An Australian woman shares her personal experience of the Landmark Forum. Here are excerpts:
I walked in one end all cocky (but still bright eyed and bushy tailed), took a rollercoaster ride with a few emotional corkscrews, intellectual upside downs and philosophical dips and came out the other end knowing that human beings are very bloody funny and a new, light, simple and amazing possibility for life and how I walk (run, jump, skip) through it. The weirdest thing is that I can’t tell you how it happened.
I walked in one end fighting with life, each defeat deadening me that little bit more and out the other alive and playing a new game. More to the point, I didn’t feel as though I had forcibly bared my soul and dug up skeletons in order to do so. Yes, they arose. But they arose in such an envigorating way.
I’ll cover more in the next blog, but here’s a few things I realised through participating in The Forum through the various conversations, sharings, challenges and viewpoints offered:
I kept telling myself I had talent but I didn’t truly believe it. I decided at the age of about 5 that I wasn’t tough enough because I was scared to watch Gremlins at school (very funny story and realisation).
At the age of 15, I turned my back on my brother, and although we have lived in the same spaces for 14 years since, I don’t really remember him as a part of my life.
My relationship with mum was ok. It was fine. But I hadn’t been listening and was being in that relationship with a constant subconscious hidden agenda.
I had lost the ability to be joyous in my life. I am actually very funny when I am not afraid to be me!
Go here to read the entire blog about the Landmark Forum.


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