10 January 2012

Letter from Lhasa, number 265. (Stein 2010): Get a Great Job When You Don't Have a Job

Letter from Lhasa, number 265. (Stein 2010): Get a Great Job When You Don't Have a Job   
by Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Stein, M., Get a Great Job When You Don't Have a Job, McGraw Hill, 2010.
(Stein 2010).
Marky Stein


The main message of this books seems to be: “Not to have fear!” Fearless résumés, fearless interviewing, fearless career change.

A résumé will be judged 80% on what the reader sees in the first lines. Basically, an employer wants greater profits. Since ageism biases, it is better not to claim more than 10-15 year experience.

In an interview, avoid the imposter syndrome when you are not at all an impostor.

Career change is a question of focusing on what one likes more although be frequently a question of real chances to be ready to catch. Transferable skills and talents make people able to a multiplicity of professions with apparently radically different labels.


Stein, M., Get a Great Job When You Don't Have a Job, McGraw Hill, 2010.

Letter from Lhasa, number 264. (Wynn 2010): The Real Truth About Success

Letter from Lhasa, number 264. (Wynn 2010): The Real Truth About Success   
by Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Wynn, G., The Real Truth About Success. What the Top 1 Percent Do Differently, Why They Won’t Tell You, and How You Can Do It Anyway, McGraw Hill, 2010.
(Wynn 2010).
Garrison Wynn 


This book is addressed “To everyone who has come to understand that just being good at what you do is not enough.”

There are different myths about success. They are just myths. Who got success has no reason to contradict them. Who diffuses them has no reason to go against what is currently believed, and “sold” and “drunk”.

For example, contrarily to the usual sugary optimism, “negativity in the workplace can be an effective catalyst for improvement and progress.”
(Wynn 2010, p. 4)

The best products are not necessarily the most successful: “People will choose a mediocre product over a good one, as long as it fills a need.” (Wynn 2010, p. 5). People “choose what makes them comfortable, whether it’s the best or not.” (Wynn 2010, p. 6). Idem for ideas. They must be easy to digest.

Smarter or smartest people are generally not understood, so, generally, they are not successful. Genius is NOT the foundation of success.

We believe these lies about success, because “We believe what’s easy to believe.” (Wynn 2010, p. 10)

“[...] clarity, not intelligence, is the biggest determinant of success.”
(Wynn 2010, p. 8)

“Some lies are easy to believe because it’s just simpler to believe them than to question them.”
(Wynn 2010, p. 11)

“The fact is people typically do business with people they trust, people they’ve got a great relationship with.”
(Wynn 2010, p. 12)

A key element is turning disadvantage in advantage. Naturally it is easier to talk about that after having realised that, than to always finding the way of doing that.

There are some assumptions:
“# People are most likely to bond with people who listen more than they talk.
“# People are most likely to agree with people who do not make them feel wrong.
“# People are most likely to value a solution they helped to create.
“# People are most likely to abandon a complex process, even if it works.
“# People are most likely to choose what they’re comfortable with, whether or not it’s the best.
“# People are most likely to follow leaders who make them feel important; those leaders are most likely to elicit the best performance.
“These observations all point to the power of influence being seated in trust, clarity, and comfort. This chapter explores all six observations, starting with the first three that intertwine to create what I call the building blocks of trust.
(Wynn 2010, p. 114)

Actually, people follow who or what has power over them. However, if they may and can chose, the assumptions above are probably precise. People follow who offer solutions seem acceptable and confortable, if nobody in a position of authority pushes towards different options. If people were really free to follow their personal best, the world would be without conflicts and problems created from other people. Unfortunately, reality is more complicate. We choose something because it seems better, not because it be really better. We operate in regimes of largely incomplete information. Information is costly.   

“Trust is built on a foundation of two things: compassion and competence.”
(Wynn 2010, p. 115)

“The pure power of making people feel heard is the foundation of earning trust.”
(Wynn 2010, p. 116)

“Whatever you’re selling—a product, a management style, a strategy, a solution, an idea—people are more likely to buy it if you listen more than you talk.”
(Wynn 2010, p. 116)

“We are narcissistic; the idea that sounds best to us is the one we were thinking of already. No idea looks better than my idea. So my idea coming from you is a fantastic idea. Whatever you just said that sounds like an idea I already had—that must be a great idea because it’s living in my head, and you just said it.”
(Wynn 2010, p. 122)

However, in these operations, it is easy to think we are very astute when we are just cunning and the others perceive we are just cunning. In such a case, the other perceives as cheated.

Of course, this book contains a long list of advices on how to behave and not to behave, on what to perceive and what not to perceive.

First-Level Lesson
The real truth about success is that not only do we not like to talk about the real truth, but we don’t necessarily want to hear it.
(Wynn 2010, p. 198)

Second-Level Lesson
What it takes to get to the top may be something that a lot of us are unwilling to do.
(Wynn 2010, p. 207)

For those who have not time to read the whole book, there is a summary in the last chapter, chapter 10.


Wynn, G., The Real Truth About Success. What the Top 1 Percent Do Differently, Why They Won’t Tell You, and How You Can Do It Anyway, McGraw Hill, 2010.

Letter from Lhasa, number 263. Politics of Massage

Letter from Lhasa, number 263. Politics of Massage
by Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Capellini, S., and M. Van Welden, Massage for Dummies, Wiley Publishing, 2010.
Steve Capellini,
Michel Van Welden
(Capellini 2010)

Stubbs, K. R., and L.-A. Saulnier, Erotic Massage. The Tantric Touch of Love, Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam, New York, NY, USA, 1998.
Kenneth Ray Stubbs,
Louise-Andrée Saulnier
(Stubbs 1998)


Humans, as well as other animals, need to touch each other and their skin needs to “breathe”, so to be in communication with external air not only with other humans.

Orphans not touched from anybody die. In times of crises, as the Middles Ages, people did not touch too much and massaging was not at all popular.  

“Many people just can’t seem to understand that massage is anything more than indulgence, luxury, and pampering, so they pass on it.” (Capellini 2010, p. 51). Consequently, it may be subversive, relatively to other ‘languages’, or it may simply reveal as a form of manipulation.

Politics of massage is politics of health and pleasure, because massage is a healthy and pleasant activity, decidedly with a marked spirituality:
In massage, you have to go beyond the moves pretty quickly. You need to develop a ‘moveless movement,’ or flow, in which you’re concentrating not on your own technique but on your partner’s feelings, sensations, and reactions, just like a musician who forgets all about notes and scales, sharps and  flats, and even the instrument itself. Your movements are the technique, the body you massage is the instrument, and it’s the interaction between the two that makes the music. In other words, massage — not the movements required to produce the sensations — is the music, the communication, the thing that you create.(Capellini 2010, p. 135-36)

For a good sensual massage, what one needs are just the right intention, spontaneity and sensitivity. (Capellini 2010, p. 264). It has the advantage of involving the whole bodies.

If, instead of planning and implementing insanities and crimes, Statesmen/women and other policy-makers practiced massage, they would make the world better instead of worse as they currently do. Organizing and implementing terrorism and organized criminality, Statesmen/women and other policy-makers break communication channels among people and inside subjects, instead of promoting wealthy and synergetic flows of energy. 


Capellini, S., and M. Van Welden, Massage for Dummies, Wiley Publishing, 2010.

Stubbs, K. R., and L.-A. Saulnier, Erotic Massage. The Tantric Touch of Love, Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam, New York, NY, USA, 1998. 

Letter from Lhasa, number 262. (Farber 2008): Meta-Magick. The Book of ATEM

Letter from Lhasa, number 262. (Farber 2008): Meta-Magick. The Book of ATEM
by Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Farber, P. H., Meta-Magick. The Book of ATEM. Achieving New States of Consciousness Through NLP, Neuroscience and Ritual, WeiserBooks, USA, 2008.
(Farber 2008).
Philip H. Farber


In this book, NLP is used for creating an exoteric frame. Remapping one’s own mind, include here a memetic entity, Atem, representing as an extension of the individual mind and perception to the whole universe.

In practice, instead of a well defined and bounded NLP reframing, what is performed is a kind of an open-bounded, limitless, reframing. “A path is formed by walking on it” is a living reality allowing the subject to try new ways, new paths, outside the usual ones.

In NLP, language creates consciousness. Here, it is create a language consistent with this broader consciousness. YOU create Atem.

The suggested exercises are progressive and introduce to this broader world.   


Farber, P. H., Meta-Magick. The Book of ATEM. Achieving New States of Consciousness Through NLP, Neuroscience and Ritual, WeiserBooks, USA, 2008.

Letter from Lhasa, number 261. (Payen de La Garanderie 2009): La Sophrologie

Letter from Lhasa, number 261. (Payen de La Garanderie 2009): La Sophrologie  
by Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Payen de La Garanderie, A., La Sophrologie, Eyrolles, Paris, France, 2009.
(Payen de La Garanderie 2009).
Agnès Payen de La Garanderie


“La prévention des maladies fonctionnelles est possible dans une très large mesure. L’apprentissage du contrôle et de la maîtrise du stress excessif, la stimulation de la pensée positive, la connaissance de soi, le respect de la bonne hygiène de vie et une alimentation saine, peuvent contribuer à résoudre partiellement ce grave problème.”
(Payen de La Garanderie 2009, p. 11)

Sophrology is here presented as a new vision of the world, allowing the passage from life to existence, comprehending an epistemology, a hermeneutics and a methodology. 

Actually, it is a usual set of exercises, from relaxation to self-suggestion. The usual goal is managing existential problems of a subject looking for some external source of ‘truth’.

Individuals like to pay for classes deresponsabilizing them if they do not get any real result. The same fact of registering and paying is reassuring, for a while. If they get no result, that is attributed to causes external to themselves.


Payen de La Garanderie, A., La Sophrologie, Eyrolles, Paris, France, 2009.

07 January 2012

Letter from Lhasa, number 260. (Wind 2006): The Power of Impossible Thinking

Letter from Lhasa, number 260. (Wind 2006): The Power of Impossible Thinking
by Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Wind, Y., and C. Crook, The Power of Impossible Thinking. Transform the Business of Your Life and the Life of Your Business, Pearson Education Inc., 2006.
(Wind 2006).
Yoram (Jerry) Wind,
Colin Crook,
Robert Gunther


We see what we think. For changing the world, one needs first to change one’s own thinking.

Mental models are useful and, at the same time, they may become obstacles or to cause disasters. There are no formal recipes for success either for changing these recipes when not anymore adequate. 

Impossible thinking is simply the skill to find solutions before unimaginable. The point would eventually be about the adequacy of the new solutions and whether they would be really innovative relatively to the old ones.

Actually, the large majority of innovative people is slave of current pattern of thinking. Consequently, only casually, and in a very limited field (generally concerning the profession of the innovator), what are considered innovative people may find some innovative solution.


“What you think is what you do.” (Wind 2006). If one sees what one thinks, obviously one, everyone, acts according to one’s own mental patterns.


Wind, Y., and C. Crook, The Power of Impossible Thinking. Transform the Business of Your Life and the Life of Your Business, Pearson Education Inc., 2006.

Letter from Lhasa, number 259. (Heath 2010): Switch. How to Change Things When Change Is Hard

Letter from Lhasa, number 259. (Heath 2010): Switch. How to Change Things When Change Is Hard
by Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Heath, C., and D. Heath, Switch. How to Change Things When Change Is Hard, Broadway Books, New York, NY, USA, 2010.  
(Heath 2010).
Chip Heath,
Dan Heath


But when Elephants and Riders move together, change can come easily.” (Heath 2010, p. 15).

Problem solving works by sequences of small solutions, rarely by grandiose plans.

The more there are options, the more people are unable to decide. Limited options are decidedly more popular than their proliferation. Complexity, uncertainty, ambiguity lead to decision paralysis, what is deadly for change.   

Understanding is not a key element for change. Sometimes, scare produces change.

With common people, psychology works better than pure maths. In first instance, people refuse change.

Actually, change is introduced either from people in charge or by tricks. If there are improvements, change is appreciated later.


Heath, C., and D. Heath, Switch. How to Change Things When Change Is Hard, Broadway Books, New York, NY, USA, 2010. 

Letter from Lhasa, number 258. (Sayre 2001): Unstoppable Confidence. Unleash your Natural Confidence Within

Letter from Lhasa, number 258. (Sayre 2001): Unstoppable Confidence. Unleash your Natural Confidence Within
by Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Sayre, K., Unstoppable Confidence. Unleash your Natural Confidence Within, Unstoppable Books, Portland, Oregon, USA, 2001.  
(Sayre 2001).
Kent Sayre


“By changing your language you change your life” is one of the basic NLP techniques of this book.

Confidence is the ability to achieve goals. Consequently, a founding aspect is to interiorise this ability. One can do it by deactivating negative internal voices while activating the positive ones.

That is less easy that it may seem. In fact, many ‘confident’ people simply show optimism, what is different from a deep and real confidence. To show is not necessarily, or rarely is, to be, as well as positive language (positive relatively to goals) is different from sugary languages.  

As first step, or one of the first steps, the author suggests suppressing doubts from language, using only absolutistic expression, about what one intend to do.

Basically, it is the problem of confidence, which is different from showing confidence as well from convincing people showing a confidence they have not.

“There’s also a confidence at the level of belief. This level means that, you believe you’re confident. You think so, you think you’re confident. You’re pretty sure. You say, ‘I am confident’. But the ideal is to get to a point where, you are so absolutely confident that it’s a given. You don’t need to think about it anymore. You are confident. You just are confident. It’s your way of being. So, if you think about your beliefs, some of them, you’re not even aware of since they’re just a given. It’s just natural. If you’ve integrated your occupation into your identity, like you’re a salesperson or you’re a doctor, or you’re a nurse, or you’re an attorney or whatever. That’s just a given. It’s not a belief that you have. It’s just your way of being. You know no differently.”
(Sayre 2001, p. 38)

Learn from mistakes. To see the positive aspect of everything and everybody. Even if one cannot always control the outside world, one can always control oneself. Avoiding mind-reading, or to suppose mind-reading, other people will improve your communication with other people. Assumptions about other people are frequently wrong. Conjectures are usually deceptive.

Of course, near the end this Americanish book, there are “twenty explosive techniques for unstoppable confidence”. Decidedly too many, even if the field is complex. Basically, what people need is a combination of visualization and action for building positive and confident habits.


Sayre, K., Unstoppable Confidence. Unleash your Natural Confidence Within, Unstoppable Books, Portland, Oregon, USA, 2001.