This website or its third-party tools use cookies which are necessary to its functioning and required to improve your experience. By clicking the consent button, you agree to allow the site to use, collect and/or store cookies.
Please click the consent button to view this website.
I accept
Deny cookies Go Back
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

ABTI | Joseph Riggio International

  • Home
  • Meet Joseph
    • To Sicily And Back … A Love Story
    • JSR Short Bio & CV
    • Abbreviated CV Timeline
  • BLOG :: “Blognostra”
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Archives for Joseph Riggio

Joseph Riggio

Why Bother …

Why Bother …

by Joseph Riggio · Sep 23, 2015

River - MorgueFile - New Zaeland 2014_18 - 200px

 (… or, what is liminality, and what’s it got to do with you???)

It happens to everyone … the kind of trauma that causes a set-back, or downright stops you in your tracks.

The trauma doesn’t have to be big, although it might be, but even a small trauma can:

  • slow you down …
  • cause you to question yourself …
  • break your confidence …
  • lead you into a state of depression …
  • or … shut you down completely

My trauma knocked me right off the tracks … and at first I didn’t even know it!

In fact my trauma wasn’t a single trauma it was a series of three traumas that came one on the heels of the other in just a few short years … first a huge financial set back (in excess of $1,000,000 USD) … then major disruption and decline in my business to the point where we had virtually no new clients for almost a full two years … and finally, an overwhelming personal tragedy that virtually brought me to my knees.

What’s interesting is that virtually no one knew that these traumas had this affect on me. Looking in from the outside I seemed to just keep going, but the reality was that for a few years “my get up go, just gone and went.”

I knew on the inside that I just wasn’t particularly motivated to take the big steps forward I also knew that I was capable of, but couldn’t get myself to achieve.

This was the worst part … knowing that I was capable of doing so much more and not being able to get to it.

I was stuck.

I even knew what to do … but I just wasn’t doing it.

In my GETTING UNSTUCK program I talk about this as “Unconscious Limitations” … what you don’t know about yourself that holds you back from …

  • becoming yourself fully
  • doing what your capable of doing
  • realizing your full potential

… and …

  • getting the kind of results and outcomes that are possible when you’re operating at your best

This is how I was caught after one too many traumas to shake off quickly … as I was always used to doing in the past.

I was experiencing “liminality” …

Liminal Space

A “limen” is the smallest possible thing you are capable of detecting, or the threshold condition for an effect to begin.

Liminality refers to the “in-between” … when you are no longer in the world as you knew it to be, and you’re not yet beyond it to the next thing either … you remain “in-between.”

After a trauma, we’re almost always experiencing “liminality” and find ourselves stuck in “liminal space” … in a state of transition, not knowing where you are anymore nor where you going … at least not fully, or with any sense of deep comprehension.

What’s interesting to me is what causes us to experience trauma …

  • failing to succeed where we thought we would … or should
  • an off-hand, stray comment that leaves us reeling
  • personal loss like a failed relationship or a death
  • failing health, an accident or serious medical incident
  • financial, career or business set-back … or outright failure

When we look closely we might recognize that we experience sensitizing imprints on a regular basis. While we won’t experience everything bad that happens to us as a trauma, some of them are … and those are the ones that create set-backs in our lives that we may find difficult or impossible to get over on our own.

When this happens we’re experiencing “liminality.” … we feel lost, or even trapped, in a maze of our own making.

The Apathy of the “Lotophagi”

We may seem to have amnesia about our part in constructing the labyrinth we’re trapped in, usually because the construction happens in the blink of an eye … literally faster than we can think.

So when we realize stuck in liminal space, we seek the guide that will point the way out, or a map that shows us where we are, where the exits are located, and the paths open to us to get from here to there.

Sometimes we spend so much time in the labyrinth that we begin to become comfortable living within it, and it begins to feel like home to us. This is the mythical danger associated with the sophoric lotophagi, i.e.: the lotus eaters of the Homeric epic the Odyessy.

”I was driven thence by foul winds for a space of 9 days upon the sea, but on the tenth day we reached the land of the Lotus-eaters, who live on a food that comes from a kind of flower. Here we landed to take in fresh water, and our crews got their mid-day meal on the shore near the ships.

When they had eaten and drunk I sent two of my company to see what manner of men the people of the place might be, and they had a third man under them. They started at once, and went about among the Lotus-eaters, who did them no hurt, but gave them to eat of the lotus, which was so delicious that those who ate of it left off caring about home, and did not even want to go back and say what had happened to them, but were for staying and munching lotus with the Lotus-eaters without thinking further of their return; nevertheless, though they wept bitterly I forced them back to the ships and made them fast under the benches.

Then I told the rest to go on board at once, lest any of them should taste of the lotus and leave off wanting to get home, so they took their places and smote the grey sea with their oars.”

The great seduction is to fall asleep, like Odysseus’ men in the land of the lotus eaters, to our own predicament, and to fail to notice that we are in the maze. Then when we arise from our slumber, finding it as hard as Odysseus’ sailors to leave the place where we find ourselves. Yet desperately seeking to find a way back home.

Coming Back to “Home Base”

When I awoke from my own dazed condition, and found myself deep in liminality, I realized I had to shake off the desire to doze again … peaceful in my apathy. I knew I wanted more from life than to coast through, because I had seen some difficult days.

The question was how to revive myself to a fully awake state. I knew that the first few steps would be the most difficult of all … and yet these were also the most essential steps I could … and would … take.

I also knew to that to fully enliven my drive to rediscover myself I had to fight the urge to accept the obvious as evidence of truth … I had to dig beyond that to my core, to reawaken my essential self.

So I set up a regimen that associated a sense of recursive, iterative inquiry to linking intention to action. I think the fundamental ground of performance is linking connection to action.

1) Remembering to link intention to action became my first step out of the maze.

Because I couldn’t discover what I didn’t know and couldn’t see for myself I had to work with what I had access to, my perceptions, my decisions, my behaviors and the results I produced.

2) Noticing the sequence that connected my perceptions to the results I produced, through my decision and behaviors, became my second step.

Then I knew to improve my performance, i.e.: to improve the linkage between my intention and the action I took, would be to record and measure the value of each link in the chain. I had to create a system to measure the value of the steps I took in moving through the sequence of perception, decision-making, behavioral response and results.

3) Establishing and tracking the metrics of my process became the third step beyond the threshold of the liminal space that had trapped me.

