The Abundance & Success Codes’ Summit
Happiness is the new rich. Health is the new wealth. Kindness is the new cool.
It's time to redefine Abundance and Success too.
The Abundance & Success Codes’ Summit is a revolutionary space dedicated to you and your evolution.
I have been invited into this space to share my journey, perspective and wisdom as a Transformational Traveller & Life Coach, where I will be exploring 'The New Global Citizenship' for you to unlock your ever-evolving potential and cultivate your own abundance & success.
You are invited to join us in this immersive and transformative 10-day summit, designed specifically for heart-centered, multi-passionate creatives and entrepreneurs like you, to help you redefine your own unique abundance and success.
Take that first step towards creating a life of alignment, abundance, success and joy!
Update: Registration is now closed. Follow my social media for more!
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Swey J: It's such a pleasure to have you here, and I just want to dive right into your journey — your journey to becoming Freeman, the man that you are today.
Freeman Fung: A bit about myself: I am a global citizen, and what that means is that I truly believe it doesn't matter where you're born, what your skin color is, what your educational background is, or what your financial circumstances are. You and I are no different; we are just citizens of the same world. By truly embodying this global mindset and committing to travel around the world using this new global citizenship thinking, my life has transformed in ways that I never imagined were possible holistically.
In the last 10 years of moving around the world, I've met Global Citizens and unlocked new opportunities in my life. I've also traveled more deeply inwardly with my mind, body, and spirit. There have been obvious lessons in love throughout this decade that I want to share more with the audience today.
At the same time, I also want to share with the audience that when most people come across my profile, there is so much about this guy that looks amazing on social media: traveling around the world, and this and that. They may feel like that is irrelevant to them because they think, "Oh, I can't travel like that either." But I always want to emphasize that I was not born in this manner. I grew up in Hong Kong.
So my background is that I was born and raised for 19 years of my life in Hong Kong, which is a fast-paced 24/7 non-stop city. I was never the smartest kid in school, and I was also the shortest kid in class. You can imagine how that goes in Asian society. I was feeling suffocated with everything that I couldn't understand. Why were we doing that? Is it for society's contest? I was just feeling squeezed by this finance-oriented and competition-driven culture. So that gave me no joy, and I felt like I had no purpose at all in my life.
There was a turning point when I was 19. That was the first time I went outside my comfort zone and traveled solo to Romania, which sounds very random. But at that point, I was like, "Oh, I have nothing to lose. I may as well just go see the world and see what life is all about for me." And that trip transformed my life. For this reason, I was involved in a volunteer project through an international exchange platform called AIESEC. I was there with 40 other internationals from 16 different countries. It was the first time I experienced a global village, and we were just enjoying this firsthand cultural exchange. The biggest lesson I learned from that first solo trip is that we are not here to be the same as others. From my whole life, and I think a lot of the audience can resonate with this, we get this label from society through education, from our friends and families, that we have to be someone else. But the fact is, that's the reason why we're stuck in this globalized world and the reason I say that we are trying to use local solutions to solve a global problem.
On that trip, I experienced the power of diversity and realized, "Wow, I'm here to be unique. I have my reason to come to this earth to make a difference, and success should be defined by me rather than using the same climbing-the-ladder models to get the next promotion, the next house, the next car, or the perfect partner."
The shift of this awakening of global citizenship is truly coming from the inside out. I recognize that I am Freeman. I'm also Hong Kong-born, and at the same time, I am a global citizen as well. That awakening is truly the starting point and also the tipping point of my life, where I transform from a state of surviving to a state of thriving.
As you have mentioned, I'm an international speaker now. The best-selling author of Travel to Transform and I'm a certified life coach as well. And also, on the side, I have a lot of multi-passionate hobbies as well. I'm a Shaolin martial artist. I'm a biohacker, I am a lucid dreamer as well. I just love all this because we are here to experience life, right? And that's why now I'm on a mission to help awaken other Global Citizens. And to share this message that you and I are no different.
