The quickest way is the detour

Your life is not going the way you want it to. Not at all, or a little bit. The question you've been hiccuping about for a while, "How do I get it going again? There may be a concrete reason for that. A burnout, for example, depressive feelings, the death of a loved one or an illness. But also an indefinable feeling of dissatisfaction can prompt you: 'I have to do something about this'.Only: what?

Something to do with spirituality? An education? A therapist, coach or guru? The offerings are overwhelming. The decision to bring change to your situation seems to create a new problem. Choice stress.Most of the alternatives you consider have this in common: they promise to bring you what you ask for. Which seems logical, and attractive, but isn't. Because you're skipping a crucial step. The question of the legitimacy of your commitment.

Because how do you know that the desire you hope to see fulfilled is right? Truly suits you? That it is "true"?

Suppose you are single and you ask the real estate agent to find you a house with ten rooms. What would you rather have, a realtor who says, "are we going to get it for you," or one who asks "uh, ten rooms for you alone: are you sure?

What makes Liber so different and so incredibly effective: it teaches you to start there where other methods step over. At a question. At this question, "I who am I? And this is because "who" precedes "what.

Do you start building a house to live in at the roof? No right? Liber teaches: then also build your house to live in from the ground up. Don't start somewhere halfway, at a desire, or at a wish, but first examine the identity of the builder. Who are you really?

To that end, you learn to take the same three steps over and over again. Acknowledge. Activate. Welcoming. Soon you begin to see that you don't have both feet on the ground of your life. That you live in assumptions about yourself. Actually being the prisoner of a story about yourself that does not match the totality of who you are. Because this story is all about controlling and knowing, while you endlessly know more not than you do. And you are also essentially powerless. After all, the most beautiful and terrible things of our lives are not "in control.

That head of ours ... let it have its way and it imagines itself to be the director of our existence. But if the wisdom traditions of East and West agree on something: the very art of living has nothing to do with knowledge. All it requires is honesty and simplicity. The courage to see and acknowledge again and again: 'I am my own worst enemy. I complicate what is fundamentally simple.'

At first glance, Liber seems different. New. But look further and you recognize an approach that helps you make an ancient wisdom your own. A knowing that resides in the depths of your soul: whoever wants to learn to come alive, teaches himself a life of unlearning. What Liber offers you: the opportunity to kick your addiction to 'Misunderstanding Me'.Liber summed up in one sentence? The detour is the fastest way. You learn to realize your goals by befriending the saboteur who stands in the way of them.And then? Happiness? Success? All your dreams realized? More than that. Much more.Liber brings you: more and more of yourself.