loud and on a boom box, and nobody was doing like that, and people were like this is cool and everybody was psyched up, and i thought i can get people inspired and they will do things they didn t know they could do, and it felt like i had an ability i didn t know i had, and it made me feel like i could conquer the world. this is the finest turkey-carver in the universe. i started my first little company and it was called the quantum consulting group. there s james a. ray, my first son, the president of got to name my company. i taught everything from time management to team building to the seven habits of highly effective people by stefan cubby, but at night i was
all right. so i am reminded of a story of a young 6-year-old boy, and he bounded out of bed on this particular morning because he was excited. remember how when you were young and really young and you got excited about, well, anything? well, that s how he was. he was excited because today was the day that he began kindergarten. he wanted to go new places and meet new people and he wanted to color, all kinds of things. and so he left his familiar surroundings and began to interact quickly with a different group of people. it was not very long before he realized that he was different. cpr in progress. two subjects passed out.
come into a room booked at a hotel over a weekend and what it really became known for is the kind of shockingly confrontational nature of the actual seminar. why do you have to be a nice guy? why do you have to look hip? why do you have to look cool? it was challenging for the people that was there and it was outrageous for the people who weren t. it was like a dam breaking, and oprah, and dr. phil, you had a wider acceptance of the idea of a group of people coming together to be completely radically transformed. i guess i don t know the value of money, and i don t know what a penny is worth or what a dollar is worth because i never had that in my life. where did you learn that one,
and i got a nice little chunk. that s like a piece of real estate in the brain, right? and those people, once they connected, it s like, you know, okay, well, he does another event and this one and this one, and this one you learned something different than in this one, and after a while, you hit this group and there s a rapport, and you get a piece of real estate in the mind, if you will. well, where are all those people? where did they go? they were beating on the door to get into my events. where are they? here i am a startup again, and i know what it takes and i get up, and i am like, shit, do i still have that in me? how are we doing numbers wise? numbers as in sales? yeah, total sales? i think the last count was a total of up to 10, maybe 10.
people were like this is cool and everybody was psyched up, and i thought i can get people inspired and they will do things they didn t know they could do, and it felt like i had an ability i didn t know i had, and it made me feel like i could conquer the world. this is the finest turkey-carver in the universe. i started my first little company and it was called the quantum consulting group. there s james a. ray, my first son, the president of got to name my company. i taught everything from time management to team building to the seven habits of highly effective people by stefan cubby, but at night i was