Landmark Education and the Landmark Forum

December 14, 2009

e-patient Dave Advocates for Participatory Medicine

Filed under: inspiration — Tags: , , — landmarkeducationinaustralia @ 5:47 pm

Today’s post comes from “e-patient Dave”. e-patient Dave is Dave DeBronkart, who was featured in the Boston Globe earlier this year as example of how the new “Google Health” system of taking computerized insurance records could be extremely inaccurate and/or misleading. DeBonkart has apparently become a well-known advocate for patient rights, in particular the right of a patient to see all their medical data, giving a keynote speech on the same subject at a recent Medicine 2.0 conference.

DeBonkart mentions that the Landmark Forum was pivotal in his life in how he’s being dealing with his cancer and in his advocacy of participative medicine. The whole thing is really quite inspiring – DeBonkart has some very unfortunate circumstances, and how he’s dealt with them should be a model for us all – using tragedy and crisis as a reason to get passionately involved in making a difference, rather than succumbing to gloom or self-pity.

Read the whole “Power to the Patient” article, which also tells a bit more about Dave’s Landmark experience, on the Significant Science blog.

December 9, 2009

Uncrazy review of the Landmark Forum

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — landmarkeducationinaustralia @ 1:37 am

Today’s review comes from the Digressica blog, proof positive that even those with cynical worldviews get something out of the Landmark Forum.

She’s got a pretty balanced view of the course – likes the stuff about humans adding meaning to life and the power of keeping one’s promises, not so high on lots of marketing and new age types around the course. Fair enough.

In all, Digressica isn’t as high on The Landmark Forum as I am, but because she turned me on to Ask a Ninja’s review of the movie Ninja Assassin, I’ll cut her some slack. It’s worth reading if you want a level-headed review of the Landmark Forum that isn’t cheerleading (like yours truly) and isn’t from one of those crazy ‘Landmark is da devil!’ types. Enough of my jabbering, check out her uncrazy review of the landmark forum.

December 1, 2009

Love under Less than Perfect Circumstances

Filed under: Breakthrough Results, inspiration — Tags: , , — landmarkeducationinaustralia @ 4:45 pm

In today’s society, it seems that most of our goals are forward looking things, based on our own grand visions of success and accomplishment. What money we’ll make, what impressive new job post we’ll have, onwards and upwards.

Sometimes it seems that the greatest accomplishments are those related to our living of our day to day life – the ability to be happy and have our ordinary days have meaning and be worthwhile in the face of life circumstances that are not perfect.

It is in this mode of thinking that I read a very moving blog written by someone who titles herself “lazy woman” and who writes about her experience of the American Holiday of Thanksgiving. Appropriate to what she writes about, the holiday urges one to give thanks for what one actually has – dreams and ambitions are fabulous, but true gratitude for what one has in the present moment is priceless.

The woman has a mother who is a schizophrenic, who is delusional and talks to herself. She writes how she recently took The Landmark Forum and decided that rather than avoiding her mother, she would look at her relationship with her as an opportunity to give love. As a result, she had a Thanksgiving experience that was truly extraordinary. Here’s a piece of it:

My mother is an undiagnosed paranoid schizophrenic — undiagnosed because she thinks nothing is wrong with thinking that three different people, including the government, are tapping her phone. Therefore, a normal relationship is tough. For a while I thought the best way, the healthiest for her and me, to have a relationship was to severely limit contact.

I reviewed the Landmark Forum a few weeks ago — six years after I took it the first time — and I got the major lesson again that I got the first time — that I want to seek opportunities to give love, rather than shy away from them. So, the first big deal post-Forum was Aaron, my boyfriend, got to meet her for the very first time. He had been begging to meet her for months. He was thrilled, she was thrilled, and all-in-all it went off in a rather carefree, lovely way. So much so in fact that we invited her to Thanksgiving.

What? With Aaron’s 16 and 20 year old? I wanted to protect them from the oddness, wanted to really protect myself from embarassment, and crawl under a rock. But, instead we ALL rose to the occasion. His kids were lovely and so mature. He was his consummate generous, easy self. And, I was really better than I’ve ever been with her either. I will say I had moments of internal freak outs when I found her carrying on quiet full conversations with the little voice or voices in her head while she dried the dishes, but I let them go fairly quickly because my god there really was so much to be thankful for, in all its shapes and sizes, love, love, and more love.

