Friday, January 22, 2010

Master Planning for Life

Some of you are aware that I have recently had the privilege of participating in Dr. John DeMartini's Master Planning Workshop. My prior experiences with Dr. DeMartini have included his powerful lectures at Parker Seminars, Personal consulting, and his amazing Breakthrough Experience Seminar featuring the DeMartini Method.

The Master Planning Seminar is the best seminar I have ever attended. I have attended over 100 seminars on health, healing, and personal development but I never had the opportunity to come back from a Seminar with an actual product that I had co-created with someone who is a master of universal laws.

The workshop provided an opportunity to write about (in-depth) my perceptions on all seven areas of life (Physical, Mental, Spiritual, Family, Financial, Social, and Career). The key word being, my perceptions. The participants had to answer detailed questions formulated by Dr. DeMartini about each of these seven areas. Each one of these questions made you take a stance about the reality you want.

I would say that I have tried to live a relatively conscious life but the level Dr. DeMartini revealed to me was humbling.

The hardest part for me was to write about my spirituality. I had always believed certain things about the Universe, God, and myself but now I had to document them and be co-creative in the process.

How many times in your life, have you asked the question...what are the spiritual rules for me? Well, I decided mine in written form in January 2010. No one else, just me. No priest, No temple, just a series of thoughts that I felt connected to and found to be congruent with my soul.

I clearly remember the day I received my driver's license when I was 16. I drove home from the westend of town, with my driving instructor, declared my freedom the moment I entered the house. The friday night that came after, as I drove my friends around, was the liberating. This seminar was like getting my license to be conscious.

Working through every section was not smooth. It was not exciting or glamorous. It was not an orgasm of epiphanies. It was rewarding. At the end of the seminar, I had the most honest document I had ever created about my life, which, I intend on reviewing and revising every week.

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