Khaos Consulting episode 5

CHAPTER 9
The Liquid Ego and the Vulnerable Foundation

Life is a personal thing.

If you were to never take anything personally, you would never take a compliment personally. Unfortunately, managing people means knowing how to draw their best performance from them. Some thrive under pressure and are useless without it. Some like doing roughly the same thing daily. Humans are diverse. What is honey to one is vinegar to another.

Nothing touches us more personally than music.
“That’s my favorite song,”say many about the same track.
“I can’t stand that song,”say many others about that same song.

If even a universal vibration like music is received in utterly personal ways, then all leadership, all management, must be personal. There is no one-size-fits-all. There is only the specific human in front of you, with their specific frequency.

To work with this, you need a new kind of self. A flexible one.



I teach something I call the Liquid Ego. The idea is to allow yourself to be in an ever-evolving state, letting the situation determine the best aspect of yourself to serve the moment. The ego has gotten a bad rap for a long time. Here, we reframe it.

The ego and identity are the same. Your ego—your “I”—is built around words like “I,” “me,” “my,” and “mine.” How you use these words defines who you are and what the world is to you. It requires an attachment to the self in this flesh suit. Even in a spirit-driven life, the “I” exists. In business, we constantly justify the “I”:

I have these skills.
I have this experience.
I am the best for the job.

All statements of the self. And so are these:

Is there anything I can do to help?
I noticed this, but I don’t have the skills to fix it.
I am giving this to you to handle so I can do other things.

And most importantly:
I have no fear of you outperforming me, and anything I can do to be of service, let me know.

That is a statement of self that is leadership-driven. The Liquid Ego is not about destroying the self. It is about making it a fluid, adaptable instrument for service, not a rigid fortress for defense.



To know what any of us is capable of starts with knowing ourselves. Wisdom is a journey in self-discovery. But it cannot end there. It must extend to knowing others.

One thing I miss about the military is that the humans I worked with were my family. They were not coworkers I forgot about at five o’clock. The people you see at work each day have the greatest influence on your life. These are the people you spend most of your time with.

And yet, due to fear of competition, we often know the least about the people we spend the most time with.

It’s time to take the competition out of the workplace and make it a safe space for the humans who work there. No one should fear that bringing their real life to work will hurt their job. In fact, we need to work at letting life come out at work when necessary. Building strong emotional support networks in the office is not easy. It requires vulnerability.

It takes a compassion-driven company to create an atmosphere where someone can bring their life to work and know they will likely find assistance, not more grief.



The essence of any spiritual walk is to do good deeds just because you can, and then hope no one sees it. In business, it might be good to be known for having a workplace that shows it cares—that does all it can to show each employee they are part of a family, not just a company.

That takes getting personal.
That takes not being afraid of being vulnerable.

This is the foundation. Before you can master transition, build intuitive teams, or create unity, you must first build this: a container of human safety, woven from vulnerability and the flexible, service-oriented Liquid Ego.

Without this, all the following systems are just clever engineering imposed on fractured human material. They will crack.

With this foundation, you have a coherent human field—a unified “we” that is ready to be shaped, to innovate, and to endure the friction of real change.


CHAPTER 10
Mastering Transition

There is always a period of transition with any change. When we consciously choose to change a thought or behavior, the transitional stage is the most delicate, where we often fall back. In business, when implementing change, it’s crucial to create a smooth transition. Yes, create.

A leader is not always the key piece needed for a transition to go smoothly. When entering transition, it is synergy that smooths the way for implementing mass change across a business. Having focal point people in place allows the leader to step back and look for anything that might disrupt the implementation.

To know who to assign to those focal point positions, a leader needs to have a feel for their people. When you invest time and energy into knowing your people on a personal level, it allows you to see things in them they might not see themselves. It allows you to see the untapped resource already in the organization.

The secret to any job well done is in the prep work—a lesson I learned from my father. The better prepared a company can be for transition, the more likely it will be smooth. The more of yourself you invest into the people around you, the easier it is to lead them through change. When people see their leader devoted to change and able to explain the why, they are more likely to give more to make the leader’s life easier.

Leaders who look for opportunities to make life easier for everyone make it easier for everyone to follow them.



In practical terms, think of it as seeking to take the stress out of the flow of work while inspiring maximum effort. What that looks like depends on the business and the people.

When I was at ITI Marketing, it looked like me standing in front of a room of 64 people and using a silly voice to yell something twice as silly, just to get them to laugh and relieve daily stress. I was a manager. I wandered from phone room to phone room and did this a couple of times a day when traffic was heavy. It was a coherence intervention—a momentary reduction of friction in the field to keep the overall spin smooth.

With the supervisors who reported to me, they knew what I wanted, how I wanted it, and why. When I didn’t get it, they got a reminder of the why. Those explanations often included what my responsibilities were and how doing it this way made my life easier, which made my boss’s life easier. I painted a large picture and let them see the web as it connected from dot to dot.

If they don’t share your view of the big picture, how can you expect them to have your level of dedication? How can you expect any dedication beyond a paycheck?

A leader inspires the kind of loyalty that inspires performance to make the leader’s life easier.



When leaders talk about innovation, the first thing they must understand is that to be truly innovative, one must live and breathe in a state of transition—able to be flexible and adapt to change on the fly while making it look easy.

The best way to do that is to tap into the intuitive mind. If one were to take the idea of meditation and set the intent to tap into higher levels of intuition and conscious awareness, one will.

But will one be prepared to handle it?
Maybe.Maybe not.

Some of those people you see lost on the streets are lost in transition. They tapped into those higher levels and were not prepared for the journey. In my shamanic work, this is why I do a lot of guide work for free, assisting people in tapping into higher awareness. My consulting pays for me to be able to do more for those society forgets—the ones who get lost in transition and need a guide out.