Swey J: Well, yeah, it's so well put, especially the part where you went from surviving. You thrived, and you defined what your success meant. I am curious to explore how you, a person of color, are someone with whom I can resonate because I'm also a person of color. How can people of color, who are held back by cultural norms, cultural expectations. How can we step out of those norms and those boundaries that society kind of creates for us? To be in a container is to be in a bubble. This kind of thing stops us from being global citizens. I would like for you to speak to that a little bit about how your unique journey can give everyone a perspective, especially people of color, to step out of that zone and cultivate their own path.
Freeman Fung: Yeah, that's such a beautiful question, right? I think even today when we watch all the Ted Talks and when we go on YouTube and find the thought leaders and the speakers, right? And many of them, you know, will be Caucasians, and a lot of them will be in positions where they have really powerful connections because of their position or their successful resume, right?
Things have changed drastically in the last decade, and it's amazing that you know, people like you and I now also have a voice and can share this message through our hearts. And, you know, technology and also this elevating of human consciousness shifts a lot, but that's a really beautiful question to really help us and also help the audience to reflect what that means to me to be a global citizen.
And how, like you said, can we break through this cultural barrier? Yeah, right. One of the most significant influences on my life is Vishen Lakhani who is the CEO of MindValley as well. And for those who haven't heard, as well as being one of the world's biggest online self-development platforms, I'm also one of the ambassadors and network coordinators in Australia. We are building our conscious community over here through personal transformation.
And what I love about the concept that he uses is the cultural landscape, and there's also the term system of living, and also the model of reality. Now, let's examine those concepts and see how we can reuse them toward you to break the bubble, as you say. So first of all, right, we are born into a world where we are instilled or installed different beliefs. And it could be, you know, for guys, we have to be strong; we can have this; we can be crying out to show our emotion because that means weakness. Yeah. Maybe, you know, for the Western concept, they are more of an individualized culture. While in the East, we are more like a collective culture. And, you know, the key point here is that there's no right or wrong.
On any of these labels or in any of these rules, there's no right or wrong, and that's important. Because when we want to break through this condition, as we say, from the inside out, first of all, we have to accept, no matter what kind of skin color we have now, no matter which country I was born in, no matter what the cultural landscape is like right now. It doesn't matter in the sense that we can always find the true answer and always find our path through cultivating self-awareness because understanding what our true selves mean, and what our identity means, is the first breakthrough in going outside our comfort zone and going outside our bubble to go outside. That culture escaped and you find yourself, and it is precisely for me to write about my journey through Romania. That's the first starting point for finding myself: traveling to find myself. That's one of the biggest messages in my book, Travel to transform, where I share with my readers how we can, no matter what our background is, really step outside our comfort zone and then break through the first step. Because when we break through the first one, we will have the second. And then that's the embodiment of change, where change is the only constant. And by constantly going outside and taking the next step, we are working towards this beautiful world of possibility rather than staying in the same bubble in the painful culture of escape, right? And now, that's the cultural escape, right? What's beautiful about bringing awareness from unawareness is that when we realize our beliefs, that I was a short Asian kid, I used to believe that I was weak. I have to listen to my parents; they have all the authority to say which school I need to attend and what kind of hobbies I need to choose. All those kinds of things slowly construct themselves to become the model of reality. Right. And what that means is that it is actually a mental construct and also a framework for us to live our lives according to those rules coming from outside. And again, back to the point, if we can unleash our true identity, our true selves, as global citizens from the inside out, then we will start, although we will start to see all those external roots. What he would call the Bullshit rules which is the Bruce? So for me right now on my travel journey, Romania was a starting point, but after that, I also started backpacking and I studied in the UK, and then I started working for a multinational company, and then I just worked for my lifestyle. But the more I do that, the more I can brick and reconstruct my model of reality
Swey J
Speaking to this new system of living and going in and identifying our identity to be able to level up ourselves to be global citizens. When it comes to this, there is always that once we reach that higher level, there is always that Push and pull: how do we exist as our true selves while also being considerate and kind and in the global mindset? Because then we kind of have, and I always say this, we are not just one identity all the time; we are one identity that is an infinity of multiple identities, whether past identities, present identities, or future identities.
