Adulthood: Revisited
Episode 86: The Responsibilties Created By 5 Year Old You
December 15, 2020
What's going on, A:R Nation?! Here's hoping all's well on your end. I had a pretty cool call earlier with Ian Stanley. If you've never heard of him, Ian is an internet marketer, and in the last couple of years, he's really been promoting the power of meditation to realize change in your life. This call was about money blocks in your life. Almost immediately, he started talking about how strong many of these blocks can be, and how many of them were unintentionally created by the people in our lives, like our parents, aunts, uncles, teachers, friends, and so on. Unwittingly, someone may have said something when we were younger that created a block in our lives. You weren't a fan of doing chores, so your parents offered you money to do your chores. Guess what? You may associate making money with doing things that you'd rather not be doing. Shifting the perspective, and really understanding the magnitude of the responsibility we carry with our words and actions, we almost owe it to our younger selves to be the best that we can be. If we don't want future generations to struggle with our struggles, we have a duty to exercise more discernment with how we are being in the world. It's a responsibility, and almost a duty to be our best self. In pursuit of that, we just might actually experience our own lives improving, as well. The power is in the doing. This is the Adulthood:Revisited podcast.

What's going on, A:R Nation?!

Here's hoping all's well on your end.

I had a pretty cool call earlier with Ian Stanley.

If you've never heard of him, Ian is an internet marketer, and in the last couple of years, he's really been promoting the power of meditation to realize change in your life.

This call was about money blocks in your life.

Almost immediately, he started talking about how strong many of these blocks can be, and how many of them were unintentionally created by the people in our lives, like our parents, aunts, uncles, teachers, friends, and so on.

Unwittingly, someone may have said something when we were younger that created a block in our lives.

You weren't a fan of doing chores, so your parents offered you money to do your chores.

Guess what? You may associate making money with doing things that you'd rather not be doing.

Shifting the perspective, and really understanding the magnitude of the responsibility we carry with our words and actions, we almost owe it to our younger selves to be the best that we can be.

If we don't want future generations to struggle with our struggles, we have a duty to exercise more discernment with how we are being in the world.

It's a responsibility, and almost a duty to be our best self.

In pursuit of that, we just might actually experience our own lives improving, as well.

The power is in the doing. This is the Adulthood:Revisited podcast.