The Keen Approach
Posted by Keen | Posted in Dating, Meeting & Attracting, Self-Mastery | Posted on 03-11-2009
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The Keen Approach
“Dating strategies for personal freedom, total choice, and sexual abundance.”
What is personal freedom?
Total choice?
Sexual abundance?
You decide.
OVERVIEW
-”as to methods there may be a million and then some but principles are few, the man who grasps principles can successfully select his own methods. The man who tries methods ignoring principles is sure to have trouble. ” Ralph waldo emerson
What is The Keen Approach
-Principle based philosophy. Essentially, a method-less method.
All attraction methods are governed by a small number of simple, concise, and powerful core principles. A principle based philosophy is one that simplifies the learning process by focusing on the underlying mechanism that make all methods work properly, or not.
Why?
1) more efficient (you don’t waste useful time learning how to be congruent with something that is not your own)
2) action oriented & less confusing (keeping it simple means you spend less time thinking and more time doing, which results in a shorter learning curve and faster progress)
3) sustainable & self-empowering. (will not make you dependant on some program that you will be lost and hopeless without, for example you forget what step or phase you are on).
I believe in this b/c it allows me to pay respect to your most valuable asset, your time, and to speak directly to your personal situation. Keep in mind that guys are at vastly different places in their dating skills, social skills, and life skills. A principle-based approach allows you to internalize only what you need and disregard what you don’t. You avoid filling your head up with unnecessary ideas that will will confuse you and overcomplicate your understanding of what is in essence very simple.
Scenario 1 – the typical approach
You read ebooks and articles, watch videos, get advice from other guys.
This results in your head being overloaded with conflicting information.
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Excessive information leads to confusion.
Confusion breeds inaction.
Inaction breeds more frustration.
The Keen approach:
Simplicity, understanding, action, repeated action, accomplishment, motivation, empowerment, personal well-being.

