Peter Crone
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It has to be because it has no ground to stand on. There's no actual evidence other than the story. So that's why the self-righteousness is so pervasive because that's the ammunition that sustains the illusion, right?
If I can find evidence for the fact that I'm undesirable as a person in a city because I don't have a partner or because I don't get paid enough money confirms the fact that I'm worthless, like, we're going to seek the evidence to keep alive the illusion of ourselves because it's a pretense. It's made up. Truth doesn't need evidence.
If I can find evidence for the fact that I'm undesirable as a person in a city because I don't have a partner or because I don't get paid enough money confirms the fact that I'm worthless, like, we're going to seek the evidence to keep alive the illusion of ourselves because it's a pretense. It's made up. Truth doesn't need evidence.
If I can find evidence for the fact that I'm undesirable as a person in a city because I don't have a partner or because I don't get paid enough money confirms the fact that I'm worthless, like, we're going to seek the evidence to keep alive the illusion of ourselves because it's a pretense. It's made up. Truth doesn't need evidence.
And so that's why we're always fighting for those limitations because otherwise it's just a death.
And so that's why we're always fighting for those limitations because otherwise it's just a death.
And so that's why we're always fighting for those limitations because otherwise it's just a death.
That's the blind spot. Yeah, that's where the compassion comes in. I, being the perfect boyfriend in my story to this girl who loved me and adored me, she didn't need me to be anything. She loved me, right? I was in a relationship with my own identity, which is what most people have. Most relationships don't work.
That's the blind spot. Yeah, that's where the compassion comes in. I, being the perfect boyfriend in my story to this girl who loved me and adored me, she didn't need me to be anything. She loved me, right? I was in a relationship with my own identity, which is what most people have. Most relationships don't work.
That's the blind spot. Yeah, that's where the compassion comes in. I, being the perfect boyfriend in my story to this girl who loved me and adored me, she didn't need me to be anything. She loved me, right? I was in a relationship with my own identity, which is what most people have. Most relationships don't work.
So that was me, unbeknownst to myself, trying to overcome that which I thought I was, which I wasn't, right? So I'm looking for evidence, you know, for whatever it is, reinforcement, reassurance, like, oh, I'm a great boyfriend, right? It's like, okay, that would appease the hurt of feeling that I'm not enough somehow. So that's the addiction. Again, I love quotes.
So that was me, unbeknownst to myself, trying to overcome that which I thought I was, which I wasn't, right? So I'm looking for evidence, you know, for whatever it is, reinforcement, reassurance, like, oh, I'm a great boyfriend, right? It's like, okay, that would appease the hurt of feeling that I'm not enough somehow. So that's the addiction. Again, I love quotes.
So that was me, unbeknownst to myself, trying to overcome that which I thought I was, which I wasn't, right? So I'm looking for evidence, you know, for whatever it is, reinforcement, reassurance, like, oh, I'm a great boyfriend, right? It's like, okay, that would appease the hurt of feeling that I'm not enough somehow. So that's the addiction. Again, I love quotes.
I say, there's no greater addiction than one's idea of oneself. That's the ultimate addiction. It's not the substance. It's not the behavior. It's the feeling of inadequacy, insecurity, or scarcity. We're addicted to that because that's where we have become so familiar to ourselves, and then we have all the evidence to support it, for good or bad.
I say, there's no greater addiction than one's idea of oneself. That's the ultimate addiction. It's not the substance. It's not the behavior. It's the feeling of inadequacy, insecurity, or scarcity. We're addicted to that because that's where we have become so familiar to ourselves, and then we have all the evidence to support it, for good or bad.
I say, there's no greater addiction than one's idea of oneself. That's the ultimate addiction. It's not the substance. It's not the behavior. It's the feeling of inadequacy, insecurity, or scarcity. We're addicted to that because that's where we have become so familiar to ourselves, and then we have all the evidence to support it, for good or bad.
You know, I work with a lot of athletes. I can remember even with Tiger Woods when he wasn't a client, but I worked with a lot of people on the tour.
You know, I work with a lot of athletes. I can remember even with Tiger Woods when he wasn't a client, but I worked with a lot of people on the tour.
You know, I work with a lot of athletes. I can remember even with Tiger Woods when he wasn't a client, but I worked with a lot of people on the tour.
Even if he was, say, five, six, seven shots back on a Sunday, the last day, he had created a personality that the millions of viewers behind TV screens and then the thousands of people watching at a golf course, their view of him was he's going to come back and win. So in that case, it was sort of perhaps a, you know,