While the Landmark Forum isn’t for everyone, and too much of a good thing can be a bad thing, I think it’s important to acknowledge that some of those who went through it ended up doing some really cool things.
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While the Landmark Forum isn’t for everyone, and too much of a good thing can be a bad thing, I think it’s important to acknowledge that some of those who went through it ended up doing some really cool things.
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As expected, the crowd drank the Kool-Aid with great enthusiasm, questioning nothing, with a few vocal dissenters resisting the idea that their lives held no meaning. Some people had hunched forward, their head in their hands, crying uncontrollably, while others looked elated, as though all their burdens had been lifted.
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I felt uneasy walking into class, not only because I was late but more so because the third day held the mighty promise of transformation, the day of salvation when our souls would be saved by the holy hand of Landmark.
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Day 2 at the Landmark Forum: the instructor asked if I was getting anything out of the class. It couldn’t have been more awkward as I tried to tell her nicely that the whole thing seemed like horseshit. But then Groupthink began to settle in, and with it some truly dramatic events.
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So . . . what happens at the three-day Landmark Forum? How about two days of chipping away at your personal identity, in preparation for it to be replaced on day three?
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I spent $420 for the privilege of spending a holiday weekend — three 13-hour days — sitting in a conference room near LAX with 75 strangers. That was the price of admission to The Landmark Forum, a seminar that promises to transform the lives of its attendees in profound, permanent and meaningful ways.
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