But I think one of the things that when it comes to going and living a full-fledged, global citizen life, whether that's in a mental space or a physical space, one of the struggles that I see most people face is, Who am I when I'm in this space? And how can I still be myself when I'm in this space? Do you know what I mean? That distinction between the two identities: how do we create alignment with these two identities? When we step into global citizenship but also cultivate our own identity.
Freeman Fung
That was one of the biggest questions I asked myself as well because there was a point in time when I was traveling around, maybe 15, or 20 countries. I think that's the time. Also, I start having this duality, right? This polarity where I'm thinking, Okay, I am a Hong Kong, this is right? I should identify myself with my friends and family. Those who have the same skin color who go to the same church as me, as my younger self and all this identity that I associate with my old life, right? Yeah. And at the same time, I have this new identity as a global citizen, just like you said that I have friends; I am starting to have all these new friends around the world that I can connect with, and I am starting to have this international career as well, working for a company, and I can relocate. Yeah, start having all this amazing non-local opportunities
How do you think that fits? So that's the biggest lesson that I have learned. In fact when we look at it from a 3D perspective rather than 2D. Yeah, they both overlap in a way that this—let's say this small circle—is my identity as a Hong Kong person. And Global Citizens is a broader Circle that transcends and includes that Hong Kong has this identity.
Yeah. So, for all the audience now, I really would love for you to rethink yourself as well. If you also have this thinking before that, you feel like you're torn in between, okay? I am having this identity as my old self, and I have this new identity that I know I'm drawing towards that I know I am bigger than what I think. I already imagined that there was a higher and better version of myself that I am working towards instead of thinking that we were trying to prove ourselves in these two ways.
Yeah, think of it as two 3D spheres. Yeah, the next version of you will transcend and include everything you have now. Yeah, there's no conflict with that,
Swey J
You know what this brings me to this ideology or this concept or philosophy than that when I see this happening with a lot of creatives and a lot of entrepreneurship? The Land fatigue, you know, the belonging fatigue where we want to travel and we want to be global citizens, and we do that quite often, and then we come back to this position of, But I want to belong, and there's this almost overwhelming sense that I will not find my community if I keep going from one place to another. I remember when I started my journey; I was so happy when it began. I was like, Oh, I'm going to go here. I'm going to go here. It's going to be fun. I'm going to meet all these people, and there was a feeling of belonging fatigue, and it started to make me realize. Oh, I do want a sense of community. I do want to belong somewhere, and I think when we're speaking to this theme of where the two identities are, they're just part of one dimension. It's also important to talk about this aspect of belonging. What do we do about this “belonging fatigue"? How do we continue to fulfill our desire to be global citizens while also not feeling like we have belonging fatigue as nomads?
What is your advice on that?
Freeman Fung
Yeah, both of those questions are great, and I love how practical it is as well, right? Because, we can talk about mind, body, and spirit, and we can talk about the integral. We can tell about abundance and the world of possibilities waiting for us. Now look at this 3D reality in this dimension, if I travel, then I would have possibly less time or less opportunity to see my old friends and families again; then how, how could I integrate it? So, here's again, where I find out inwards comes in and traveling inwards come again ,because when we feel a sense of loneliness or sense of disconnection, the truth is, we have to ask ourselves, Why did that happen to me, and possibly to you and a lot of the audience and listeners well during COVID? And, you know, during the pandemic, I think that's a really good time where we can finally get a chance to pause and reflect. The system of living we have been relying on, right? And connections were such a big part of it because, you know, since 2020 since lockdowns over the world.