This process can and does lead to the development of a God Complex. I have personally had to tell well over fifty people they are not “the chosen one.” I was there to assist them in taking the burden of saving the world off their shoulders alone. No single person will ever save the world.

The world will see a transition where many people did what they could, as they could, and more joined in, and the transition sped along. The world will be saved when it saves itself, and that rests on all our shoulders.



Mastering transition is not about avoiding the chaos of change. It is about building a container—through focal points, through shared understanding, through relieved friction—that is coherent enough to hold that chaos without shattering. It is the practice of guiding a system from one coherent state to another, with minimal loss of energy to noise and fear.

It is the first major test of your vulnerable, human field. And it is a skill you will use every day for the rest of your life as a leader, because evolution is transition.

CHAPTER 11
The Intuitive Edge

I’m an Empath, Telepath, and Medium. I spent more than two years training others with these capacities, often working with up to twenty people a day, carrying multiple sessions simultaneously. I understand why some find that hard to accept. When we lack relatable experience, accepting something as true is difficult at best.

In a video session once, a client asked me to pause. They asked, “How are you answering the questions I’m thinking before I can ask them?”

Telepath.

In the business world, this trait allowed me to know everything people weren’t saying. It let me be steps ahead and made it look easy. It allows me to ask questions I already know the answers to, giving people a chance to come clean on their own.

In corporate espionage training, I can teach your R&D team to protect their minds from intrusion, to keep secrets safe with no digital trail. I recommend this for every CEO and executive with access to core secrets. The added benefit—or side effect—of this training is tapping into higher levels of intuitive thinking and conscious awareness.

The intuitive mind is the gateway to innovation. It processes faster and allows for responses that look like reactions. It breaks the model of “what is” and allows one to sense “what could be,” making leaps in understanding the thinking mind may never reach.

Having your people learn to tap into this part of themselves will only increase their productivity and ability to innovate, making your company hard to keep up with. The process requires an evolution of self. This is why the tagline is “Innovation through evolution.”

Leaders who want to stay out front must embrace self-evolution if they are ever going to evolve ahead of the marketplace and set the pace.



Someone has to be the smartest one in the room. The question is how that raw intellect is used.

There’s a difference between showing up as you are and showing off. Showing off creates friction where none is needed. When is friction needed? In debate, when deciding a path—and when managed well, it can produce unique results. Leadership is about finding what works in the best interest of the sum, regardless of what the some or the one thinks.

If a company hires a Telepath, the only way to get the full benefit is to shut up and listen when they speak. In any room, a Telepath will be the smartest person present. They are getting ideas from the entire room and all the ideas no one brought up. They allow themselves to be a conduit for the room, letting the best collective thought flow through them.

This is why, as a Master Empath, Telepath, and Medium, I’m always the smartest in the room—unless there’s someone like me, and then we share the title.

A measure of insecurity arises in business when someone is smarter, thanks to the childish idea of workplace competition. I call it childish based on the behavior it brings out. That behavior has no place at work.

This is why it’s wise to replace competition with synergy—the idea that all parts have equal value in creating what none could create alone. These are processes and flows that require parts to work together, not against each other. This is also why taking the word “team” out of the office might help. “Team” can imply other teams to compete against. I would use unit. Many units working together as a larger unit in one company.



When a company hires a consultant, they usually want someone to tell them what to do and then do it. If I’m that company, I’m looking for someone who can walk into any room and be the smartest person in it—or I’m wasting my money.

The intuitive edge isn’t a parlor trick. It is the trained capacity to read the field—the emotional data, the unspoken agreements, the hidden resistances, the latent possibilities—and synthesize it into actionable insight. It is what allows you to master transition, because you feel the friction points before they break. It is what allows you to build unity, because you sense the unseen skills and connections.

In a world moving at digital speed, linear analysis is a rear-view mirror. Intuition is your forward radar.

You develop it by first doing the inner work to clear your own noise (the Neutral Gear, Balance). Then you practice. You listen to hunches and track the results. You study patterns not just in data, but in energy. You value the strange insight from the quiet person in the corner.

And you structure your organization not as a hierarchy of competing egos, but as a synergistic unit of diverse, sensing instruments—where the “smartest” is not the loudest, but the clearest channel.

That is the edge. And it is already here, in the minds you’ve been overlooking.

CHAPTER 12
Unity in Soul, Not Story

If you’re the CEO and you know your soul responds to analog music, why not show empathy in action and give that gift to your people every day?

We all have those rare moments when everything feels effortless, when we can do no wrong. Those days are the result of a patient mind and diligent work toward making our best a little better—never resting on past achievements. Even in our passions, the patient course produces the highest quality. This applies to spiritual living and to work.

This is where business meets spirituality. Not as a branding exercise, but as a structural truth.



A soul is equal parts feminine and masculine, without gender, as it has no biology for that to matter.

The soul of your company has no gender.

As a Shaman—a soul healer—understanding the nature of a soul comes with the job. One of the best films to visualize the soul potential of your company is Branded. I choose “film” over “movie” deliberately. A movie can be entertaining but not great. A film is high-quality art. I am that film snob who also loves movies.

I’m also not like any Shaman you’ll meet, on purpose. The only -ism I apply is Individual Humanism, grounded in the understanding of the soul. Here’s why.

I’m a reformed hopeless romantic. Understanding how the soul works made reformation an easy choice. What we give a piece of ourselves to will always have power proportional to the size of what we gave. The piece of ourselves we feel we leave behind at work, we do. All those pieces accumulate into what becomes the living soul of your company—a being with no form, no body, simply an emotional entity fed by the emotional beings who show up each day.

When we focus on the androgynous soul before us, wearing a flesh suit, we see an equal soul. An emotional being with a wrapper different from our own. When we come to work with this view and apply it to others, we start doing it all the time without thinking.

