How To Attract Abundance by Manoj Sharma

December 29, 2006

It is not what is being said. It is who is saying it. So, read the following words silently and listen carefully to them come alive from within you.

The 21 Laws of Abundance by Manoj Sharma.

1. Abundance is the rule of plenty, it is all around you.
2. Abundance flows from your spirit, through your mind and body, into your reality.
3. Abundance is your creativity manifested.
4. Your level of consciousness co-relates to your level of abundance. The higher your level of consciousness, the higher your experience of abundance.
5. Abundance is not about what you have or do not have. It is your relationship with both.
6. While abundance is present everywhere, you still need to create it for yourself.
7. Abundance is beyond your physical realm. It’s a non-physical reality.
8. Your experience of abundance is based on your predominant continuous thoughts.
9. Seeds of abundance produce fruits of abundance. Abundance observes the principle of cause and effect.
10. Your abundance or lack of it has nothing to do with another.
11. Abundance is a long-term attitude, not a short-term wish.
12. Abundance is based on what is happening internally, not what you express externally.
13. Abundance or the lack of it take effect independent of your awareness.
14. Your relationship with abundance is betrayed by your relationship with what you have and do not have.
15. Abundance is caring, not care-less.
16. Knowing the laws of abundance allows you to create abundance.
17. Abundance attracts abundance.
18. Recognize your abundance. Think abundant thoughts. Speak the language of abundance. Act with abundance. Reap abundant results.
19. The universe freely bestows abundance, it is up to you to appreciate and experience it.
20. Your continuous abundance in giving is multiplied in receiving.
21. The laws of abundance are consistent, ever present, eternal universal laws.

Out of abundance, he took abundance and still abundance remained. - The Upanishads

Robert Pante’s 5 Fundamentals of Professional Coaching, Consulting & Advising

December 28, 2006

Robert Panté is part of DifferWorld’s Professional Faculty. He is a world renowned speaker, author and media personality. When Robert Panté Speaks… people listen!

The truth is he is far more than that. He is a master, a mentor and above all a friend. An extraordinary gentleman living an extraordinary life - bringing magic into people’s lives on a daily basis. The following are Robert’s Method of Professional Coaching, Consulting and Advising.

Robert Pante’s 5 Fundamentals of Professional Coaching, Consulting & Advising

1. Create a consciousness of deserving, worthiness, greater beauty, power and prominence. Build the client! Empower a readiness to excel and expand. Basically, nurture good, outstanding, viable qualities.
2. Sustain in the client the awareness of her/his real and genuine beauty. See, talk and continually reveal the essential beauty of client - constantly reiterate and support clients over their hurdles.
3. Destroy the negative false impressions that are present and hidden in the client’s psyche, mindset, self-image and belief. Dissolve destructive feelings, untruths and harmful concepts about themselves, removing fears and obstacles.
4. Captivate, control and convert the client’s mind from uncontrolled dualistic and negative thinking about himself/herself. Catalyse the value of non-verbal beauty and presence; the importance of rising to their most impactful, appealing and attractive self.
5. Inspire and extol the client by transmitting his/her energy, his/her powers and knowledge of the true inner beauty and personal power that is residing”within” the client. The client needs to experience an awakening and become aware of his/her own radiating attractiveness, beauty and fineness - constantly instilling a true sense and experience of personal abundance, high qualities and genuine appeal.

How does Robert do all of the above? In a word - magically.

For the benefit of the rest of us Robert has revealed briefly what he looks out for in THE FIRST ENCOUNTER.

“I take a quick snapshot, in my mind and make quick mental notes as well as noting what I am feeling and sensing in the presence of this person. I take quick note of their…

* Body structure, presence, attitude and immediate impact
* The message of their clothes
* Their quality of grooming - hair, make up, scent
* Style consciousness
* Level of personal sophistication and personal style
* Their social impact and gradients of their poise and grace, confidence and control, dominance and strength, command and power, etc…”

This is just a brief glimpse of the masterfulness of someone who has delivered over 2,000 keynotes, seminars and workshops over 3 decades around the world.

If you’re interested in get in touch with Robert for some Professional Coaching or would like him to run a keynote, seminar, workshop or course internationally please contact us so that we can assist you be at your best.

Einstein’s Biggest Blunder

December 28, 2006

Even geniuses make mistakes.

When Albert Einstein formulated General Relativity in 1915, he was not aware the Universe was expanding. Large scale structure in the form of galaxies was not known and all fuzzy luminous nebulae were considered basically similar and within stellar distance scales. Only with Hubble work in 1930 came the realization some of those nebulae were in fact island universes, and that they were not only very far, but also receding from us at enormous speeds. This was not known for Einstein, and since gravitation exerts its influence up to infinity, it was natural for him to postulate some force working in the preservation of an apparent equilibrium among matter, preventing universal collapse. This is why he postulated the Cosmological Constant, symbolized by the Greek letter Lambda, and included a term accounting for it in the field equations.
Once universal expansion was discovered, the need for an unknown repulsive agent could be dropped and Einstein dismissed the Cosmological Constant as his “biggest blunder”.

Charlie Rose interviews Warren Buffett Part 3 of 3

December 28, 2006

Examining his gift to foundations

Charlie Rose interviews Warren Buffett Part 2 of 3

December 28, 2006

Great insights into his business philosophy.

Charlie Rose interviews Warren Buffett Part 1 of 3

December 28, 2006

A wonderfully engaging program that gives great insight into how Warren Buffet thinks and what’s he values. And thought provoking too.