We start to recognize, you know, what this belonging is, these connections that I've been eager for, Sometimes we just take it for granted. We take it for granted in our daily lives and for me, even with my family. So the funny thing is that traveling transformed my life holistically, a beautiful transformation. One thing that I always love to share with people is my relationship with my family.
So when I struck out on my own when I was 19, when I went to Romania, I hated my parents. I hated Hong Kong. I hated my city. That's the reason I needed to find my new home .It wasn't until the pandemic that my mental space was in a dark corner. I realized the connections and the belonging that I've been eager for, I had taken for granted. I've never asked why. Yes, I've never questioned myself further. What do connection and relationship mean? Even means to me. And it was at that point, when I looked deep within, that I started to recognize my relationship with my parents because I hated them for ruining my childhood by making me the dragon of the Asian family, making me learn this and that ,trying to make me sharpen my competitive edge. I'm sure you've all heard of the Tiger mom. Yeah, in Hong Kong, my mom is labeled as the monster parent, which is what we label them as at the most elite level. So it's like the next level of tiger mom, dragging it too far though. When I examined my belongings and understood the reasons behind them, I started to realize I was only trying to fill the gaps of the void I have with other people's relationships. And that's an important part because most people, when they're seeking a community, aren't even clear on that. What are we looking for? Hmm. And when we have certain communities, we spend time on some time when it doesn't even line up without your identity and we've put on a mask.
We put on a mask and live our lives that way, and long enough, we don't even remember. We are putting on the mask. They happen to so many people; you have me as well. So going within It's one of the most practical ways for us to find this balance between—okay, I would love to keep traveling and I will also love to build connections as well because to me,
Now, once I understand the reason behind that, I have to cultivate and fix my relationship with my parents. I love them so much now. And I haven't seen them for three years now. Yeah, I haven't gotten the chance to travel back to Hong Kong. I'm still so connected with them through technology.
Swey J
What's interesting is that when you were speaking about this belonging fatigue, I was just having a conversation yesterday. With one of my, you know, community members, the conversation took an interesting turn because she was saying,
I love attending more in-person events. I like more in-person stuff, even though the majority of the world cannot access that kind of community. And this is why global citizenship And especially your approach, is so important because even though we keep expanding and expanding, there's always a problem with accessibility, and speaking to this belonging fatigue, there was one. So what you said is just so bang on and on the nose about the fact that
What is belongings to us, and what does it mean for us? What is it, and how does it connect with our identity? How does it connect with the communities that we're seeking? Because it isn't the physical matter in its essence, it's what's behind or at the core of the physical matter. So when you said that, I was immediately thinking about my relationship. I mean, I've cultivated such beautiful relationships that I don't think I would have been able to if I hadn't struck out on my own just like you, you know if 16-year-old me, who left home,
If she hadn't taken that decision to be like, you know what? I'm going to go find myself in the most cliché way possible—find myself. If I hadn't done that, I wouldn't have the relationships that I have now, and I wouldn't have understood what belonging means to me and to that, now that we're talking about belonging fatigue and how it is about the core.
Let's look at inaccessibility. Not everyone can access being a global citizen in today's world. I know that sounds very ballistic given that we have improved so much and we've evolved so much, but there is still so much to be done in terms of accessibility. What would you say? What are your thoughts on this in terms of accessibility? How do you feel the world can evolve to a place where it is more accessible for everyone? Not just people of color, but everyone, no matter where they are. Where they're at and where they come from. What are your thoughts on this?
Freeman Fung
In my book, What I always share is that yes, you can travel to transform. Travel is inwards one of the ultimate tools for self-development for everyone, right? Right? Simultaneously, we don't have access in the sense that financial situations or family circumstances don't allow me to go traveling; what can I do about that. I have been speaking about it on my TED talk as well as on MindValleys world tourism forums. What I would love for people to rethink is that it doesn't matter whether you travel frequently or not. You asked, Are you a global citizen? Yeah. Because global citizenship is not measured by the magnitude of the contribution I'm making to the world, Right? Yeah. It doesn't matter whether you're fighting for global property or whether you're fighting global justice at the front. And it doesn't matter how frequently you travel. How many miles do you have in your status account? Yeah. And it doesn't matter whether you are living in a metropolitan area or whether you're living in the country or in the suburbs, you don't have any accessibility to go overseas at all. Yeah, it doesn't matter. We are global citizens by simply belonging to this modern world.
