I heard from a client the other day that he realized that his friend who had taken a spirituality course had been deceived.
Originally, this person had told his friend that he should stop, but he did not listen to him and took several courses and workshops to become a healer or a spiritual counselor.
After taking the course for a few months, he advertised his business on social networking sites and used social networking to attract customers.
What do your customers think about this friend’s behavior? I had been asked before.
Well, I really couldn’t say, since everyone is different, but the one thing that came out of my mouth was, “Don’t lick my spirituality.” I said to him, “Don’t lick spirituality.
We know full well that it is not that easy a world.
But, after all, it is a spiritual course, and the content seems to inspire hope and dreams.
That said, I myself have never taken any spiritual courses other than Aura-Soma, but I have heard of people who have taken questionable spiritual courses…
It seems similar to self-help.
It seems to be a mix of spirituality and self-development, which is what makes it so exciting to receive.
You feel like you can do magical things, you feel like you are amazing, you feel like you can do anything, and you feel like it will work.
The point is to give us positive thoughts.
And then, without fail, the story of the Law of Attraction enters the picture, as if it were a promise.( ̄▽ ̄)
So you think, “If I change and feel positive, I’ll get paid and it will work out!” I think that’s why people think, “If I feel positive and change, the money will come in and it will work out!
Positivity is largely a function of one’s original personality and upbringing, so it is not easy to become positive just by taking a course or training, and even if one becomes positive at that time, it does not last long.
In the end, the friend only had two acquaintances come in when he first opened his business, and then he never received any customers.
He noticed one thing after another that was wrong with the company that was operating again, and he realized that he had been deceived. (He paid quite a bit of money for a little bit of deception.)
But this story is just the tip of the iceberg.
Being in this industry for many years, I hear many such stories, even if I don’t like them.
And I feel bad every time I hear it.
But even such deceptive courses can be accepted in this industry as long as they are well advertised.