Manoj Sharma on Einstein’s The Chase

December 27, 2006

All of us in our younger days seems to have a significantly different view of life from when we get older. This of course also applies to how our points of view differ from what they are today to what they will be when we are truly old.

It is with this relativity in mind that I read Einstein’s words.

The chase - The truth is we are all caught in it in one shape or form at one time or another. Often time we are unclear on what we are chasing, why we are chasing it and if we are chasing anything at all.

What causes this chase? Einstein suggests that it is the mere existence of our stomach. Our desire and capicity to consume be it in a physical or metaphysical form. He also suggests that while the physical chase might be satistfied it may not necessarily satisfy our metaphysical chase represented by his words “not man insofar as he is a thinking and feeling being”.

Experience in life be it long or shortlived shows this to be true. Whatever your desires may be, there are always others that crop up even before the initial ones are fully satisfied. So what of pusuing the path of achievement which in today’s world seems to be mostly a chase for higher levels of comfort (which Einstein’s metaphorically called the stomach)?

So the the question is then one of will the desires that you chase ever be satisfied. Objectively, both you and I know the answer is a certain “no”! Why then the never ending pursuit of it? Interesting!
This are some of the questions I cover quite extensively in a course I run called The Principles of Money and I also cover in a article I wrote in Cebu, Philippines under the Free Articles page entitled The Wisdom of Ages 1 - The Human Condition Read the links above, contemplate Einstein’s and my thoughts, develop your own insights and do drop me a note through www.DifferWorld.com or www.ManojSharma.com I look forward to hearing from all of you.

Einstein’s The Chase

December 27, 2006

Einstein:

When I was a fairly precocious young man I became thoroughly impressed with the futility of the hopes and strivings that chase most men restlessly through life. Moreover, I soon discovered the cruelty of that chase, which in those years was much more carefully covered up by hypocrisy and glittering words than is the case today. By the mere existence of his stomach everyone was condemned to participate in that chase. The stomach might well be satisfied by such participation, but not man insofar as he is a thinking and feeling being.

Manoj Sharma on Einstein’s Credo

December 27, 2006

I’m sure as you read more in this Einstein series you’ll unravel just how fascinating a mind Einstein had. I have put together for you a brief summary of my interpretation of his credo.

The situation is strange

Seemingly we do not see to get to choose to be born, are here for a relatively brief moment, living for all intents oblivious to our “true purpose” - which may forever remain elusive.

There may be no free will

We may only be here ironically for the sake of others once we appreciate the interconnectedness and interdependence of us all. Also we build our lives on the lives of others and for this a certain indebtedness might be in order.

He was against

1. Affluence and luxury
2. Unnecessary obligation and dependence
3. Violence and clubmanship
4. Military
5. Nationalism
6. Priviledge based on position and property

He was for

1. Social justice
2. The individual
3. Pacifism
4. Democracy
5. Social equality
6. Economic protection

A religious loner

He saw himself as a loner who was part of an invisible community of truth, beauty and justice. He perceived that the most beautiful experience was that of the mysterious be it in art of science. He dubbed this experience religiousness - a feeble indirect reflection of beauty and sublimity that our minds cannot grasp.

Einstein’s Credo

December 27, 2006

I have decided to keep the Einstien theme going for the next couple of weeks in which we wil explore Einstein’s perspective on a variety of subjects. Here are some extracts of his credo. Please read through it and take the time to pen down your own thoughts on what your credo is. You are welcome to send me your own thoughts through www.DifferWorld.com or www.ManojSharma.com

Einstein:

Our situation on this earth seems strange. Every one of us appears here involuntarily and uninvited for a short stay, without knowing the whys and the wherefore. In our daily lives we only feel that man is here for the sake of others, for those whom we love and for many other beings whose fate is connected with our own. I am often worried at the thought that my life is based to such a large extent on the work of my fellow human beings and I am aware of my great indebtedness to them.

I do not believe in freedom of the will. Schopenhauer’s words: “Man can do what he wants, but he cannot will what he wills” accompany me in all situations throughout my life and reconcile me with the actions of others even if they are rather painful to me. This awareness of the lack of freedom of will preserves me from taking too seriously myself and my fellow men as acting and deciding individuals and from losing my temper.

I never coveted affluence and luxury and even despise them a good deal.

My passion for social justice has often brought me into conflict with people, as did my aversion to any obligation and dependence I do not regard as absolutely necessary. I always have a high regard for the individual and have an insuperable distaste for violence and clubmanship.

All these motives made me into a passionate pactfist and anti-militarist. I am against any nationalism, even in the guise of mere patriotism. Privileges based on position and property have always seemed to me unjust and pernicious, as did any exaggerated personality cult.

I am an adherent of the ideal of democracy, although I well know the weaknesses of the democratic form of government. Social equality and economic protection of the individual appeared to me always as the important communal aims of the state.

Although I am a typical loner in daily life, my consciousness of belonging to the invisible community of those who strive for truth, beauty, and justice has preserved me from feeling isolated.

The most beautiful and deepest experience a man can have is the sense of the mysterious. It is the underlying principle of religion as well as all serious endeavour in art and science. He who never had this experience seems to me, if not dead, then at least blind. To sense that behind anything that can be experienced there is a something that our mind cannot grasp and whose beauty and sublimity reaches us only indirectly and as a feeble reflection, this is religiousness.

In this sense I am religious. To me it suffices to wonder at these secrets and to attempt humbly to grasp with my mind a mere image of the lofty structure of all that there is.

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