That is important because that means global citizenship, which I also call the new global citizenship—not that they are new global citizens or old, but that it's the new perspective to rethink global citizenship again. Now, why is it so important? Because if we can truly embrace this new perspective and this new lens, what it means to be true. Being new global citizens is as simple as having that openness in our hearts and being able to respect differences among different cultures. Absolutely. Because, if you think about it, even the audience members listening have never traveled around the world before. Even if you have never flown before. Look around you. We already live in a globalized world. Well, people with different skin colors, people with all different cultural backgrounds. International students in your cities expects, regardless of who they are, we are globalized, and even less say, the people around you are not that diverse, just look at yourself, that cell phone that you're using and the chair in which you’re sitting were all designed in a different country, assembled in a different country, and delivered by a different company, with probably different origins from the country as well.
So bearing in that mind what that means and telling us to reflect on this, we are living globally. Well, the only problem is that our global consciousness hasn't reached that level of globalization yet.
Swey J
It’s just to, like, put this out there. What Freeman is speaking is important for you guys to understand. Is it true that global citizenship begins with small things and paying attention to the small things?
Most of the creatives that I speak to, and most of you that I speak to, get caught up in the idea of, Oh, you know, our world just belongs in this little space, but, as Freeman said, if you start noticing how you're so encapsulated by the world in every little thing that you do, once you start having this awareness, which goes back to his first thing when he said it, which is that awareness of having like, Who am I? Where do I exist? And starting to notice these little things around you.
Once you start looking at that, you automatically become more open to the idea that the world is in my palms and I am in the palm of the world, and that energy just continuously flows. So, speaking to that Freeman, I would love for you to share a little bit about how this awareness, which is something you spoke about before, can allow people to physically travel. Because I know so many creatives who yearn to, you know, start living a nomad life or, you know, start being a global citizen in the sense of not just embracing it mentally and spiritually but also embracing mentally but what would you say are some of the physical steps? For example, to give you a little bit of an idea, I was speaking to one person, and this person was like, I'm not sure about immigration. Let's just talk about this simple, practical fact: immigration is going to even allow you to enter the country.
And I think for people of color, that is a big concern. Sometimes I wonder if they'll even accept me. Let's talk about this fact. How do we integrate this?
This mindset is that we are accessible to the world and the world is accessible to us. How do we kind of, how do we put that forth in our actions? That we take the steps necessary to become and begin living global citizenship, you know, lifestyle?
Freeman Fung
But of all the concepts, sharing with people is the core of travel inspiration. I make this work myself, which means, for lack of a better word, that I am the inspiration to travel. Yeah, but it's such a
An important concept that would address your question. Beautifully and intricately, because first of all, we talked about how Simon Sinek always talks about the golden circle, the why is always coming from the inside first because when we know the why already, we have the spark, right? But then when it comes to traveling, like you said, most often when we travel, we often think about going on the trip, which may last three to four days. Come back.
