because there's not a whole lot of withholds when, when you reach, you know past a certain state, you start saying yes, more so there are things that Aligned but I would have said no to in the past instead of just saying yes.

Speaker 1:

Now again, I'm not talking about the crazy stuff or the illegal stuff or anything like that, but saying yes in terms of things that is beneficial for your survival, based on this is also very important to know based on reasoning, so and and logical thinking. So you don't want to go and do something that's gonna be negative, but you kind of see where there is an alignment of, I guess, your postulates and when you can discover, okay, these statistics would benefit me better than what I'm currently doing now. That's when you go for it. There's also something to say, which you had just reminded me of, about how I got here. There's also something to say about what you pull in. So if your intentions align and you start working for yourself and and making things work for you and, and you really get out of your own way, and you don't have all this, this, these, these mock-ups in your, in your way, you Will attract the things that you want. So you call it an OT ability or whatever. It goes beyond just the physical aspects of life people.

Speaker 1:

Beings who, yeah, beings who align with your purpose, your true purpose, the thing that sets your soul on fire, the thing that you want to do, it's gonna happen. And If you, if you have second thoughts about, about doing those things, it's not gonna happen because it's, it then becomes a question of is this what I should be doing? Is?

Speaker 2:

this not what I should be doing. An unequivocal postulate, exactly tone 40? Yeah, there we go. Yes, and so beings, because they they are basically good, they align with your purpose you will pull in the people that Aid your goals and aid their goals, and it all becomes a sort of a mesh and it all works out as as long as you get your own First dynamic in a line.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, 100%.

Speaker 2:

Well, we've hit the 43 minute mark here. Sign taller girl. I've really enjoyed the Conversation and I I think our listeners will get a big kick out of it too, because it's it applies to everyone. Yeah, everybody has a dream or a postulate or a goal that they want to achieve, and and with it comes financial success. And I'll ultimately mean more importantly, happiness is money doesn't make you happy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the key takeaways are that, if, if you get auditing and you do study independence, ontology and you become more self-determined, you will also become more aware, and in that way, you will be able to be in alignment with your own goals and, as such, bring people who will contribute to your life, and that will lead to eventual success absolutely Well, folks, we hope you've enjoyed this.

Speaker 2:

We'll see you on our next podcast tomorrow. Relisa, sign taller girl, and myself we bid you adieu, namaste, and we love you Bye.

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