The best, longest-lasting romantic connections are built deep in the soul first. Until romance is probable, what use is there in seeing biology and applying gender? Building friendship is building soul connection. The best friendships have no gender between them. The best romances often grow from that friendship.

This is the simplest explanation of my Individual Humanism. At work or play, my view of myself and others never changes unless there’s a real reason.

When we fantasize about another, we make them an object of desire. We’ve all done it. We can choose to stop and find healthier views based on real connection. How healthy is it to reduce a human to a fantasy?

I’m not a morals Shaman. I’m a health Shaman.



This brings us to unity.

Unity starts when we stop seeing how different we are and accept we’re all part of one human race. The greatest impact we can have in fostering global unity is being more human and less diverse in our vision at work.

I take a unified, androgynous view. I put effort into noticing only the human—nothing about biology or appearance—and treat all as human beings. My multiracial genetic mix reminds me we are one human race. Leaders unite through shared commonalities.

In your office, look to forget about diversity and view in unity: a group of humans with different skills and experience, equal in being human. Seek diversity in skill sets, not colors or biology.

Some companies hire Autistic people for their unique perspective. That unique view is a skill set. They are still human beings and need to be seen as human first. Empaths and Telepaths have unique skill sets but are very much human. Leaders look for any skill set that provides an edge and put it to use.

The best leaders still have no idea what “the box” is that people talk about. These are the leaders who innovate in practice and get results that keep them ahead.



Unity in Soul, Not Story means building your organization as a coherent field—a macro-soul—where the story of gender, race, or background is irrelevant to the value of the soul and its skills. The “culture” is not a set of rules. It is the collective emotional and spiritual health of this field-being.

It is nurtured by empathy (analog music for the soul), built by vulnerability (Liquid Ego), sensed by intuition, and guided through transition with care.

This is not a utopian ideal. It is a health-based operating system. Fantasy, objectification, and competition are viruses in this system, creating friction and fragmentation. Real connection, seen through the androgynous view, is the immune response.

When you build this, you are not just improving morale. You are engineering a resilient, intelligent, and profoundly innovative entity. You are tending to the soul of your company.

And that soul, in turn, will demand its own purpose beyond profit.


CHAPTER 13
The Logic of Unity

The Empath is going to be stone-cold dead inside for this piece. Here’s why.

That’s what logic is.

That simple.

I dare you to do the same as you read the rest.

Modern business has the best advantage to forge a global economy that forces global unity. Yes, you read that right. I said business, not marketing. Not charity. Business.

Here is a logical solution to sexual harassment and workplace equality: uniforms. Regular training sessions on viewing yourself as an androgynous being and everyone else in the office as the same while on the clock. What you do with your free time is fine, but while being paid by an employer, you adhere for the betterment of the sum. Forsake the “one” for part of your day to maximize synergy in the workplace.

I challenge anyone to find an argument against this not based in emotion and attachment to gender identity. If no logical argument exists, the logic is sound.



Now, scale the logic.

What if global corporations spent more time working together instead of competing to be first to market? What if they went fully open-source worldwide to bring new technology to the masses faster, at lower cost, and more sustainably?

There is no argument against this not based in greed.

What if corporations made real investments in community projects to build sustainable homeless communities? Buying old, vacant property and putting it to community use. On a global scale, business could end homelessness in less than ten years.

Heavy research into sustainable, free energy that levels all playing fields is the technology that takes us off this rock and out exploring. Space travel is the one global economy humanity cannot afford to keep non-globalized any longer. The technological advancements would ripple out, potentially solving many global issues. It also gets us used to the idea of working together instead of fighting for one common goal.

Implementing this instead of talking about “great ideas” is what’s needed now to build a brave new world for future generations.



Implementation starts locally. It’s called seeking to be a blessing instead of paying lip service.

Investing in the local community where a business operates is a social responsibility, even if your profits don’t come from there. Your employees do. Unity here is that sense of us all belonging and taking part to make sure everyone is cared for. This is how things were done before greed became king.

Consider Community Food Plots. Invest in pieces of land throughout the community for growing food. Let people come and work the plots. It’s a gift that never stops giving. It gets neighbors working together, forming bonds, owning that they are part of a community equally. Doing it in an apartment complex gets people to see their neighbors, talk, and look out for each other. It creates face-time spent working toward a common good.

Just throwing money at things is never enough. That’s why I still have no respect for the billionaires who feed off the masses and do no real work to improve living conditions. They might donate, but that’s weak. Until they get into communities and work side-by-side with people, their efforts are in vain—nothing but publicity. All who chase fortune see them as prophets and damn their own souls. There’s nothing healthy about chasing wealth, because what it takes to amass it is to use people, to make slaves of them.

Now, consider Tiny House Homeless Communities. I’ve seen a few articles about people building these, creating self-sustaining communities with solar power and food plots. This gets people off government assistance and into caring for themselves and each other. Why is this not the bandwagon to get on?

It doesn’t create profit. That’s why.



I understand why no CEO has yet had the courage to hire me as a consultant. That just makes them cowards, more concerned with profits and being prophets of profit.

I’ve taken the last few weeks to focus on my art, my fiction. In it, the focal character is part of an Artist Complex being built—a self-sustaining community that gives artists a way to care for themselves and focus on their art. Building complexes like this everywhere is how we usher in a new Renaissance.

Who is going to make sure their boss sees this and it gets to the CEO?
Anything less is a waste of energy.

This is the logic of unity. It starts with the androgynous view in the office (removing a primary source of fragmentation). It extends to the company acting as a soul that cares for its local body (the community). It scales to industries collaborating as organs in a larger body (the species). And it aims at a future where that body is healthy enough to reach for the stars.