Once I could track the movement of my process in real time using the metrics I had established I was able to begin thinking about how to improve the process. Using the data I was tracking and gathering I began altering the things I was doing seeking to identify the things that made a difference.

4) Building a feedback loop using the information I was uncovering, and refining my process by focusing on what worked and eliminating what didn’t, became the forth step to improving my performance.

Now I had the skeleton key to the final step in my perfomance improvement process … the path out of the labyrinth of liminal space … uncovering what I could not see for myself.

While I still couldn’t notice what I couldn’t see for myself, my process left a trail of evidence I could and did begin to track that pointed to the invisible. Although my unconscious limitations remainded beyond my ability to recognize, I could notice for the contexts where I found myself getting limited … this proved to be the key to unlock the gate that freed me.

Instead of trying to figure out what was going on that was unconscious for me, I began noticing where I was limited and what my behavioral responses were in those contexts … then I began changing my behaviors without worrying myself about why I had behaved as I had before.

5) The final step in finding my freedom and fully regaining myself was choosing to do what was not automatic or familiar … I began exploring the idea of becoming comfortable with uncertainty, even the chaotic … and choosing intentional and unfamiliar actions that were most likely to produce my outcomes, even when they were counter-intuitive.

Following these steps I began rebuilding my business and my life. It took a little while but I woke up completely and re-discovered myself again. In fact in many ways my life today is more completely aligned with who I most am more than ever before.

It feels like the first time I can honestly say I’ve truly come home to myself since I was a child. I’ve regained the surety of being myself in a way that is usually associated only with the innocence of youth.

Yet, what may be most interesting to me is that I feel like I’m more aware of the dichotomies of life than ever before … and, in my newfound innocence I find myself simply able to accept them as part and parcel of life and move on.

Maze - Morge-file7541243010745 - 200px

Escaping the Maze … Beyond the Labyrinth

Now I’ve begun refocusing the work I’m doing too. It’s the same process I’m working with, but the focus is on choosing to limit what I’m doing with it and for whom.

I’ve been moving toward working with people and organizations in liminal space for the last few years, and I’ve amped it up even more recently.

  • These are folks who are in transition themselves, or lost between transitions.
  • Maybe it’s someone who is moving between jobs, or coming out of corporate/organizational life and trying to discover the next thing for themself.
  • I’m finding that I’m attracted to folks who are deeply confused about where they are in their lives, while doing their damnest to remain where they are and doing what they do … and not so strangely they’re attacted to me and the work I’m doing too.

Usually this is about going beyond the discovery phase and onto how they relate to others … leaving behind some of the folks who are most familiar to them … and making new connections, or reconnecting, with people who have now become important in their lives in new and exciting ways.

Sometimes the work I do involves groups or teams of people. I love helping people learn how to go beyond competition to collaboration … and to develop the communication tools necessary to begin performing at an elite level.

The most complete expression of the work I’m doing these days, the MythoSelf Process Professional Training, though is actually teaching the process to people who want complete access to it in their lives for themselves and to share with others that are important to them. Those who get hooked even stick around to become skillful enough to become certified MythoSelf facilitators themselves.

FWIW I’ve never felt more complete or satisfied!

I tell you all this to let you know if you’re struggling with liminality yourself there’s a good chance with some persistence you could come out the other side even stronger and more fulfilled than ever.

The hardest part of the journey is always taking the first step as they say … yet, it could be as simple as waiting at the edge of the river for the ferryman, ready with coin in hand to be ferried across the threshold to the other side.

When you get there look me up …

Buona Fortuna & Abundaza,

Joseph Riggio, Ph.D.
New Hope, PA

P.S. – I’m running another session of GETTING UNSTUCK, the live webinar series, starting on October 13th. If you’re interested in learning more stay tuned and I’ll get you the details … if you can’t wait drop me a line.

Filed Under: Blog, Elite Performance, Life, Mythology, Transformational Change & Performance, Transformational Communication, Uncategorized

Freedom is just another word …

Freedom is just another word …

by Joseph Riggio · Sep 21, 2015

Plugboard-eniac4 175px

 

… and Freeing Your Mind is where to start!

 

When I think about “freedom” I think about something that goes beyond place and time.

For instance most folks think of freedom as:

The ability to do what they want, when they want, where they want, whenever they want … or something like that from my observations.

But, that presupposes something that is very typically missing more often than not … the fundamental ability to have a choice in the first place.

Ah, but there’s the rub …

To begin with to have a choice you must first be free of preconceived notions and knee-jerk responses, and so few of us are even a little bit free of those bits of installed mind programs.

From the very beginning, maybe even in the womb, we are being programmed with what to like or dislike, what is good or bad, what to desire or reject … and on and on. Yet we think the things we choose are our preferences most of the time, and not just pre-conditioned responses.

If only that were true …

I’m not here to tell you that your full of it … but I am here to tell you that you are full of pre-conceived notions and knee-jerk responses you think are choices and preferences. Heck, even the way you just responded to reading that last sentence probably falls into the category of pre-conceived notions and knee-jerk response.

 

Your “brain” ain’t your “mind” … at least not in the way I use those terms.

An easy analogy to use in making my point would be the distinction between “hardware” and “software” in a computing system.

The “hardware” part is analogous to the brain part in humans, the wetware that runs the “software” part.

This would include things like the brain and the central nervous system, and also things like the sense organs and the parts that comprise them as well, e.g.: your eyes, ears, nose, tongue and skin.

When thinking about the wetware connected to and part of the brain system as I’m using that terminology here the “hardware” mechanisms that provide the input and throughput for the compound senses like balance and proprioception are also part and parcel of what I’m referring to as wetware.

Then you have the “software” that runs on the “hardware,” which in the case of the human brain may be a configuration of the “hardware” itself.

The particular patterns of connections in the brain may be what comprise the programs we run, like the plugboards in early computers . In order to run an instruction set on these early computers wires would have to be physically rerouted to the appropriate connections on a plugboard with dozens or hundreds of fixed, pre-programmed microcircuits (see the image attached to this post above – Programming the ENIAC – Columbia University).

When the plugboard had the wires connected in a particular pattern the particular instruction set associated with that pattern would run, and only that instruction set. If you wanted to run a different calculation, based on a different instruction set, you would have to physically remove the wires from the plugs that linked the pre-programmed microcircuits in the existing order they were in to do it. Then you would have to re-route the wiring to the new configuration that provided the instruction set you now intended to run.