Yeah, well, maybe I go for a week and come back, or maybe I will go for three months for academic reasons and come back. Maybe I will go study for a degree overseas and come back, or maybe I will go for an internship and come back, right? And the reason for that is when we have the spark and know why I know I want to do this, but then our travels inspire us. It's like the few things you need to keep your travels going, which are also incorporated into your physical life. And again, now, I am obviously in a place where I'm living in Sydney, Australia, right now as an ex-pat. And, you know, I've been here for three years, and, you know, there's kind of a new home for me to construct here while building my communities at the same time, right? I never came from this place and became a global citizen right away. Right? I also start from that trip to Romania, right? Little overseas in Europe for the summer, and then I realized, Oh wow, I love it so much that when I go back to Hong Kong I apply for an academic exchange right away for half a year to study in Oxford, in the UK, right? And that's the closest opportunity for me because my travel inspiration at that time was whatever resource or whatever options are available to me and at the same time still aligned with my why. When studying overseas. And then I went back to Hong Kong. I finished my dissertation, which is about international tourism, and it was
And then I recognize, Oh, I love to explore to grow myself into the global arena, right? I want to study something more, also relayed, like international business and politics. So that's what I went after for my master's. And I went back to the UK, and that's my viable option. And I share all these examples that I won't order all the audience here to think about. What about your travel inspiration? How does that relate to your why? Because of that, then you'll be able to start finding all the possible options. Absolutely. That was suiting your lifestyle; that was suiting your financial circumstances; that was suiting whatever consideration you have with your family and friends around as well. Yeah. Because traveling is not like a separate element that you try to put it as a separate piece of a puzzle into, it becomes part of your picture. But in fact, it already is part of your life, part of your puzzle that you want to play with. And by making this shift and finding this piece of transpo-travel inspiration, in your life, you will be able to take the next step.
Swey J
The next step, meaning travel, is similar to starting your own business and heading in a specific direction. And once you discover the root cause, this is why I want to do it. It's just going to open doors. The breadcrumbs are literally in front of us. It's just a matter of picking them up and creating and walking that path. So what you said is just so on point; it's not about how someone thinks that it's inaccessible. It's about. How can they make it accessible? It's more. It's time to stop asking. Why is it accessible to me and should I start asking? How can I make it accessible to me? So, I think, I believe not. I think it all comes down to dedication to yourself, dedication to your core, and dedication to your aspirations. And on that note of dedication, what is your last piece of advice that you learned the hard way? But you want to share it—a piece of advice that you learned the hard way—with the audience, so they can tap into that global citizen space.
Freeman Fung
What comes up right now is the global unity itself. Now, what I mean by that is that I think I've learned it the hard way because even when I was traveling a lot, I wasn't a fully-fledged, global citizen the whole time. No, I learned it the hard way for ten years, and that's why I wrote my book—because you don't need to take ten years. You just need to have the map, and you can explore this beautiful world where we are in the shortest period possible.
Swey J
Thank you so much for sharing a beautiful piece of advice with me. And I think there are so many of us within the community. And myself, as well as a gentle reminder. You know. No dream is too big. No. The dream is too far away. And I think that's a beautiful way to talk about how we can embody this integration by fully stepping into the global citizen space, and on that note, thank you so much. We meant for you to join me in this conversation, and before we wrap up, Where is, or what is, the one thing? Right now, that's happening in your life. What are you offering that the community can jump into and explore this global citizenship with you?
Freeman Fung
Yeah, so right now I'm creating a lot of new content, really based on the idea of traveling to transform, and I'm helping more Global Citizens find their next steps. No matter what personal circumstances they are in, they can still find that next step to go outside their comfort zone and in fact, on my website right now, so it's a free download for all the listeners. So there's a free chapter of my book as well, in which we just speak about global unity, which is a big concept. And, to dissect this concept, I also have a much more in-depth framework in my book as well. And actually, let's play. We can speak about it, just give you a little glimpse of how this sneak peek at this framework could help you in your life and it's very easy to do because my objective as a global citizen is actually to make everyone understand how we can embody this in the simplest way possible, right? So let's talk about the supercomputer in your pocket right now, which is your mobile phone. Yeah. So you have a mobile home right now everybody have one, right? And the thing about the hardware itself.