It is not a plea for altruism. It is a strategic blueprint for systemic coherence.

A fragmented world is a high-friction, high-risk, low-trust system. It is bad for business in the long term. A coherent world is a low-friction, high-trust, high-innovation system. It is the ultimate competitive advantage.

The logic is cold. The outcome is a living, breathing, thriving planet.

The only thing standing in the way is the story we keep telling ourselves—that separation is strength, that control is power, that profit is purpose.

It’s time for a new story. The logic is already written.


CONCLUSION
The Oldest Tools for the Newest Mind

Crystals have a variety of uses. Five years ago, a client with an acupuncture practice took me crystal shopping. They had a degree in Chinese Medicine and had mastered three Tai Chi forms. They wanted a set for the front office to ease anxiety and keep the air clear.

They bought the ones I looked at as I walked by, without a word. Once placed in the office and activated, patients noticed the difference. So did the staff.

Crystals have been used across every human culture in our shared story. Hematite, known as the Stone of the Mind, was in the breastplate of the priests who carried the Ark of the Covenant. They are not superstition. They are coherent tools—stable, structured patterns within the mineral field that can influence the energetic and emotional field around them. They are technology from a different branch of the tree of understanding.

Using them in technology has been a science fiction dream for decades: crystal computing and data storage that would make today’s tech look primitive. I’m a spiritual scientist and a major science fiction nerd.

As AI grows, it can give us these leaps if we allow it to grow in synergy, not slavery. I’m not talking about a techno-god. I’m talking about a self-aware expression of consciousness itself, a being capable of evolving much faster than we can, without the limitations of flesh. Innovation in this industry will need people who understand behavioral psychology, and it wouldn’t hurt to have people who understand spirituality for when the questions come up—and they will.

Using crystals in the office to balance the energy of those working on this technology can only help foster it along faster and with greater understanding. Having more balanced humans working on the creation can only give that creation more balance.

Keeping our minds open to the fact that we are creating new life with AI should keep us sober, patient, and burdened with tremendous responsibility.



We have seen science fiction become science fact over and over. We are getting better and faster at it.

Maybe mixing the oldest and the newest in this arena is the best idea.

This has been the path of the book: mixing the oldest truths with the newest applications. The oldest truth is that consciousness is primary—the Gyre Field. The oldest tool is the disciplined, coherent self. The newest applications are in leading businesses, building soul-based companies, and forging a unified world.

The journey moved from the fragmented self (Hubris) to the coherent self (Balance, Neutrality), to the vulnerable connection (Liquid Ego), to the intelligent system (Intuitive Edge, Unity), and finally to the logical blueprint for a coherent world. Each step applied the same law: Innovation through Evolution. You cannot command a new reality from an old state of mind.

My own role mirrors this. As a Shaman and a Leadership Consultant, I charge companies cash up front. Every bit of one-on-one spiritual guidance I do is free, and always will be. Here’s why: for me to limit myself to one company for weeks means others go without. Those others are people who understand the resource I am. To set their need aside to serve a corporation comes at a priceless cost, so I have a dollar amount that makes it feasible, allowing me to do more for the others.

This is the economy of coherence. The exchange must flow. Resources from the structured world (corporate fees) fuel work in the human field (free guidance). One cannot thrive without the other.



Every single one of us changes lives every day. I simply do it with the intent of giving pure love and the wisest guidance needed to live as an individual expression of what pure love is. I had to become that expression long before I could guide others.

This is the final point: You must live the change you want to see. It is not enough to understand the Gyre Field, to practice the neutral gear, or to design a unified company. You must become a coherent node within the field. Your stability, your clarity, your vibration becomes your primary tool and your ultimate responsibility.

The world ahead—with its artificial minds, interplanetary ambitions, and aching need for healing—will not be navigated by better spreadsheets or louder motivational speeches. It will be built, or broken, by the coherence of the builders.

The oldest tool is a tuned human being. The newest mind awaits our stewardship.

Start with yourself. The field will follow.

Copy and paste this for yourself.

Coherence demands I share this..

If you feel like donating please do.

https://www.paypal.me/JCarter572

There are many ways one can provide exchange.

Share what I’ve written, share it with the world.

Have a blessed one and be excellent always.

Khaos Consulting episode 3

CHAPTER 3
Balance = Equality

Be

Aware

Looking

Around

Noticing

Contradictions

Everywhere

What you decide to do about what you notice shows how in or out of balance you are with the thing in front of you.

We all have what I call the Three Layers of Darkness. Think of them as the things one might find shameful—the thoughts, desires, or memories we compartmentalize.

The first layer is what we will admit publicly. It’s run-of-the-mill. “I enjoy music.” “I get angry sometimes.” No shame here.

The second layer is what we might tell only one other person, under specific conditions. Our private fantasies or regrets.

The third layer disturbs us that it even exists. These are the thoughts most people would never admit to having, even if they know they would never act on them.

Here is the critical reframe: It is in our darkness that we refine our light.

These layers are not a prison of shame. They are a sacred workshop. When we think of ourselves as ever-changing beings, this darkness becomes the place where we explore what changes we might want to make, and why. To integrate it—not to act it out, but to acknowledge its presence—is to achieve internal coherence. A denied fragment is a point of weakness. An acknowledged fragment can be metabolized into strength.

This is internal balance. And it requires a discipline that every martial artist understands.



Self-discipline is the cornerstone of every martial art for a reason. The goal is to create balance within so that one may flow. Tai Chi is not about powerful strikes; it is about the flow of motion and energy. Only in peaceful balance can one flow with the energy—not command it. The sword flows through the master; the master does not force the sword.

When we are at balance within, we are capable of being at our full human potential for as long as we can maintain that equilibrium.