In many ways the human brain seems to be organized much like the early computers were with their pre-programmed microcircuits. Except in the case of the humans the preprogrammed microcircuits are the distinct patterns of neuron firing across the synapses that comprise the wetware of the brain.

The patterns of neural firing in the human brain are preprogrammed by virtue of familiarity. In the cognitive sciences we say that synapses that fire together wire together, meaning that the pattern of use determines the ease of recreating that pattern again.

The more a particular synaptic pattern fires the more it becomes myelinized. Myelin is the fatty sheathing that surrounds healthy nerves and facilitates the transmission of nervous impulses along their pathways. The better a nerve is myelinized the more easily, efficiently and effectively it seems that impulses are able to flow through it.

Nerves also seem to become more myelinized through repetitive use, i.e.: the more a particular pattern is used the more it becomes grooved in as the preferred pathway taken in response to a particular stimulus or category of stimuli. This allows us to build very rapid responses to common action scenarios when exposed to familiar stimuli or a category of stimuli, for example:

There is a particular way you tie your shoes, right lace over left lace first, or visa-versa. Doing it any other way feels unfamiliar and awkward.  Yet, tying your shoe laces the way it’s been programmed is so familiar and comfortable it has likely become second nature, and you can probably do it at a pre-conscious level, while attending to something else on a more conscious level. 

Wizard of Oz Scarecrow - MorgueFile-IMG_3130 175px Your choices aren’t only limited to the way you tie your shoes … and we’re not in Kansas anymore! 

So following the logic of the pre-programmed brain patterns we can begin to discuss, “What is the mind?” 

In some ways I think it would be fair to consider the “mind” the patterns of neural connections in the “wetware” that we use in thinking consciously, pre-consciously, sub-consciously and trans-consciously.

These patters of wetware connections at one level are what thought is as we understand it today. However, there seems to be more to mind though than just the wetware connections, because we retain an ability to override the preferred patterns grooved into the wetware and do creative, impulsive, spontaneous and original things.

This ability to create unique responses is grounded in the brain (or the total configuration of the wetware in the body-at-large), and at the same time it exceeds the patterns previously organized in the wetware configuration and familiar within it.

Every time you respond as you have “without thinking” you are NOT expressing freedom or choice,  you are expressing a pre-conceived notion or knee-jerk response grooved into the patterns in your wetware … like a pattern in the way the wires are configured in the plugboard of the ENIAC at any given time. In this way you are literally only capable of running the particular instruction set associated with that configuration in response to the presenting stimulus – you aren’t “thinking” you’re just following the actions associated with that instruction set.

Have a choice, or being free, requires you have options when acting in relation to any presenting stimulus.  

So freedom isn’t being able to do what you want, when you want, where you want, whenever you want … unless you have a choice about doing it at all!

 

“FREEDOM” is a Mind Game … but you have to first take control of your brain to have access to your mind.

This is something I learned early on in my NLP days … to use a quote from Richard Bandler, one of the co-developers of NLP:

Brains aren’t designed to get results; they go in directions. If you know how the brain works you can set your own directions. If you don’t, then someone else will. – Richard Bandler (http://www.azquotes.com/quote/703363)

In Richard’s book, Using Your Brain For a Change: Neuro-Linguistic Programming says he’s going to give the reader “a manual for running the brain” and in my opinion gets at least part of the way there in his descriptions, instructions and examples.

One of the things that’s interesting to me about “Using Your Brain For a Change” is that Richard never really talks about the hardware as wetware as I have above. Instead of getting into the whole discussion about neural patterns as they operate at a physical level Richard spends all his time discussing our representations of reality, i.e.: how the patterns we make about the world and ourselves are organized.

In particular the discussion of how we organize our representations of reality in this book by Richard Bandler are focused on what he refers to as “submodalities” … unique distinctions about the elements of perception that determine  how we make sense of what we perceive and what meaning we attach to those perceptions.

The submodalities of perception are organized into configurations, i.e.: “submodality configurations” that are more significant than any individual submodality standing apart from the pattern of the configuration as a whole.

Submodality configurations are comprised of two aspects that are equally important:

The Semantics of Submodalities: these are the way in which the particular submodality of perception is present in the representation of reality as it is known to you, e.g.: the unique color of someone’s eyes as you recall it and where you “see” that image in your mind’s eye, as well as the brightness, angle of view, distance from you and the way you hold the totality of the representation in regard to the visual image … as a photograph or video for instance.

The Syntax of Submodalities: this is the order or sequence in which the submodality configuration that forms your perception of reality is represented and attended to by you, e.g.: you can notice first the visual submodalities and then the auditory submodalities, or you might notice them in wholeform all at the same time as you would were they occurring in real time, and you might also notice the unique pattern of the submodality in stages as well, first noticing the color, then the brightness, then the angle and so on … and by virtue of the order or sequence the submodality configuration take on a logic unique to the syntax you use.

What Richard explores and examines in his work is both the semantics and syntax of “subjective experience” and how we can alter that for ourselves.

There is a powerful perceptual logic in the semantics and syntax of submodalities, and what’s unique to this logic to me is that it is non-linguistic, and therefore can be held and experienced in wholeform, i.e.: beyond the limits of language.

While language is always digital, with one element … a word, a sentence, a paragraph … distinct from the one before it and the one after, indeed from all other words, sentences and paragraphs, and by it’s very nature needing to be experienced separately from them, life occurs in wholeform, i.e.: all at a time, simultaneously.

Language is also always ordered sequentially and linearly, once more separating it from the experience of life, where many things can and do happen in simultaneity.

Submodalities are a kind of a bridge between the direct sensory experience of wholeform life as it happens and our processing of our conscious experience of life as what happened. They (submodalities) are magical, like the Old Norse runes, they are the elements from which we can conjure our subjective experience as we see fit.

“I, master of the runes conceal here runes of power. Incessantly plagued by maleficence, doomed to insidious death is he who breaks this monument. I prophesy destruction.” – Björketorp Runestone, 6th C. Sweden

Or one more, suggesting a runic use benevolently capable of giving life to the dead …

I know a twelfth one if I see,
up in a tree,
a dangling corpse in a noose,
I can so carve and colour the runes,
that the man walks
And talks with me.

– Odin

Hávamál, Codex Regius 13 C.

 

The relationship between Subjective Experience … Freedom … and Choice/Choosing

Until we have access to how we are choosing what we are responding to and how we respond to it, we have little or no choice … and, without the option to choose we have no freedom.

Now here’s a critical distinction … we may not always be able to choose “what is” or the elements we are experiencing in our reality, but we always have options about what we choose to make of what we’re experiencing.