So the hardware is the brain. Yeah. And then the software itself is the mind. Yeah. And all the apps that we install reflect our beliefs. And when we have different apps in a folder, that folder is our worldview. Yes, and this is the final section, so whether you have an iPhone or an Android device. There's always one underlying operating system, right? Yeah. And that version of the operating system is our level of awareness, our level of consciousness. Yeah, we'll come back to that, but let's go with the app first. Yeah, those are our beliefs. So how can this framework help us conceptualize how we navigate cultural gaps to help us go deeper within to help us grow up as global citizens? Here's the beautiful thing: So if you imagine the belief and the app itself,
Most people, including you and me, already have many of these apps installed on our phones and our supercomputers. Before we are even born, right by our parents, by our friends, and for me, right? When I was younger, I had this app called I am not good enough, right? I have this app called I Have to climb higher, and I am not hardworking, right? But luckily, through my travel journey, I get to replace all this toxic software.
As you know, I traveled with compassion and cultural understanding, which helped me expand my apps. And then I will also expand my worldview because, as I said, you have more and more space and more room for that. Yeah. And for the listener, if you think about it, here's the important thing. Because, let's say, let's pick one folder.
Let's say the religion folder again—a very heated topic, right? And what most people usually do with the apps is that. So let's say I'm a Christian, and then people will always use this app.and then somebody, if they have a Buddha, some apps, right? Then they clashed. Hmm. That worldview clashes, right?
But here's a funny thing, when we use one of the apps, we are bringing the whole truth of that app. And we don't need to use that set of truths to reach another set of truths, which is the most beautiful thing about being a global citizen. If you have this framework in mind, if you have this folder in mind, If we can set ourselves the objective that we are expanding our folders, so that I can have Christian, the Bible, Buddhism, Hinduism, Judaism, even Avian, Any cannot believe. If you can let it be in your religion folder, I'm going to rename its spirituality as well, right? If I can have my spirituality folder, full of all the diversity of understanding of different frameworks on the same topic. That will expand my worldview so much, right? And that's why, if people don't have this frame in mind, they'll use my app because it's better than yours, right? And then they will go to war about it. And that's what happened with our religion, War, right? With all the cultural conflicts, it's also Western versus Asian, right? All the way I got dichotomy politics. Right-wing, left wing .So when we are aware, we have this folder that we can use to install more apps than we already have. That's a beautiful expansion, but that's not it because we talked about the operating system, right? And this is where the beautiful leveling up and upgrading comes in. Because if you think about this, first of all, everybody has a different level of consciousness, a different level of IOS. So let's say somebody could have a lot of IOS 2.1.and then somebody can have 2.2 or 2.3. It's a spectrum, right? And we are not here to judge anyone, whether somebody is higher or lower on the OS. Although we are on OS, we are just here to observe because we live on a planet where the level of consciousness is always different. We have to be compassionate and understanding about that. But it is important to understand that there are different levels of operating systems. Here's the cake because instead of going to war, instead of going to war and saying my app is better than yours. We can click that upgrade button and upgrade our operating system, and the beautiful thing about using this framework to upgrade our operating system is that it makes so much more space in every single folder. And it doesn't have to be the only religion. It could be a language. It could be philosophy. Yeah, you could be mind, body, and spirit, whatever areas of life we're talking about having this upgraded mindset and understanding. There's a button we can press; that's all it takes to transform ourselves, transform others, and transform the world together because we are not at war. We are just on this journey called personal growth. So for those audience members, you know, who are interested in this, go to my website, www.traveltotransform.com, so you can take a sneak peek and download some free chapters to see if that resonates with you. And I know, you know, this is an amazing summit and we have so many amazing speakers. So I assume I'm pretty sure every single one of you who is listening will be able to find somebody who resonates with you. That will be your next step, and if you feel that by incorporating this global citizenship mindset or simply a global way of living, you will be able to shift yourself from a state of survival to a state of thriving if that resonates with you. Yeah, reach out to me. Go to my website and send me a message. You can find my social media handles as well and connect with me, send me a message, and let me know what you think about this session.
What do you think about our conversation today? And what does it even mean to be a global citizen yourself?