All in Self care and Setting boundaries
I open my book Heart, Mind & Money by explaining that we all have a little bit of the prostitute archetype in us because we all have the capacity to do things for money. Things we don’t want to do.
We have multiple archetypes - one is dominant. But the dominant archetype may not run the show when it comes to money.
It may be the shadow of that archetype that runs the show or it may be any of our other archetypes.
We also have collective archetypes and those also have a huge/ major influence on the money archetypes as well.
Because these are the archetypes and shadows we see play out in our daily lives.
As I’ve been doing a lot of inner child meditations lately and I had this epiphany this morning that so many of my emotions that I thought come from adulthood and events that are happening in this moment, don't come from there.
I've just conditioned myself to react and feel in a particular way from childhood, and most of the events in my adulthood just trigger those emotions and I’m reacting from that space of hurt.
A few months ago I'd recorded an inner child meditation for the Creating Money Magic course and something weird happened - it disappeared.
Students asked me what happened to it and I couldn't find it anywhere in my files, I must have deleted it from the course and my laptop
The last few weeks have been insane, made more so by anger and guilt emotions that have surfaced around money.
I went to South Africa for 3 weeks and toured the country to my heart’s content. I got back to South Korea on Saturday, and am now packing to leave for Sri Lanka to go get some tantric body work.
But somewhere in the midst of all this, something happened to me – anger!
There’s nothing like having people who ask you – “how can I help you reach your business goals today” and then go all out and help you reach those goals. That sense of support and feeling of connectedness has helped me on my entrepreneurial journey…
We lose control of our destiny when we let others define success for us
Jim Rohn once said, “Formal education will make you a living; self-education will make you a fortune.”
When I started out as an entrepreneur, after graduating from business school, I had very set ideas on how to build a startup and what a writer turned entrepreneur should do. After all I had spent God knows how much money getting an MBA to buy into academia’s ideas of success and entrepreneurship.