How we make sense of things and what we allow them to mean to us is always in our control … when we are able to access the process we use to make sense of and make meaning from the presenting stimulus of our subjective experience. 

In this way, even when we are “objectively wrong” we get to choose our own experiences, and from there what and how we choose to respond to as it appears to us.

Here’s another Richard Bandler quote to tie things together:

The greatest personal limitation is to be found not in the things you want to do and can’t, but in the things you’ve never considered doing. – Richard Bandler (http://www.azquotes.com/quote/703366)

This is the essence of freedom (and mind) as far as I’ve concerned … i.e.: being about to choose what isn’t and hasn’t yet been.

Someone in prison who gets this idea fully can choose “FREEDOM” while doing the time of their sentence. Someone being beaten can choose to make it means something other than the loss of control of their experience.

Regardless, of the circumstance or situation if you can choose what something means to you, you can be free.

One of my favorite scenes of all time is from the 2006 James Bond movie  “Casino Royale”  with Daniel Craig, playing Bond. He’s being tortured by the criminal mastermind, Le Chiffre, played by the actor Mads Mikklesen. He’s in great pain and likely to be killed imminently in this particular scene:

Bond: I’ve got a little itch … down there. Would you mind? No! No! No! No. To the right. To the right. To the right!

Le Chiffre: You are a funny man, Mr. Bond.

Bond: (Laughing) Yeah! Yes, yes, yes. Now the whole world’s gonna know that you died scratching my balls.

Now that’s having control of one’s “subjective experience” and choosing in the most dire of circumstances!!!

 

In the end it ain’t what you can or can’t do … or be … it’s the choices you make with what you’ve got.

In the follow up to the scene from “Casino Royale” above Bond is next seen recuperating from his trauma in a hospital accompanied by his paramour in the film, Vesper, played by Eva Green. They are on a lawn and he is clearly weak and debilitated after his ordeal.

Vesper: Hello.

Bond: Hello.

Vesper: You all right? I can’t resist waking you. Every time I do, you look at me as if you haven’t seen me in years.

Bond: It makes me feel reborn.

Vesper: If you’d just been born …wouldn’t you be naked?

Bond: You have me there.

Vesper: You can have me anywhere.

Bond: I can?

Vesper: Yeah. Here, there, anywhere you like.

The scene continues a bit further in the dialogue …

Vesper: You know, James …I just want you to know that if all that was left of you … was your smile and your little finger … you’d still be more of a man than anyone I’ve ever met.

Bond: That’s because you know what I can do with my little finger.

Vesper: I have no idea.

Bond: But you’re aching to find out.

Vesper: You’re not going to let me in there, are you? You’ve got your armor back on. That’s that.

Bond: I have no armor left. You’ve stripped it from me. Whatever is left of me …whatever I am … I’m yours.

There’s something particularly remarkable in these two scenes to me.

There’s something particularly powerful about the nature of having control over one’s self, including the ability to let go … to be fully present to “what is” as well as one’s self and what one wishes to be experiencing in the moment, regardless of what the evidence is that is presenting itself in that moment.

I’d even argue that in terms of mythic form, in this moment captured by these actors, Bond is everyman and Vesper is everywoman … the ideal of the anima/animus as the blended being becoming whole and complete. Wonderful!

The conclusion I reach is that FREEDOM is more a powerful and potent force than PERFORMANCE.

Even though I make much of my living, and devote much of my life’s work to assisting others with mastery in terms of performance, i.e.: linking intention to action in terms of the results and outcomes they achieve, freedom is the real treasure … i.e.: having what you want as you want what you have.

Buona Fortuna & Abundanza,

Joseph Riggio, Ph.D.

New Hope, PA

Filed Under: Blog, Cognitive Science, Language & Linguistics, Life, NLP & Hypnosis, Transformational Change & Performance, Transformational Communication

Killing Me Softly …

Killing Me Softly …

by Joseph Riggio · Sep 7, 2015

Altruism’s Big Hidden Secret

Before I begin going too fast and too far I want to share a little bit of my bias in the interest of full disclosure …

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

 

 

I’m a big fan of the American myrmecologist (someone who studies ants) Edward O. Wilson.

 Wilson also conceptualized the field of sociobiology, or the study of the biological roots and implications of social order in living organisms from protozoa to humans (he got a bit of backlash for the suggestions that humans should be included in such a conceptualization, but did it nonetheless). He defines sociobiology as: “The extension of population biology and evolutionary theory to social organization”[1]

I’m loosely sharing the following based on what I understand Wilson’s take on the sociobiology of altruism to be. All credit for the concepts I’m sharing here go to him, all blame for any incorrect assumptions are mine alone.

Okay, now that we have that out of the way …

What Is Altruism? … a sociobiological perspective

Hard Altruism

From a sociobiological perspective E.O. Wilson suggests that a particular form of altruism, what he refers to as “hard altruism,” was first and foremost an evolutionary advantage that allowed some lines of humans to prosper over others in a competitive environment.

For example, if an individual were to sacrifice themselves to save another of their bloodline, especially a child, they increased the chances for that individual to go on to breed and pass along the genes they share.

If the genes of an individual include a drive to altruism, i.e.: self sacrifice to save another in one’s bloodline, then these genes would begin to flourish in the population as it grew.

While it may seem that dying to save another’s life is a poor way to pass along one’s gene, it must be taken at the higher level of gene transmission to be understood.

We all share genes with our kin. Mothers and father each share about 50% of their genes with their offspring, Brothers and sisters share about 50% of their genes in common, half brothers and sisters share about 25% of their genes in common as do nephews and nieces with their aunts and uncles (NOTE: only identical twin share 100% of the same DNA).

So if we save another in our bloodline, we are actually saving the genes we share to potentially be passed along to the following generations. Using this logic, if I sacrifice myself for someone in my bloodline I increase the changes of those genes making it to the following generations through the transmission via the individuals I save with my sacrifice. When my sacrifice is greater than 1:1, i.e.: my sacrifice saves more than one person in my bloodline, my contribution to the transmission of my genetic profile to future generations is enhanced.

Now to be clear, this is not suggested to be a conscious choice per se, “Hey if I kill that intruder at the cost of my own life and my entire family gets to live than my genetic profile has a greater chance of being passed along than if I let them die and survive by myself.” Instead the idea is that there were individuals who had this instinct or response, and over time via natural selection the function of altruism led to a propagation of those individual who shared this trait to prosper over those who did not.

