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Originally Posted by seeker5 I assume you're talking about a CEO who wants to use the consultation to increase the good he is doing. I can see perhaps a darkworker CEO who may want to consult you simply to gain more ability to do what he is doing. Will you automatically accept anyone who buys the consultation like Erin automatically accepts all new clients who buys a reading from her site, or will you have another screening mechanism to filter out people who are able to pay the $500, but whom you're not interested in helping out, such as a darkworker CEO?
Although, I can see that a darkworker CEO may not want to reach out to get a consultation with you considering your known lightworker views. Furthermore, it's possible you could help a darkworker CEO see the benefit of being a lightworker if he is spending money to consult with you. However, I still thought I'd bring up the question. |
I wouldn't be interested in helping McDonald's kill billions more animals and pump more methane into the atmosphere if that's what you mean.
I think many CEOs feel trapped. They don't wield as much power as you might think because they must answer to the company's BoD and investors. And the investment climate is often "Make us money. We don't care how you do it. Just make us richer." This ends up creating a nasty consciousness-lowering atmosphere downstream, where the employees are treated as cogs more than as human beings.
Many of these companies have missions statements, but those statements are B.S. They're just for show. Same goes for many corporate charitable donation programs. It's for PR purposes, not from a real alignment with love.
But it is possible to shift a fear-driven company to a love-driven company where everyone is happy and the investors make a bundle. It won't be easy, but if you can shift the mindset of enough people at the company (a critical mass), the business will change.
When a company is fear-driven, virtually no one feels good. The CEO is panicked. The employees are beaten down into submissive slaves. The investors are anxious about what might blow up (are we sitting on another Enron or Worldcomm?). And the customers are always talking about how clueless the company is at customer service.