Read more of this extraordinary post by this so-called lazy woman!

November 10, 2009

The Landmark Forum in a Nutshell

Filed under: inspiration — Tags: — landmarkeducationinaustralia @ 4:27 pm

Sometimes I see people who have done many of Landmark Education courses struggle to put into words what they have gotten from the programs, and struggle to say exactly how the programs work and what results they produce for people. Perhaps because of this, I’m always strangely amused when I see a person who has just completed the Landmark Forum simply and succinctly summarize what course is and how it works.

This personal blog does just that. Although the post is longer than this, here’s the Landmark Forum in a nutshell:

“Landmark uses a lot of mumbo-jumbo lingo, but the ideas are actually pretty simple. Take responsibility for your actions, your life and your future. Stop dwelling on the past. Stop complaining, gossiping and passing judgment. Be generous, free, accepting, and authentic. Love more. Live more. How can you argue with that?”

There – was that so hard?

The whole blog is worth reading – visit this woman’s website to read it.

August 7, 2009

Landmark Education: a View from New York

Filed under: inspiration — Tags: , , , — landmarkeducationinaustralia @ 8:00 pm

A lot of interesting reviews of Landmark Education and the Landmark Forum have been appearing in the last week or so – this one that I just noticed comes from a woman in New York is both well written and insightful. It doesn’t pretend Landmark Education is perfect, and at the same time speaks about how and why Landmark’s courses makes a powerful difference for most people. The whole article is at The Examiner.

Landmark Education: a conflicted Love Story

Landmark Education is one of the most contentious and controversial pioneers in the personal empowerment field. Most of their courses are a three-day rollercoaster that at their best, leave participants with a radically expanded sense of self and accountability to one’s own power.

I went through Landmark’s three course Curriculum for Living in 2007, and overall had a fabulous experience, despite a few issues that I’ll detail later in this essay. The introductory course is the most well known: the Forum. It can be taken alone, or as part of the larger series of two other courses that build on one another: the advanced course, and the self expression and leadership program. The purpose of the Forum is to help people determine, deconstruct and disappear limiting beliefs that they have been clinging to that get in the way of living their most fulfilling lives. The course is largely sold on its ability to inspire and motivate people into creating instant breakthroughs: that multi-million dollar opportunity after years of being broke, suddenly quitting your job to become a world traveling yogi, etc. Though the participants’ accomplishments tend to be more down to earth (healing a rift in a family relationship, asking for a long overdue raise, meeting a potential soulmate, reclaiming one’s artistic expression – these are common themes), the best thing about Landmark is that they are very adept paradigm shifters. Through a series of interactive exercises, they demonstrate the mechanics of how a shift in consciousness opens up the internal floodgates such that loftier goals do immediately become more within reach.

[Read the rest at the link above.]

August 5, 2009

Landmark Forum Review: cult, cult, cult?

Filed under: Breakthrough Results, inspiration — Tags: , , — landmarkeducationinaustralia @ 9:40 pm

This might be the best Landmark Forum review I’ve ever come across, if the criteria are humor combined with insight combined with paranoia about joining a cult.

Landmark Forum review

I am joining a cult. My mind kept saying, Cult, Cult, Cult, Cult. Yes, okay so what if it’s a cult, does it hurt to go and see what they do for three days?

A friend of a friend of mine (let’s call him Bob) told me ever so briefly that I should do the Landmark Forum. I was a little hesitant at first simply because none of the other people I knew were going to do it with me.

Go on and read the whole thing on the Cognicology blog).

August 4, 2009

Inside the Landmark Forum Review

Filed under: Breakthrough Results, inspiration — Tags: , — landmarkeducationinaustralia @ 3:41 pm

Here’s a fairly straightforward review of the Landmark Forum I found on the blog of a man named Gary Sager. He clearly articulates some of the ideas behind the program, and goes one step further and compares it to some of the other personal development programs out there (read his entire review on his success blog).

Landmark Education and Landmark Forum: An inside look

“The possibility I am inventing for myself and my life is _________” You fill in the blank. What possibility do you see for yourself? Landmark Forum teaches the technology for producing new possibilities and breakthrough results. It teaches personal transformation as a way of living.

