By The Corporate Ninja, Ron Lee
The Corporate Ninja explains how you can achieve more than you want.
"Nothing exists and everything is an illusion based on our perspective and perception."
I said that on the phone one night to a friend who has several science degrees, two of which are in physics. After asking me to repeat it, she said, "Look, I'm a physicist and I know that things exist".
"Do you really? Tell me what you think exists."
I heard a knocking sound and Lillian said, "That's my dining room table. It's made of wood and I know that it exists."
"Are you sure?"
"What are you getting at?" she asked with a hint of reservation in her voice, as if she was beginning to doubt her own certainty and wanted clarity.
"If you were an x-ray, would the table exist in the form that you see it now?"
"No, it would still be here, and I would be aware of it, but I would pass right through it."
"Okay, if you were a neutrino (more than fifty trillion solar electron neutrinos pass through our bodies every second), would that wooden table be in your field of awareness at all?"
After a couple of seconds of deliberation, Lillian said, "No, I would pass through it and it wouldn't exist at all...Hmmm...Let me get back to you."
The fact is, whatever you believe to be true from your perspective, according to your perception, is the truth; it's your reality.
This also applies to your view of yourself, your capacity to achieve and your worthiness to succeed.
I started school in Australia in the late 1950s, in the midst of the White Australia Policy, at a time when the government was encouraging immigration of caucasians and discouraging the ‘yellow hoards' from our immediate north. Even though my parents and I were born in Australia, I was abused and victimised and name-calling was constant, so my self-worth was very low.
It wasn't until the age of 37 that I realised I was never going to be a Nordic blonde and that I should do something with what I have, and The Corporate Ninja was born.
This coincided with a major career move. I had decided that being a self-employed financial planner wasn't my calling, considering I was going broke, so I became a full-time professional speaker and executive trainer. In the first year, I earned twice as much as my previous best year, and after focusing on adding value to clients' experiences, revenue doubled again.
So, was almost going broke good or bad? BAD, at least at the time.
Now that I'm earning a good living, travelling the world and living my life purpose of helping people to empower themselves to become what they need to become so they can do what they're destined to do, was that experience good or bad?
Everything that happens to us is based on our perspectives and perceptions.
You can achieve more than you want with less effort.
The Corporate Ninja, Ron Lee, CSP, uses Eastern/Western philosophies, universal laws, and practical metaaphysics to achieve outstanding results for corporations.
corporate-ninja.com