The most important thing I never learned in Landmark… that allowed me to grow
In 1967 I applied to participate in a 6-day on site advanced program in Landmark… it was still called Werner Erhard and Associates at the time.
I was denied. The staff member for admittance told me: Until you learn the difference between thinking and doing, you can’t do the course.
I had no idea what she meant. But I wanted to do the course… so I called her daily. And tried different ways to prove to her that I knew the difference… I got in by mistake.
What you are, instead alive, is a walking dead, resigned, and settled for the little that, it seems, life has to offer. To you. You see others, seemingly happy, seemingly alive, and you feel regret, shame, and envy.
Your heart, where rain forests and colorful birds, and life used to live, is devastated. The lush rain forests gone, the birds gone, life: gone.
Your ups and downs are tiny, not like a roller coaster. They are about money, or noise, or that you are fat, or skinny, or that you are aging. Irrelevant circumstances.
Maybe it is about someone being sick, maybe dying… but that is also a circumstance.
Human DNA is like a Christmas tree: it has lots of light on, and even more lights off.
A light on is a human capacity that is active. A light off is a human capacity that is not active.
Evolution of the species is an inside job. It happens on the DNA level: some capacities turn on.
But how do these capacities turn on, and why isn’t everybody the same on the level of DNA?
A DNA capacity turns on when it’s needed. Comfort, peace, smooth living don’t turn on new capacities.
You don’t need them. You could use them, but you don’t need them.
When I
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