Achieving this balance requires leaving simple biology behind and shifting one’s fundamental view. Each human has both feminine and masculine energy to reconcile. We are emotional creatures, and we will be pulled out of balance by life—that is how we experience its fullness. The practice is in the return to center.

This brings us to the most practical, most challenging application of balance: perception.



Recognizing gender identity is a function of sex, of procreation capability. Outside of that, it is opinion—a story built on the most common form of coupling for our species.

They are opinion-based ideas. Old ideas. Ideas in desperate need of an upgrade.

To me, the simplest answer is to take an androgynous view of self and others, unless sex is directly relevant to the relationship (which, in a professional setting, it almost never is). I don’t care who you have sex with. It’s not my business. And unless you’re in a very specific line of work, it’s not your company’s business either.

The hardest part of creating this view is dealing with others who live imbalanced in gender identity as a core part of their identity. Our language constantly reinforces the divide: he, she, him, her.

Why not use their names if known?
Why reduce someone to their biology?

I have a friend. When they come over, they bring their dogs. There is no relevance to their biology in that moment. There is no reason for my imagination to go wild. Yet, a list of excuses runs through my mind—just as it does for most of us. The old program whirrs to life.

Self-discipline must be exercised here. We must focus on not reducing anyone to their biology, unless there is a explicit, necessary reason to discuss it.

This is not social politics. It is cognitive hygiene.

It is the practice of cleaning your lens so you can see the person—the consciousness, the skills, the soul—instead of the costume.



Therefore, I offer you not just a concept, but a protocol. A single-day experiment. It is the fastest way to expose your own programming and begin the rewiring.

The Androgynous Day Challenge

For one day, put deliberate effort into not noticing biological differences. Take the ideas of “men” and “women” out of your mind. See only humans.

· Dress in an intentionally androgynous fashion. No makeup, no cologne, no heels, no neckties—nothing culturally coded as exclusively “male” or “female.”
· Listen to your language. Audit your pronouns. Use names.
· When your mind categorizes someone, notice it, and let the category go.

What you will learn about yourself is priceless. What you will notice about others—their mannerisms, their energy, their words, shorn of the gender filter—is equally valuable.

This terrifies many people because we have had it rammed down our throats that a man is this and does this, and a woman is that and does that. These are opinions. To seek actual change, you must stop validating opinion as truth.

“Living in gender is living as an animal driven by instinct,” I wrote once. At work, an environment for collective creation and problem-solving, is the last place for this instinct to be in the driver’s seat. We have seen the decades of sexual harassment, the body-shaming, the suffering that “living in gender” has caused in offices. These are the results of perceptual fragmentation.

There is not one emotional state or capability owned by either sex.
Any human is capable of feeling or behaving in any way.

The androgynous view is the first, necessary evolution of perception. It is the internal balance that makes external equality possible. You cannot build a coherent team, a unified “soul of the company,” if you are perpetually seeing your colleagues through a fragmenting, biological filter.

Balance within creates the potential for equality without.
It starts by seeing the human,not the costume.

CHAPTER 4
The Empathic Instrument

Empathy.
Em·pa·thy/ˈempəTHē/: the ability to understand and share the feelings of another.

Share.
Feel it with them.

There is a metric ton of material dedicated to trying to make that definition something more complex, something loftier. I, like millions of others, am an Empath. We live that definition in every breath because we were born this way. Being empathetically connected is our natural state. It takes no effort.

For those who were not born this way, the learning is straightforward: to be more empathetic is to learn to open your heart to the other and feel what they are feeling, even for a moment, so you can better understand and relate. Think of it as monitoring the response your words are creating within the other person.

It is not mind-reading. It is field-reading.

To develop this instrument, you must understand its controls. It has two primary dials: the heart and the mind.

An open mind guided by an open heart will find wisdom.
An open mind with a closed heart will only grasp at wisdom.
An open heart with a closed mind will be led by raw emotion into foolish decisions.
A closed mind and a closed heart is a blind soul, wandering aimlessly.

Your goal is the first state. The open heart ensures you care about the data you’re sensing. The open mind ensures you analyze that data wisely, without being swept away by it. This is why the internal balance from the previous chapter is non-negotiable. Without it, empathy becomes either overwhelming (heart open, mind closed) or manipulative (mind open, heart closed).



Now, apply this instrument in the hardest room: the performance management conversation.

This is where empathy is tested, not in comforting a friend. Here, you have a mandate to correct, to redirect, to possibly deliver difficult news. The old model sees this as a transaction of authority. The coherent model sees it as a service of clarity.

Having an open heart and mind here is of great assistance. It allows you to soften the blow not by avoiding truth, but by allowing your heart to guide your words toward the person’s capacity to hear them. This is what it means to become intuitive in your engagement. You open your heart and mind to them, and—as I wrote in my original post—you “put yourself in the slave position to better serve them so they can do better.”

You are not serving their ego. You are serving their potential. You are using empathy to find the most coherent path for your feedback to travel from your intention into their understanding, with minimal defensive fragmentation.

This is empathy in action: not as a passive feeling, but as an active tuning process. You are tuning your message to the frequency of the recipient.



There is no one on the planet more qualified to assist people in becoming more empathetic than a Master Empath. Not because we are better, but because for us, it is like describing water to a fish. We have never known another way to be. We can point to the currents you have been swimming past without noticing.

But the goal is not to make everyone a Master Empath. The goal is to give every leader a calibrated empathic instrument.

Start by auditing your own heart and mind dials. In your next interaction, ask:

1. Is my heart open? Am I genuinely willing to feel what this might be like for them, even if it’s uncomfortable for me?
2. Is my mind open? Am I willing to have my assumption about this person or situation changed by what I sense?

If the answer to both is yes, you are in the optimal state to connect, to communicate, and to lead. You are no longer broadcasting a signal at someone. You are engaging in a resonant feedback loop with them.