Altruistic War???

Taken further this instinct or drive would lead an individual to proactively sacrifice themselves to ensure or preference the survival of their kin. This would lead to war when resources got scarce, even if those who want to war knew they were unlikely to survive. The need to secure resources for the survival of kin would exceed the need for one’s own survival based on the natural selection for hard altruism.

If we continue to extrapolate even the threat of scarcity might be enough to prompt a hard wired individual to proactively seek to eliminate the threat before it became a reality exerting pressure on the clan or tribe that included one’s kin … pre-emptive war or raids on neighboring clans or tribes.

If the issue of blood relatedness is taken into this equation we might speculate about homicide within the clan or tribe to favor one’s direct offspring leading to high rates of murder.

If you take this one step further it would be reasonable to expect that the favoring of male offspring over female offspring would also be favored, because in a lifetime a male may produce many more offspring than a female is capable of producing.

Now, Wilson doesn’t say this, and I’m not suggesting this “hard altruism” led to these results in human evolution, but the potential is there if the theory holds.

Yet, Wilson does speculate about the function of hard wired altruism in the waging of human wars, and the willingness for individuals to sacrifice themselves for the clan or tribe they belong to if there is a perceived threat to it. I take this further and speculate that this may play a role in the kind of behavior we see in things like suicide bombers and some of the terrorist behavior leading to mass killings of innocents.

 

Soft Altruism

The Other Altruism

Edward Wilson also proposes a different kind of altruism, what he refers to as “soft.” In soft altruism the individual is driven to perform altruistic action that will potentially have a benefit to themselves as well. This is the kind of altruism that most people think about when the world “altruism” is used, not the kind that leads to self sacrifice predominately, or the kind that leads to war and murder (hard altruism).

Soft altruism is seen when someone shares their piece of bread with another, or does some act of charity. While there may not be the expectation of immediate return on investment for such action, there is a case to be made for that in evolutionary terms.

Imaging a clan or small tribe of proto-humans or early humans eking out a living in a harsh, competitive environment. The sharing of food would become a way of insuring that when food was scarce it would be used to support the largest numbers of people within the clan or tribe, versus hoarding which would limit the survival of the largest number.

Social Predation and Altruism

In a social species this is an important asset, especially when you consider a predatory species that hunts for food. Humans share a unique trait with other social predatory species, which are few in number on the planet, they hunted and killed animals larger than themselves for food with primitive implements long before killing such animals was assured in the hunt. When compared to other social predatory species humans are in a class by themselves for the size animals they hunted and killed proportionate to themselves.

By example the evolutionary record shows that humans would hunt and kill animals as large as full grown, healthy, adult elephants regularly. Not even a lion pack would take on a full grown, healthy elephant unless it was particularly desperate, and then the outcome would be far from assured. But humans took on such game regularly it seems.

In the case of more modern humans, still using paleolithic technology, game as large as water buffalo and bison were a common food source. Again no other predatory species, social or not, regularly hunts full grown, healthy animals this large proportionate to themselves. If we choose to use extreme examples the Inuit still hunt and successfully kill walrus and whale using primitive weapons (by modern standards).  Even a polar bear would be hard pressed to attack an adult male walrus, and would only attempt to do so on land, and then only in desperation. But it is a common for Inuits to hunt and successfully kill walruses in the spring.

The risk taken in such hunts is itself altruistic, the sharing of meat (and other items from the kill) is an extreme form of soft altruism when the kill is shared with those who did not participate directly in it. But the risk of not sharing would mean the potential of being ostracized by the clan or tribe, and in a primitive environment that would decrease the chance of survival many times over.

We see this behavior in many of the social predators; e.g.: lions, wolves, african cape dogs, hyenas … but not in solitary predators; e.g.: tigers, foxes, leopards, bears. So while humans aren’t alone in terms of food sharing, they are unique in the degree to which it is ritualized and formalized in the species.

Other Forms of Altruism in Human Systems

Another way that altruism appears in human systems is via non food sharing care that is exhibited, often to those who are not direct blood kin. Humans have a long recorded history of caring for those who are less fortunate than themselves when the other is unable to care for themselves.

A strong example of this is the taking in of an orphaned child that is not kin. Or the adoption of a child that is less fortunate and can be given greater opportunity to survive and prosper in the adopted home.

Of course any time care is given to another without the expectation of direct return we see this as an act of altruism. But altruism also exists where there is the exception of some form of return for the act performed.

When a “favor” is given with the expectation that it may be returned someday, either directly or indirectly, that too is a form of soft altruism, and would have strong precedent in evolutionary terms as well.

If I can expect that either I or my kin would benefit from an act of kindness I perform today it would behoove me to perform it even if I don’t get an immediate reward for doing so. Over time this ritualized performance of altruistic acts would become part of the background of culture and raise the status of the individual within the group who performed them as well. So in this case altruistic acts would potentially directly benefit me with acts in kind offered at some future point in time, or alternatively by raising my status within the group.

This kind of soft altruism has become ritualized to the point of professionalism in some quarters. I would argue that the entire lobbying industry in the U.S. political system is a form of systematized, ritualized altruism. The lobbyist asks a politician for the favor of a vote on a particular topic of interest to the group they represent with the expectation that in the future the politician can expect the support of that group for their accommodation. It might even be argued that the entire structure of the lobbying industry as it exists is based on the premise that if I scratch you back today, someone coming up after me in the future will scratch my back, ad infinitum, securing the role of the lobbyist within the systematized and ritualized walls of politics at large.

Take from an evolutionary point of view such altruism would give the altruist a potential survival advantage, and again this argues for a basis in the long road of human evolution and the genetic potential carried from thousands of generations of individuals, and now embedded in the social fabric, albeit largely invisibly so.

 

Does Altruism Have A Future? 

Personally I’d argue that we’d have a hard time breeding out altruism from the human species at this point, but culturally modifying how it’s expressed is an entirely different story it seems. While biological evolution occurs regularly, compared to cultural evolution its movement is glacial (although with climate change that’s not the same metaphor it used to be).

We have already seen major shifts in the ethics and etiquette expressed in modern human societies. It’s almost impossible to read a cultural magazine, read a newspaper or watch a news program without some complaint about the decreasing moral values that sustain a desirable kind of altruistic ethics and etiquette we’d like to see on a regular basis.

While the fundamental genetics for altruism are probably largely unchanged in the last generation or so, the way we express ourselves socially has radically shifted.

