That's when I stumbled upon a Tony Robbins seminar all about working on myself instead of wasting time trying to control everything else!
It was now crystal clear to me how to easily create lasting happiness by changing the master system that drives all results, because I saw I just needed to tweak a few things is my life and it was 100% within my control.
I also learned that just going to seminars and reading books isn't enough to create lasting change, you need to create a system that will get me there instead.
As a result I started learning everything I could about personal development and how to change your emotional blueprint.
After I did that, I started getting real clarity about what really mattered to me for the first time in my life.
Suddenly, I was excited about my life where I used to feel broken.
That’s when I realized that the secret to get ahead in my career like I was supposed to was playing a different kind of game. If I wanted to feel better I simply had to change the system. And to me as an engineer, this made perfect sense...
My plan was to start learning everything I could about personal development.
So I started attending lots of seminars and started volunteering a lot to help other people and before long I became the go-to guy to create a strategy to solve other people's problems. But I didn’t stop there.
I then I started my coaching company and started training people around the world on personal transformation and peak performance.
After that, we Left my two engineering degrees behind for good.
But there was still a problem...
I was traveling the world two weeks out of every month.
I had left my corporate career to create more time and freedom to live my life but I was working more hours than ever.
I was not spending time with my partner and friends, in fact many times people were surprised to hear I was back home - because I was always away.
Moreover in a lot of the events I trained at people got super excited about their life but couldn't sustain the momentum when they plugged back into their lives.