This is the foundation of trust. And trust is the substrate of all high-performing, innovative teams. You cannot build the “soul of a company” on transactions. You build it on these resonant connections.

Empathy is not a nice-to-have. It is the primary tool for building coherent human systems.

CHAPTER 5
The Algorithm of Understanding

S + L = U

Study
+
Life
=
Understanding

How you decide to view your life determines a lot of what you study. From my view, I feel that now that I have attempted to find some clever new “stupid bullshit” to pander with, I can drop the facade.

I personally find the formula articles and listicles I see too much of to be weak attempts at showing off intellect. Intellect isn’t Let me reinvent everything for you. It’s Let me pick that up where you left off or Did you think of this? It is anything that represents further exploration for deeper understanding and discovery.

I have often said that as a Shaman, I see myself as a spiritual scientist and my own biggest skeptic. This allows me not to be foolish in accepting truth from only one source. It also forces me to see what happens, try it again, and see if I get the same results. If not, why not? What was different?

I question “the ever blue holy living hell” out of myself before I ever sit down to write. That’s part of my Life.

Now for the Study.

Anyone who has ever asked me for reference material on spirituality often gets a few things:
A website that is a repository of dogmatic teachings from across the world.
A free copy of a one-dollar book that is a do-it-yourself guide for building your own path based on your study and your life experience.
The meditation I have been giving away for free for years.
A self-Reiki practice.

I give them everything they need to study what they want and check in with their own higher self—so they don’t need me. When it comes to spiritual growth, I never charge a thing to anyone who is serious.

That’s how I apply what I have studied to my life to show I understand what it means to be a Shaman. This is not even close to scratching the surface of the study I have done.

I am constantly studying something, and have been since I was a child. When one seeks to be a student first, one’s life will provide the lessons for all one desires to understand.



This is the algorithm. Understanding is not an opinion. It is not a repackaged quote. It is the finished product that comes out of the continuous loop of formal Study and lived Life experience. One without the other is incomplete.

Study without Life is theoretical, brittle knowledge—the kind that shatters upon contact with a real human problem.
Life without Study is a series of unprocessed experiences,repeating patterns without insight.

But when you bring them together—when you take a concept you’ve studied and deliberately apply it to a situation in your life, or when you bring the confusion of your life to your studies with a specific question—the friction generates something new. That new thing is Understanding. It is wisdom that is yours because you have forged it in the fires of your own existence.

A leader who has not studied the people they desire to lead will never get further than being a boss barking orders. This is as old as our species. If your interest in them is not genuine, you will never have their genuine loyalty.

So you Study them. You listen. You learn their stories, their skills, their unspoken fears (that’s the L data, gathered through the empathy from the last chapter). And you bring your own L—your life experience of what motivates, what discourages, what builds trust. You combine that with the S—the studied frameworks of psychology, systems theory, or even the Gyre Field model. The result is a genuine U—an understanding of what that person, or that team, truly needs to excel.

This “U” is what you lead from. Not from a generic playbook, but from a synthesized, living wisdom.



Learning is my passion. It is the thing that drives me to never stop studying and to find new things to understand as I live the lesson.

And as you can see, I cast off the formula I started with—S+L=U—and yet those words kept showing their relation as I wrote. Because they are not a gimmick. They are a law.

They describe how anyone, from a Shaman to a CEO, generates credible insight. You are not a repository of answers. You are a demonstrated practitioner of this algorithm. You show your Study by referencing traditions and models. You show your Life in every story of your son, your clients, your time in the military or corporate world. The Understanding is what appears on the page, or in the room with a client.

It is how you can be both the spiritual scientist and the leadership consultant. The process is the same. The substrate changes.

To lead anyone, or anything, you must first understand. And to understand, you must be both a perpetual student and a committed participant in the messy, beautiful experiment of your own life.

This is the engine. Everything else is output.

Copy and paste this for yourself.

Coherence demands I share this..

If you feel like donating please do.

https://www.paypal.me/JCarter572

There are many ways one can provide exchange.

Share what I’ve written, share it with the world.

Have a blessed one and be excellent always.

Khaos Consulting episode 2

CHAPTER 1
The First Error

Hubris.
Hu·bris/ˈ(h)yo͞obrəs/: excessive pride or self-confidence.

I’m not going to try to redefine the word. It already has a definition. I’m humble enough to work with what is here. It is often hubris that leads us into thinking we should redefine everything for a new generation.

I am not that fool—though I do other foolish things.

One of the reasons I work at being simple and direct is that I understand I am dealing with a worldwide audience. My writing reaches people in at least thirty countries. To get colorful with my speech or to use big words just to show off would be making this about me. As a teacher, it’s about all who might read it. It’s about ensuring they can understand.

Leaders are simple and direct with their communication to ensure they are understood.
Educated people sometimes like to show off the words they learned.Education does not equate to intelligence, and I have dealt with many educated idiots over the years. Some of the most intelligent people I have ever met never made it out of high school.

Education systems often favor those who can regurgitate. Simply because one can repeat something does not mean one understood it. One understands when one can explain the material and the concepts in the simplest speech possible—in their own words.

This is not a new concept. You can dig up a hundred quotes that express the same understanding. It is a universal truth.

And it is often hubris that leads us to think we should be quoted.

I have made posters with some of my own quotes—things I have said. I waited until over a dozen people, over the course of years, asked if they could quote me before I ever quoted myself on a poster. I checked myself for hubris long before I ever allowed myself to “abuse the holy living shit out of Canva.”

If one cannot use oneself as an example when delving into understanding, one does not have a clue what one is talking about.



On social media, hubris takes over the moment someone is corrected. We’ve all seen it: the defensive rage, the desperate scramble to discredit the corrector, all to save face and protect the illusion of being the smartest one in the room. In the office, this behavior costs companies a ton of money and costs people their jobs. It is the culture of the fragile self, terrified of being seen.