Take as example the idea of chivalrous behavior from as recently as the 1950s here in the U.S. to the fostered equality between the sexes at the start of the 21st century leading to some very different ways that men and women now interact.  It could be argued  in many cases that a lower degree of civility exists today than ever … despite the arguable increase in equality between genders in other terms.

While there has always been tension between integrated and assimilated individuals within cultures, especially in those cultures that are high context and kin driven, there is more animosity than every between citizens and immigrants in many places around the world than ever as well.

In the past immigrants were expected to integrate and assimilate, and even when it wasn’t elegant eventually found a way to do so. Now we see a significant proportion of immigrants who demand the right to retain their cultural, ethnic, religious, moral, sexual or language habits or preferences accommodated in the societies into which they emigrated without having to or being expected to integrate or assimilate. This has raised tensions in many societies to untenable levels of discomfort for many.

This could be considered a kind of perversion of altruism when viewed from a sociobiological perspective. If the majority group holds an altruistic form of cultural preference to accommodate the “other” and the minority group is willing to use that altruism to their sole or unique benefit than the function of altruism becomes distorted for the majority who accommodate the minority. It could be argued further that it is only when the function of altruism potentially benefits the entirety of the population exhibiting it that the sociobiological benefits of altruism are realized.

If this were extrapolated to the “Nth” degree we might see a future where only hard altruism remains, as held and fostered by the minority groups perpetrating it. This would be a disaster of enormous proportions using Wilson’s speculations. From a a Gravesian point of view (levels of development within Clare W. Graves’ model of human social-cultural-biologial evolution) the system corrects such errors by evolving culturally to modify the values held to support the greatest gain for the many over the few, to the point of preferencing ever larger systems. The suggestion within the Graves Model is that eventually the “system” becomes the planet that is preferenced over any group inhabiting it. I personally believe we are on the cusp of this level of developmental evolution.

Capitalism and Altruism 

If my take on cultural evolution is correct vis-a-vis the Graves Model evolving to correct for the perversion of altruistic impulses in the many to favor the few (think about the 1%/99% argument in the Occupy Wall Street movement of 2011), than the system will shift to a means of caring the many over the needs or desires of the few.

Now if this correction as I put it comes to pass it will be a hard pill to swallow for some. There are people on both ends of the few who will be impacted. Those who are living at the extremes of wealth or privilege for instance will not be preferenced the way they are today by the system. There will be much less disparity between the extremes of wealth (as only one example of privilege or preference), but a greater more equanimous distribution of resources, as well as a more equal access to resources.

As an example, think about the elimination of “elite” schools in favor of less schooling available to average or mediocre students with more attention on offering specialized “elite” education to those exhibiting the greatest potential to utilize it, and other opportunities offered to those who demonstrate less potential or talent. No more quota systems or weighted advantage for the disenfranchised or disadvantaged, but no need either.

No more Harvard or Oxford for the rich, privileged and connected, but a pure meritorious system. But, the caveat would be that at any time someone shows the potential and/or talent to succeed in such an institution the doors would become open to them, not just at 17 or 18 on the basis of past performance as an adolescent and a standardized test or two.

This same kind of thinking would extend to the larger social and political systems. Think about the potential of a political system where we would vote on the platforms of the candidates only, without knowing the individual we are voting for by personality. We could arrange a system based on open access to the platforms via Internet cafes opened and run by the government solely for this purpose like public libraries, and these cafes would then also become the voting “booths” of the future as well.  Of course we could also have a vetting process to insure that they were legally able to hold office, that including the question of any obvious ethical breach that might make the unsuitable to do so.

Now extend the thinking once again to the business systems and apply only those regulations that insured the distribution of resources, including profit, proportionally to everyone in the organization. A “founder” could be rewarded for their contribution in a single payment of sorts for taking the initial risk and coming up with the initial concept at some rate against the success of the enterprise using a formula for potential future growth out to a specific point in time, say ten years. Or they could exit with a payment of a specific percentage of the value of the entity at any point in time up to ten years, but no more than say 10% of the total value of the entity regardless of the percentage held (as a public company, private companies could be organized differently).

Individuals who come in with specific an highly desirable skills could be given a kind of joining bonus when they start working for an organization, but then fall into a compensation plan that is much flatter than the ones commonly scene today. Even private companies would be forced to follow this flatter plan for compensation.

Shareholders would be forced to take a limited return on investment of any company they held stock in and pay a much higher percentage of unearned income than those paying taxes on earned income (the exact reverse of today’s model of taxation in the U.S. and most other places). This would force a greater valuation of the contributions of the working class, while still rewarding those with wealth to invest. To make this work of course the return on investment for shareholders would have to be weighted by their ability to realize capital gains in addition to dividends paid on their investments.

An Altruistic Transition to the **NEW** Capitalism

We could have a single moment of amnesty for the super wealthy today to take advantage of a last time to payout against their current holdings before moving into a new system, but they would no longer be able to realize the long term advantages of accumulated wealth as they had in the past or current systems. In all cases when such systems went on too long either revolt or conquest led to their demise, with those who had accumulated enormous wealth standing the most to lose, including their lives.

There are a lot of potential issues to be dealt with in such a scheme, but with modern technology all are doable today. The bigger issue is cultural willingness and acceptance to force such a change before a crisis that forces it upon us, e.g.: bloody revolution.

One of the critical factors in establishing such a **new** system would be the lack of governmental regulations. The system needs to be open to exploration and risk. Those who take risks would be responsible for them personally as well as organizationally. For instance if an organization allowed a researcher to do research that caused harm to others both they and the individual causing harm would be held culpable in the full. This would extend the most grievous outcomes for those bringing risk to others in unwarranted and unacceptable ways, especially if the motive were to realize profit.

In such a system non-human interests would be treated with the same degree of protection regarding risk as humans. These non-human interests might include the environment, such as the oceans and seas, water ways, air quality, soil quality. And we would extend this kind of responsibility to biological non-human entities as well, such as plants, animals, and the mirco-biome of the planet.

Making the system self-regulation with the responsibility of assuming 100% of the risk in aiming to realize profit would reverse hundreds or thousands of years of culture of course, but the alternative might be a corruption of the altruistic instinct that leads to our eventual total demise as a species, and even something potentially worst than that.

Joseph’s Pitch

Okay … short and sweet to end this monologue.

To move in the direction I suggest would mean the evolution of a **new** mind that precedes and exceeds the **new** system.

Fortunately I am suggesting that just such a **new** mind is coming into being even as I write this diatribe on altruism and the **new** system. And, FWIW I believe that business will lead the way, albeit not as we understand “business’ as it is today … but business in the ideal sense of serving a community that includes the producers and the consumers equally with the intention of improving the quality of life for all concerned.

My own small role is to live near the edge of this vision as pioneer speculator with an intention to translate the data present at that edge into usable “mind technologies” we can access and implement now.

Joseph Riggio, Ph.D.
New Hope, PA

P.S. – As always I look forward to your comments and reactions to this bit of current speculation of mine too `’~> … please drop them in place below for me.

Filed Under: Blog, Business Performance, Human Systems, Life

Why Do I Hate Marketing …

Why Do I Hate Marketing …

by Joseph Riggio · Sep 5, 2015

Because Most Marketing SUCKS!

FWIW I don’t actually hate marketing per se, BUT I do hate what’s presented as “marketing” sometimes, especially in the Information Marketing world, the Blogosphere, the Digital and Direct Marketing space … and on and on.

Let’s start at the beginning … “You must find a niche.” or “You must identify your ‘ideal client’.” or other such blather. Sure I’d agree that if you’re responsible for coming up with marketing messages or offers you probably want to aim them at an audience, but that’s such a small piece of what “marketing” is all about.

Another thing I hate about “marketing” is when someone places the emphasis on making money, instead of “creating customers” (as the late, great Peter Drucker claimed was the fundamental purpose of a business).

Most of all I hate marketing as it’s often presented on the Internet because it gives business a bad name, and I love business as a solution creating machine that’s done more to improve the quality of human life than any other institution on earth!

Well we’re really at the starting point now … i.e.:

Geodesic Dome - Morgue-file7021291129045 - 200 px

“I love business (and business folk)” 

In fact there are lots of people I know who love businesses and business folk. Heck some of the most well known and beloved personalities have been and are business folk … like Steve Jobs, Richard Brandson or Elon Musk.

There are others that no one thinks of as business folk first and foremost, but they are like Buckminster Fuller (a personal favorite personality of mine BTW) and Walt Disney, Steven Spielberg and just about every major entertainer or artist who’s name you know … like the big “O” – Oprah Winfrey.

These folks are business people, doing business, coming up with ways to create and serve their customers, and making money … sometimes millions or billions … in the process.

One of things I most like to do is work with business folks to become more effective at what they do, especially in terms of their personal/professional performance and as leaders (truth be told  I hold a special place for helping people become better leaders in their lives, in their businesses, in the classroom, in small teams … whatever and wherever, because I think good leaders make things happen that otherwise wouldn’t and great leaders change the world).

But … when many people think about business they are actually thinking about bad marketing.

They’re not responding to business or business folk, but to marketing efforts that promote ME over YOU. It’s made us all cynical, suspicious buyers who will reject a decent, valuable offer before we even consider it when we perceive the markers of “marketing” attached to it.

Why???

Well because we’ve probably all had the experience of being ripped off … a little bit or a lot.

We can probably live with the loss of money, but the lost of faith and face can be overwhelming, and that we can’t and won’t tolerate.

Yet we all seem to want things in our lives … from “stuff” that we use every day, like toothpaste and shampoo, or “special stuff” like a prized blouse, jacket or pair of shoes maybe … to special experiences, a fabulous vacation/holiday somewhere exotic or a special dinner out with someone we love. It could even be a simple thing, like a fresh ripe peach or a movie to relax with at the end of the day.

Each of these things comes to us via a business that produces, presents and/or delivers them. Also, all the services we want are largely delivered to us by a business of some kind … the professional medical or dental practice is a business, just like the massage therapist or hair stylist you might use.

I’ve been thinking a lot about this and what it means about “society” as we know it and think about it.

Once again I’ll return to Peter Drucker’s view of business. He used to say that he was a business scholar, because he was interested in people and the social structures we engage in, and that business was at the heart of many of our interactions with one another. I think he was absolutely right too.

I want to build a great business that delivers extraordinary results to my customers … it’s that simple why I love business.

I could also say that I want to express myself in relation to others in a way that allows me to manifest what I think of as some of my unique interests, talents and maybe even my unique gifts … and business is a space where I can do that.

BUT, I hate that you hate marketing. I get it … but I hate it. 

You see I have something I really do want to share with you, my services, and I need to let you know about it to do that.

When I reach out to let you know about what I’m up to, and make an offer to allow me to serve you, I hate the unconscious resistance I know is there for some of you … regardless of how much the offer might be a match and fit for you.

I’ve been trying to figure out how to get past all that … for me and for the folks I work with who also have some great stuff to market, but deal with the same resistance.

So I’m changing tact … looking for a new wind, so to speak.

Here’s the simple scoop …

I’m setting up an Unconventional Advice “No Membership” Private Access program that will offer a complete suite of offerings at absolutely no cost or fees of any kind.

I’ll be writing articles, doing podcasts, putting e-books online and of course doing some new videos too.

Part of the Unconventional Advice “No Membership” Private Access program will be that we’re going to be cutting up the programs I’ve delivered and recorded for sale, and putting up the “best of the best” highlights as well.

Of course I’ll still have stuff for sale, products, programs and services … and I’d love you to become a customer of mine, but in the meantime I want to share with you some of the best stuff I have with no obligation other than to have the privilege of communicating about the stuff I’m interested in with you.

Coming soon …

Unconventional Advice “No Membership” Private Access

I’d love to hear your thoughts … leave me a comment below!

Best,

Joseph Riggio, Ph.D.

New Hope, PA

Filed Under: Blog

Early Mis-Education … Some Notes

Early Mis-Education … Some Notes

by Joseph Riggio · Jul 26, 2015

On The Miseducation Of American Children

[NOTE: I haven’t written on Blognostra for a while, ’cause I’ve been way busy!!! Lots of stuff happening in too many areas of my life all at once … and most of my time communication has been on Facebook. One of the threads there has been about the miseducation of children, which I’ve long been ranting about (see my TedX talks on YouTube for instance). But, I wanted to continue that conversation, and in the service of that intention here’s a short snippet from my book “Experiencing The Hero’s Journey: Foolish Wisdom Book One, An Apprentice Of Wonder” … ENJOY!]

Chapter Six: Soul Relief

“Many young men started down a false path to their true destiny.
Time and fortune usually set them aright.”

