284: Growing Up vs Waking Up

Old Souls and Seekers - A podcast by Guy & Ilan Ferdman - Mondays

Categories:

We've been in the personal development space now for over 20 years. We spent the first 15 years doing the old-school personal development stuff, the Tony Robbins, Wayne Dyer, re-framing, and mindset stuff you're probably also familiar with. When we are looking to achieve certain results and constantly move forward and process, while that’s all great - it’s not the whole pictureIlan Ferdman What we found after 15 years of this old-school work that was created in the 1960s is that it got to a plateau where it just wasn't helping anymore. Even though it had been helpful and gotten us success in life, there were still patterns that kept appearing and triggering. It got to a point of frustration where we began to feel stuck again, even after all these years of personal growth. The old-school work wasn't doing it for us. And that's when we found this other area of personal development that we'd never really heard of before. This was the key to the next level. In today's episode, we'll give you clarity on why after all these years of personal growth you still feel stuck and we'll share with you the key to unlocking your next level of success in the simplest way possible. Tune in! Episode Timestamps: 3.00 The benefits of an Aura ring  8.00 Calming down the nervous system with outside input 14.00 The distinction between growing up vs waking up work 20.00 Old school personal development work 30.00 The waking up work  40.00 Why bypassing the parts doesn’t work 45.00 Why it’s so hard to do waking up work on your own 50.00 How to get to the next level in the simplest way You cannot run away from who you are. You can not understand your way out of who you are.Ilan Ferdman OUR NEXT LIVE EVENT IS COMING UP: Is It Really Possible To Completely Transform Your Life In Just Two Days Using These Little Known Awareness and Energetic Techniques? Tap here to learn more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices