You know what you want: happiness, wealth, and health are almost universally desired, but few people ever achieve even one of these goals. We die from self-inflected disease caused by the food we eat. We work tirelessly but never seem to have enough money. And as for happiness, what little we achieve is fleeting at best.
While others claim willpower, motivational exercises, and inspirational thinking lead to a successful life, Constantine Mitropoulos disagrees. Instead he suggests people suffer from what he calls TIABOB Syndrome.
Short for "trapped inside a bubble of bullshit," TIABOB prevents us from seeing reality as it really is. Our personal bubbles distort what we see and how we think, making real change impossible-unless we burst the bubble.
Mitropoulos provides the skills you need to break free from TIABOB. First you change your mind, then you change your body, and then you change your life-forever.
If the journey seems hard, that's only because TIABOB obscures your perceptions. Guided by Mitropoulos's Four Commandments of Life, Five Laws of Perception, and his Seven-Step Life Formula, you'll learn to ask "why?" instead of "why not?" You'll learn to defeat TIABOB!
About the Author: Born on August 15th, 1964, Constantine Mitropoulos was raised in Sydney, Australia, by two loving parents who taught him the value of honor, respect, and trust.
Mitropoulos overcame severe stuttering as a teen, and his parents guided him into the field of computer programming at a time when personal computers were in their infancy. He excelled at his job-and is responsible for pioneering CD-ROM technology in Australia and revolutionizing automatic teller machines with CD-ROM and touch screen technology in 1987, a world first.
At age twenty-four, Mitropoulos went into business for himself, manufacturing the first CD-ROM to contain the entirety of Australia's yellow and white pages. He also received an apostolic blessing from Pope John Paul II for translating certain texts into Latin for the Vatican.
Realizing his true passion lay in personal development, Mitropoulos semiretired from business in 1997 to explore ways in which he could improve the world. TIABOB is the result.