– Mario Puzo The Godfather

School Closed SIgn - Morgue-file3691291227482 200px

Early Mis-Education

I was prone to daydreaming or doing something other than paying attention to the teacher when I got bored in class. When some of my teachers noticed me not paying attention they seemed to take a certain pleasure in calling on me so I would stumble over the question they asked. If I happened to catch the question and answer correctly when they had caught me daydreaming it just seemed to frustrate them. Either way I would be punished. I probably spent a ratio of about one hour in detention to every four or five days I spent in class in elementary school.

Following the rules was worse for me, as I thought many of them were ridiculous, even as a child. “Why do I have to draw within the lines?” … “Why do the hearts on the Valentine’s Days’ cards have to be red??” … and, “Why can’t I glue the blocks together to make the tower taller???” These were just some of things I purposefully did (or did not) that that got me in trouble in school as early as in Kindergarten, and caused me to have to ask these kinds of questions of my teacher.

In every year of my elementary education two things were true because I was not so “good” at following the rules, 1) my mother met every teacher I had from Kindergarten to Eighth Grade, often with the school principal in attendance, for a “Parent-Teacher Conference” about their wanton child’s behavior in class (or out of it), and 2) every year I was evaluated by the school psychologist. Depending on the demeanor of the psychologist who was doing the evaluating that year they either threw me out of the evaluation in frustration, or threw me out of it laughing. Neither of these results left my parents laughing however.

Over time I learned I had to “prove myself” – which in translation I now know means I had to justify my existence to those in authority because I had been deemed a “trouble maker” and “trouble makers are no good.” The message I got was that as far as the school system was concerned I was “no good.” My saving grace was that I was a “good student” meaning I got good grades despite my “poor” behavior. I also got along well with everyone and had a lot of friends, including all the really smart kids and the worst troublemakers. For my teachers this was disturbing, because it meant I could not be all bad … and they did not really have a category that made dealing with me easy for them.

Bad kids, those who were intractable (uneducatable), were easy enough to deal with because they fit into a nice, neat category. Suppress them in class, and get them through school, so you can get rid of them. These were the ones who would never turn out well or do anything worthwhile as far as the educational system was concerned. Good kids, those who followed the rules and did well in class, were also easy to handle … bring them up front, use them as an example for the rest of the class and graduate them with honors. The good kids were the stars who would go onto good schools, continuing to get good grades, graduate with honors, get good jobs and continue satisfying the roles they had shown themselves so capable of adopting … roles that served both themselves and the greater good … along with “following the rules” and “fitting in” well to the system.

Kids who were like me in school, bright and capable students, who constitutionally were either unable or refused to follow the rules, were trouble all around … for teachers, for the administration, and often forour parents who also do not know how to handle us. Heck we were the children who did “horrible” things … like talking to other children, wanting to play more than learn when we were young, asking questions instead of mutely accepting the teacher’s pronouncements and worse of all … not sitting still on our chairs, behind our desks, quietly doing our work for six hours a day at six years old!

On the one hand we … the “horrible” children … seemed like we had something to offer and on the other hand, because we are not able or willing to conform, we seemed like we were going to continue to rock the boat and cause trouble. This created a conflicted message in an ongoing way, something like, “You have so much potential … if only you would learn to do what you are told … you could be something.”

Translated the standard message in the classroom to the “horrible” children sounds like: “Until you give up your individual mind, thinking for yourself and your unique ways of seeing the world, and simply accept the group mind, thinking like everyone else does and follow our way of seeing the world, you will always be good for nothing.”

What a message to give a kid, i.e.: “Unless you start accepting your place in the system just like everyone else you’ll be good for nothing.” … especially a bright one who can “hear” what is not being spoken!!!

This message is ancient, despite getting updated continuously. In the past it was installed in children’s psyches simply as matter of “follow the rules or get the rod” maybe best exemplified by the famous Protestant “Christian” parenting dictum, “Spare the rod and spoil the child.” … which was equally carried out by teachers in schools “in loco parentis” extensively, including the many horror stories I heard from friends in Catholic school about nuns, rulers and knuckles.

Today the message about “be the same and not different” gets installed far more subtly, far more deviously and unfortunately far more treacherously. At home, in schools and on sports teams young children are taught that “everyone is special.” At home everyone is treated like a prince or princess – and referred to by parents, grandparents and sometimes other family or family friends in that way as well, in school everyone gets the gold star, on sports teams everyone gets a trophy … effectively eliminating anyone who actually might be special or different in some way that would allow them to stand out.

In the interest of conformity, diversity and tolerance we’ve eliminated any chance for our young to be outstanding … cutting off the flower before the tall poppy in the field has chance to grow and disrupt the nice uniform structure of things … or god forbid, challenge the system and the status quo. Society has always chosen the preference for comfort and familiarity leading to mediocrity rather than encouraging the kind of peaceable, constructive dissent that leads to disruption, innovation and excellence … especially in our children.

Riggio, Joseph (2014-09-23). Experiencing the Hero’s Journey: Foolish Wisdom Book 1: An Apprentice of Wonder (p. 106-109). Parrhesia Ink Publishing. Kindle Edition.

N.B. – All emphasis added, JSR

Joseph Riggio, Ph.D.
Princeton, NJ

PS – I’m looking forward to reading and responding to your comments as well …

Filed Under: Blog

MythoMania 2015 – 25 Jan

MythoMania 2015 – 25 Jan

by Joseph Riggio · Jan 3, 2015

Join Joseph & the MythoMania™ Team…
for a full day of excitement, exploration, information, transformation  and fun.

Logo_WisdomWerks_LOGO ORANGE

Presented By:
WisdomWerks℠ Center for Transformational Performance
31 N. Sugan Rd. ▪︎ New Hope ▪︎ PA ▪︎ 18938

Filed Under: Upcoming Events

Foolish Wisdom – UK 16/17 Jan

Foolish Wisdom – UK 16/17 Jan

by Joseph Riggio · Jan 3, 2015

Join Joseph and a small group of select, like-minded participants in exploring how you get yourself stuck, getting yourself unstuck and moving towards mastery.

London_Bridge_Hotel_-_Tower_Bridge_Hotels_-_The_Tower“Foolish wisdom is about dealing with the world in ways you have not before … treating life as less of a problem and more of a puzzle.“ – Joseph Riggio

This day is all about you, the agenda is utterly simple … “What do you want?”

Filed Under: Upcoming Events

« Previous Page
Next Page »

© 2026 ABTI | Joseph Riggio International · Rainmaker Platform

Privacy Policy

  • Services
  • Log In