I just completed my first Landmark Forum presented by Landmark Education in San Jose, California. I was introduced to Landmark Forum by a friend who was completing the Landmark Forum last year and she called my wife and me and invited us to a free evening session to find out about the Landmark Forum.

[Read the rest at the link above.]

June 29, 2009

What Happens in the Landmark Forum, Second Day

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — landmarkeducationinaustralia @ 8:00 pm

The blogger who previously wrote about the Landmark Forum’s first day has added a description of the course’s second day – like the first part, it’s worth reading. Here are parts of it – to read the whole thing, go the My Landmark Forum Experience blog.

My Landmark Forum Experience

On the second day we learn to accept that the lies are lies, and that we do not have to be bound by those lies. Basically, you are what you are (pretty simple right?); so if you do not like what you are, no longer be that, become something else. You do not need to let the past lies constrain you and prevent you from becoming what you want to be.

Speaking of the past, basically (what I took from it), is use the past for what it is, a learning experience, but do not let it dictate what you do in the future. If you truly want to do something and have failed previously, or maybe where made fun of for doing, or anything like that; do not let it prevent you from doing it again.

In addition, don’t dwell on the past. If a dog does something bad and they get yelled at, do you think they spend the next 5 years of their life thinking about how “bad” they were, no, they get over it…and you should too. If you did something you regret, oh well, don’t do it again, but don’t go around killing yourself for it so that you are currently unhappy.

June 2, 2009

Grateful for her Life

Filed under: Breakthrough Results, inspiration — Tags: , , — landmarkeducationinaustralia @ 8:46 pm

This blog post comes from a woman from New York City in the United States, who describes her experience of taking the Landmark Forum. I think her post/Landmark Forum review is notable for two things: it points out how ridiculous some of the negative things you can find about Landmark Education on the web really are, and it also expresses what I would describe as one woman’s profound gratefulness to be alive and create what she wants with the rest of her life. Here is some of NYC Mama’s post:

So Grateful

So, this past week has been filled with a roller coaster ride of ups and downs. My birthday and the day after left me feeling a bit ‘blah”, to tell the truth, and I was worried I was getting a case of the Birthday Blues. Luckily for me in the beginning of May I had signed up to do the Landmark Forum the weekend after my birthday. It was truly, aside from having my son, the most transformative experience I have ever had. I was a bit skeptical going into it, because when you Google the Landmark Forum you get all this “cult” stuff about them. I can understand that though, I mean, Christianity, Islam, even Buddhism were all cults when they started out because their perspective was so radically different from what was being taught at the time. The thing is, one of the closest people in my life to me did the Forum in April and I saw with my own two eyes the positive change it had on her. I knew then I didn’t really have anything to lose anyway; I’m way too level-headed to get sucked up into drinking Jim Jones’ Kool-Aid. She assured me that it was nothing like that, and she too is one of the most practical and level-headed people I know. She had become so free from all the tension and negative intensity that had ruled her life for so long after the Forum. She seemed so much more peaceful and contented, still her, but like a Her 2.0 version of herself, lol. The changes in her were so pleasant and positive.

By the time I signed up, I was in desperate need of a pleasant and positive change.

It’s not a very easy experience to describe, except to say that it transforms the way you look at yourself, your past, and your life. Indeed, life in general. I feel free in a way I haven’t since childhood. I have been given the gift of a release from the burdens of the past to create my life and my future. What a gift. Happy Birthday to me!

Read the rest at the link above.

April 16, 2009

Decisions Made in the Past

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — landmarkeducationinaustralia @ 10:31 pm

This post quotes Chris Hughes, who has been very successful in the personal development field. He blogs that he just completed the Landmark Forum, and describes the course and what he got out of it. I especially like how he talks about realizing that he made decisions that he wasn’t good at certain things, particularly sports.

How to Transform your Life in 3 and a half days

This past weekend I attend a weekend “seminar/workshop.” It’s called Landmark Forum. Many of you have probably heard about it. I have had several people BEGGING me to attend over the years. They were all so EMPHATIC about it. And even with their curious enthusiasm, I never went. I thought, “Yeah, yeah yeah. I’ve been to these things before. They are all the same.” I could not have been more wrong… more ignorant. The Landmark Forum is unlike ANY personal growth book, audio or seminar I have ever experienced. There is absolutely NO COMPARISON.

