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Cy Wakeman




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Be It.  Do It.  Have It.

In Cy's most personal keynote, "Be It. Do It. Have It.," she shares profoundly inspiring vignettes of her life, illustrating ways in which she has personally lived the motto, "Change your thinking, change your life."

Cy provides a simple formula for organizational and lifestyle change, the realization that in order to reach our full potential in any area of life, we must simply cultivate the universal benevolent qualities that already lie within us.  By nurturing the thirteen noble virtues of well being despite one's fears, we will find the inner strength to pursue any worthy course of action.

As we meet the many challenges posed to us in life, whether in relationships, health or business, as humans, we most often pray to have our circumstances change.  These prayers are often left unanswered as God works instead to change us.  Cy leads participants through a process whereby they come to know that true lifestyle or business change arises only as we reject traditional planning and goal setting models, which focus on the necessary tasks, behavioral changes and resource additions.  We must work instead to change how we see our situation, challenging our worn our personal and organizational beliefs.

Belief has great power, for whether you believe something is possible or impossible, either way, you'll be right.  Cy invites all attending to experience the path of Satori, which means enlightenment or spiritual awakening.  To be enlightened is to awaken or recognize that everything we seek elsewhere, we already have inside.

In this presentation, Cy helps participants to "unfreeze" old patterns of thinking and behaving so that new possibilities and ideas can be created in their businesses and their lives.  Participants are brought to the stark realization that many of the disappointments that we face in life are due to our own self-imposed limitations.  The effect of these self-imposed limitations grows exponentially; with enough set backs, which we falsely attribute to external factors outside of our control.  We come to live in a condition of "learned helplessness," a psychological affliction affecting our belief systems and our confidence.

Only through the cultivation of the virtues of well-being will we move out of a state of "learned helplessness," coming to believe once again that our actions do have a direct impact over our outcomes in life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


© 2010 Cy Wakeman. All rights reserved.