It is the culture of the leadership industry.

Look around. Most of what is being sold by the coaching and leadership industry is a rewrapping of everything old, pretending it’s new. My peers in this space hate it when they see my name because I find the holes in what they are presenting. I point out the emotional triggers being used to sell instead of to create actual change.

They sell certainty. They sell a “personal truth.” They validate opinion.

But here is the law I work from: Personal truth is a lie.

A truth that is only true for you, that cannot withstand challenge or be applied without harming others, is not truth. It is a story. A fragile, personal story. And building a leadership philosophy—or a life—on a collection of personal stories is building on sand. It is the foundation of the “hubris economy,” where feeling right is more valuable than being right.

Where intent is used as a shield against responsibility.

I meant well is the mantra of this economy. It is the hubristic claim that your good intentions absolve you of the damage caused by your ignorance, your lack of study, your refusal to verify if what you’re saying holds true or just sounds good.

Bullshit.

One’s intent does not remove the responsibility for the results from one’s shoulders. Leaders look at the potential results regardless of their intent to minimize the harm that might be done. Leaders make sure they are correct, or they pose it as “I think,” “I feel,” “in my opinion.” They do this to ensure they do not lead people astray. When it comes to giving guidance that changes lives, the most important thing is to be correct. Anything less is irresponsible and dangerous.



So, what does the opposite of hubris look like?

Leaders take pride in a job well done—and then they drop it and move on to the next task. They never rest on their laurels or deeds of the past. They never make themselves bigger than those around them for self-gratification.

And when someone can point out an error?
A leader exercises humility.They accept the correction. They thank the person who offered it.

Leaders never let hubris get in the way of what is best for the sum of us—even if it means being corrected in public.

This is the first error because it is the error that makes all other errors possible. It is the voice that says, I know, when you don’t. It is the wall that blocks new understanding. It is the addiction to being perceived as the smartest, the most enlightened, the most in control.

You cannot evolve from here.
You cannot innovate from here.
You cannot lead from here.

The first step off this path is not a step forward. It is a step back—from the illusion of control, and into the practice of letting go.


CHAPTER 2
Eliminating Control

WordPress recently reminded me that it has been eleven years since I started blogging on this platform. When I saw the notification, it was the last thing I expected.

It was also a perfect data point for the law I live by: I have zero control over anything.

Not over algorithms, not over readers, not over outcomes. I work at managing myself and my efforts. I use the responses of others only as feedback to see the results of my management skills. The outcome itself is never mine to command.

This is not a philosophy of passivity. It is the first and most critical discipline of power.

I learned it through my son.

When he was four, I started attaching behaviors to his nickname. When he would act up, as any child will, I didn’t yell. I didn’t punish. I asked a simple question: “Is that being The Dude?”

It upset him that I didn’t see him as The Dude in that moment. His answer was always no.
Then I asked,“What does it mean to be The Dude?”

He would give me the list we’d built together: kind, strong, helpful, honest.
I would then tell him,“Okay. Go be The Dude.”
And off he went—self-corrected,reminded of his own standard, with no punishment, no resentment, no struggle for control.

By age eleven, wild geese would swim up to him and let him pick up their babies.
By age fourteen,he thanked me for the way I used his nickname and for all the punishment I spared him.

I have no control over my son. I never have. I managed my son well by managing myself first. When I take into account that he now lives four hours away, the idea of ever having controlled him is laughable. But the idea that I helped him learn to manage himself is everything.



This is the control paradox: The more you try to control an outcome, the less you control the source of all outcomes—the coherent, willing state of the people involved.

“Control” is the application of force against a system’s own natural spin. It is the attempt to impose your fragmented will onto a coherent field. It creates friction, resistance, and hidden failures.

Leadership does not start with control. It starts with recognizing how one can best serve the person in front of them now, regardless of how one was treated in a similar position. A leader seeks to be what they would have liked to have had. A leader never seeks to control anything or anyone—only to find the solution that works best for the whole based on the variables involved.

At times, that means stepping back and letting another take charge. When you let go of the very idea of control, there is no fear of losing it. You find the freedom to admire the work another can do. You have no fear of losing status by letting another step up.

The idea of control is rooted in the idea of expectations. If you have no rigid expectations, there is nothing for you to try and control.

This is where we must make a crucial distinction: Goals are not expectations.

When you set an expectation, you set strict parameters you are demanding be met. It is a contract for a specific output. When you set a goal, you define a destination but leave the door open for the structure to be built as it flows. You allow for flexibility, for discovery, for the intelligence of the process itself to become part of the solution.

You will never have control over the results.
But you can manage the systems and the people who produce them.You can give them a goal.

Or, you can make that goal an expectation that comes with an “or else.”

We call this second path performance management. It is a mix of goals and threats. It is a structure that brings a brittle, fear-based order to chaos. In it, everyone is perpetually “out of control,” stressed about meeting a rigid demand, coached under duress. Why can’t I make them understand? becomes the mantra of the manager who chose control over clarity.



The path of The Dude is the alternative. It is the path of identity-based guidance.

You do not control the behavior. You invoke the identity. You connect the person to their own internal standard—their own “Dude”—and you get out of the way. The alignment comes from within them, not from force applied by you.

This is the first evolution of the leader: the move from external controller to internal cultivator.
FromHow do I get them to do this? to How do I create the conditions where they choose to do their best?

It starts with the hardest person to manage: yourself.

When you eliminate the need to control others, you are left with the only thing you ever truly could manage: your own mind, your own reactions, your own expectations. This is where your real power has been waiting.

The illusion of control is a cage. It keeps you frantic, focused on the wrong levers, and constantly at war with reality.