Everything in the world of personal growth has been an addition to that which I experienced in the past. It has been in attempt to fix, alter, better or add to my past experience. The Landmark Forum, instead of additive learning (adding to what you already have), will foster transformational learning, leading you to TRANSFORM your life, creating new realms of possibilities, rather than altering or adding to what you already have. It’s interesting that I was not allowed to take notes for the 3 1/2 days of the seminar, yet the shifts that occurred and the benefits received, again, can not be compared to any other event I have attended, wherein I  did take copious notes. The transformation can be compared to riding a bike. When learning to ride a bike, you didn’t take notes, you just got it. And once you got it, you never lost it. That’s what happens in the Forum.

You will be given access to what you DON’T KNOW that you DON’T KNOW. I got to swim in this never before explored area of my mind and I had many, many, many breakthroughs that make my life being the same, an absolute impossibility.

Let me share one of the minor breakthroughs and realizations I had (I had many, some of which are very personal and which rocked me to the core and gave me deep understanding of why so much of my life doesn’t work, even with all that I know and have experienced).

Any of my readers who know me well, and have invited me to participate in any sport, have probably heard me say, “Oh I suck at sports.” I have declined invitations to play sports dozens of times over the years. Now the truth is, I don’t suck. I’m not that great, but I don’t suck. Even sports I have never or rarely played, I’m still alright at. I don’t “suck.” Prior to this weekend, I had never considered why I always tell people that I suck at sports. It’s not true, so what’s up with that? I figured it out in the Forum.

Several times during the weekend, someone Assisting in the back of the room would bring a note to the Forum Leader (Richard). I noticed that sometimes Richard would read it and put it on the podium. Sometimes he read it and put it in his pocket. And sometimes he would read it, crumple it up into a ball and throw it in waste basket about 3-5 feet behind him.The first ball of paper he threw into the trash went right in. For some reason I was struck by how confidently he did the job. That was a great shot! I thought. There was something about watching that happen that captivated me. Later he did it again. Two points! It went right in the waste basket, no rim, just right in, just like the first time. And again, I was captivated. Great shot! I thought. He is so confident. I continued. And later he did it again. And again it went right in. Man he is good at that, I thought. He is so confident. So committed. He knows he going to make the shot. Why don’t I do that? I almost always miss the basket, even if it’s right in front of me. The thoughts were coming about one a second. Then this understanding came out of know where. I don’t commit because I believe I will miss, therefore I hesitate and don’t follow through and therefore am the very cause of missing and therein reinforce my belief that “I miss.” (I hope you will read that last question twice. It is WHY most people don’t succeed in life.)This realization lead me to think about how I approach all sports, and perhaps even much of, if not all of life. Thinking back to my child hood, every time I was at bat, I was thinking, What if I miss? When out in the field, and the ball had been hit to me, I thought, I hope I don’t drop it. When shooting a basket, What if I miss? When hitting a golf ball, What if I shank it? I realized that my whole life has been plagued with fears of failing, of looking stupid and wondering what people might think. Where does this come from, I thought.

Inexplicably, my thoughts took me to my very first sporting memory. It was soccer try-outs. I was 4, maybe 5 years old. It was my turn to kick the ball, so “they” could see how “good” I was. I remember two rows of people. One on the left and one on the right, and me and the soccer ball in the middle. The ball was on the ground about 5 feet in front of me. I ran toward it and kicked! My foot almost missed the ball entirely. I kicked the very left side of the ball causing it to shoot quickly to the right. The ball went more right than it did forward, and I felt like an idiot! I felt like everyone was watching. I remember yelling at my shoe if you can imagine. Stupid shoe! Stupid shoe! Then I bent over and starting hitting my shoe with my fist. Stupid shoe! Stupid shoe! How redonculous huh? I realized that in that moment I determined that, I suck! And that became my belief about myself in regards to sports, and who knows what other things. My life has been less than whole and less than complete because of something that happened nearly 32 years ago. And again, this is just one of the lessor meaningful breakthroughs I experienced.

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Theme: Shocking Blue Green. Blog at WordPress.com.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.