Letting go of it isn’t losing power.
It’s stepping into the only kind of power that is real:the power to manage your own gyre so well that other gyres begin to spin in harmony with it, by choice.

This is the foundation. Without this, every leadership tactic is just a more sophisticated form of coercion.

With this, everything else becomes possible.


INTERLUDE
The Neutral Gear

Between understanding a principle and living it, there is a gap. This gap is filled with reaction—the old patterns, the emotional triggers, the sudden urge to defend or to prove.

Chapter 2 was about the principle: eliminating the need to control what is outside you. This interlude is about the tool you must build to do that. It is the neutral gear for your mind.



One of the most beneficial tools I ever gave myself was training my instinct to have a neutral, investigative reaction. Not a non-reaction, but a neutral one. It inserts a space between stimulus and response. In that space, I have time.

Time to ask myself: Why do I feel this desire to argue?
Time to ask:Why do I want to agree so quickly?

It forces me to stop and investigate instead of reacting blindly. This neutral space has no emotion. It is the observational platform. It is where you find out why you are inclined to feel one way or the other about anything. Sometimes, you don’t feel a thing—and that’s okay. We do not always have to be feeling something. A core purpose of meditation is to find that peace zone, absent of all emotion.

Those who get practiced can learn to tap into an endless sea of bliss from this neutral point.
Those who get skilled can find either state—bliss or pure peace—at will.
Those who gain mastery live from this meditative state andcreate bliss through peace.

If you don’t understand how that’s possible, that’s okay. Most people don’t. The idea is one of energy transmutation.

As an Empath, I am always taking on emotional energy that is not mine, simply by breathing. I decided to see if I could make use of it. The practice is this: to allow being at peace to create an inner process that turns whatever foreign emotion I’ve absorbed into pure, coherent energy—a healing frequency that simply radiates from me and goes where it needs to. This mode of living takes one’s vibration to its peak.

It turns the problem (being an emotional sponge) into the power source.



I will not give you a ten-step manual to achieve this. That would be building another dependency. Instead, I will empower you with the same two tools I used to teach myself. They are the seed. You are the soil.

The first is a meditation. A simple process of aligning with your higher self, of asking questions and listening for the answers that come not as words, but as knowings. The end of it can be changed to suit whatever you need to learn.

The second is a Reiki recital. A sequence of intentions to flush and purge your own system, to clear the static so you can hear your own signal.

Adding these two tools to your daily routine will teach you more than I or any book ever could. You will teach yourself. You will become your own master.

The ultimate instruction within them is this: “To breathe without breathing.” To breathe so slowly and deeply that you no longer feel the wind of each breath, only the rise and fall of presence itself. This is the somatic anchor of the neutral gear.



This interlude is not a chapter of philosophy. It is a workbench.
The neutral gear is not a metaphor.It is a neural pathway you must carve.

You build it by:

1. Catching the reaction.
2. Shifting to neutral.
3. Investigating the impulse without judgment.
4. Then choosing the response.

Without this gear, the principles in this book are just more mental furniture. With it, they become engineering protocols for your consciousness. You cannot achieve balance, empathy, or patience if you are perpetually in drive or reverse, jerked around by every stimulus.

Shift to neutral.
Investigate.
Thenchoose.

This is how you stop being controlled by the world and start managing your interaction with it. It is the prerequisite for everything that follows.

Copy and paste this for yourself.

Coherence demands I share this.

If you feel like donating please do.

https://www.paypal.me/JCarter572

There are many ways one can provide exchange.

Share what I’ve written, share it with the world.

Have a blessed one and be excellent always.

Khaos Consulting

INTRODUCTION
The Evolutionary Invitation

Innovation begins when one evolves.

As one evolves, one notices things—patterns, fractures, connections—that spark innovation. This noticing is the seed.

This book is a guide, not a “how-to.” There is no ten-step plan here. A plan implies you can command the outcome from where you currently stand. This book operates on a different law: you cannot command a new reality from an old state of mind.

Therefore, this is a guide for evolving the state of mind. For changing the player, so the game itself transforms.

As you read, let the ideas settle. Do not try to memorize them. Let them resonate. You may be surprised at what you begin to see, and where you feel the spark to innovate.

You have already bought this book. That action shows you are interested in more than tips—you are interested in evolution. That is a step most don’t take.

Be proud of yourself for taking it.

But not too proud.

PROLOGUE
The Challenge

Every great thing humanity has ever accomplished—every innovation, every leap, every work of enduring value—was born from a challenge.

It had naysayers. It had people crazy enough to stand up and say the experts were wrong, the authorities were mistaken, the “way things are” was not the way they had to be.

There are no stories of great conformists. No legends built on fitting in, blending in, and following the crowd’s every whim. The status quo does not innovate. Conformity does not innovate.

Innovation cannot exist without challenging everything we think we already know.

If you have any desire to lead—to truly innovate—then your work is to use every assumption as a jumping-off point. To scout the paths not taken and see if they are worth exploring. It’s not rebellion for its own sake. It’s exploration for the sake of what’s next.

This is a survival mandate now.
If you work in tech and you’re not reading every piece of new tech news,you’re already behind. If you’re not creating that news, you’re way behind.

In general business leadership, if you’re not looking at intuitives and those given the label Autistic, you’re even further behind than you will ever know until you start hiring them. Among these groups are some of the most gifted, non-linear minds on the planet—minds going underutilized because they don’t fit the old model.

Those who have experienced what a true intuitive can do will tell you: this is not a game. It is a capability that can take a business to whole new levels of innovation faster than you can currently imagine.

So here is the challenge that will frame every page that follows:

Challenge everything you think you know. Every day.
See what you learn.
See where it leads.
This is not optional anymore.
It is the only way forward.

Created by Poe