How to Grow Up to Your Highest Potential, In the Shortest Time Possible

On this week of “new beginnings”, I thought it would be a good idea for this week’s blog to introduce the basics of the Stage Climbing process in case you are new to it (and this site) as well as for those who can use a refresher or motivator to put it to work for you.

Let’s start with a few questions to perhaps ask yourself: What will it take to make your life better, so that you can reach your highest potential and feel happier, more, satisfied, more creative, more effective and more at peace? How can you make a positive and lasting impact on the people around you, and ultimately, perhaps, on the whole world? How can you literally GROW UP to a more improved– or better yet — the best possible you?
Sadly, so many have no clue about how to make those things happen. As a result, they stay stuck in a what they see as a rut for much of their lives, reliving the same old problems and hitting the same old roadblocks, instead of reaching the goals that will first translate to success and then happiness. As a psychologist, there’s something that’s very positive I want everyone to recognize in themselves: Within you resides everything you will ever need to “get there” (i.e. reach your goals, be happy and fulfilled, and make your unique contribution) very quickly.
My life’s work has been to help people, often very high achievers (successful business people, professionals, media figures, politicians, athletes and creative types), identify what they see as their potential in one or more areas of their lives; and then do what it takes to make the life changes to reach that potential as rapidly and effectively as possible This means becoming more accomplished and more successful now and in the future — as they also contribute more to the people in their lives, communities, professions, and the world.
Stage Climbing
I call my system “Stage Climbing.” It’s a new way of thinking that’s already helped many people to achieve more than they had previously thought possible in their personal and professional lives. By learning this simple system, you can use it to change your life as well. It’s also a formula and roadmap to give you insight into where and how you may be stuck in a specific part of your life, such as your career, spirituality, parenting skills or with your relationships. Stage Climbing literally helps you to “grow up” (or operate as a “grown-up”), which means to identify and then use the best parts of yourself to meet any life challenge — and in the shortest time possible.
Here is a “Cliff Note” version of the Stage Climbing process. Stage Climbing gives you a fresh and clear perspective on practically any issue, from relationship troubles to a stagnant career to plummeting self-esteem to feeling disconnected from your calling, spirituality, mission or purpose. It provides you with seven distinct and ascending views or stages that you can apply to or view any facet of your life. You then have the power to choose to stay where you are or to consciously “climb” to the higher stage more consistent with the transformation you are seeking.
Here’s A Glossary of Stage Climbing Terms:
Stage: Stages are levels of maturity that pinpoint the degree to which you have evolved in a given life area. Think of your stages as benchmarks or plateaus.
Default Stage: The stage that defines how you now typically function with respect to a given aspect of your life. Generally speaking, the higher the default stage in an area of life, the better.
Target Stage: This is the stage from which you would most like to operate. When you are operating out of your target stage, you are using the best parts of yourself to accomplish almost anything! Hook: Any part of you that is uncharacteristically in a stage higher or lower than what your default stage would indicate. Gaining control over a problematic hook (via the Stage Climbing process) means you have solved a problem AND broken a pattern. However, not all hooks are bad! We also have hooks to our higher stages.
The Seven Stages
As you will see, we optimally pass through the earlier stages at a point in our lives that is age appropriate. However, to the degree that we have hooks to those earlier stages, issues later in life become the predictable result.
Stage One is the only possible default stage for infants who are totally dependent on others. Hooks in Stage One as an adult generally translate to dependency in relationships as well as a variety of other issues.
Stage Two is the typical stage for toddlers, whose lives are characterized by primitive and undisciplined behavior, extreme self-centeredness, and the tendency to act out. Those who retain those narcissistic characteristics as adults, usually do it via their Stage Two hooks.
Stage Three: The usual stage through late childhood, is characterized by the ongoing development of conscience, learning and accepting certain rules that protect our world, saving lives, and learning about long-term consequences. Hooks in Stage Three as an adult can — at their extreme — make us “rigid rule abiders,” unable or afraid to access one’s own uniqueness.
Stage Four: This is the typical stage throughout adolescence. Your Ultimate Goal at Stage Four is to be accepted, admired, and respected by all of those who in any way matter to you, as you start becoming your own person. As an adult, living in Stage Four can result in anxiety, depression, self-doubt and other self-esteem issues, plus alienation, shame, and a wide variety of neurotic and approval-seeking behaviors. These are the result of that constant quest for the approval and admiration of others.
Stage Five: In our modern Western society, this is the typical stage for a normal adult, where you often think of yourself as a role juggler, or the sum of all your life roles. This is the stage that gives us the best state of mind for keeping balance in our lives and taking care of logistics and essential chores. It’s also the most neutral or dispassionate stage. While that Stage Five frame of mind is important to have at times with respect to certain relationships and activities, it often results in disappointment when you expect higher degrees of fulfillment than this stage can deliver.
What motivates you at Stage Five? Money, benefits, privileges, and respect from others, specifically for how you handle the roles and responsibilities of a particular aspect of your life.
The attitude that’s most helpful for climbing out of Stage Five and to the target Stages Six and Seven is simply: “I want to be doing what I love and to feel rewarded internally as well as externally.”
Stages Six and Seven are the target stages that most people aspire to. As
you understand Stages Six and Seven, this will become clear: by removing
anything — such as the lower stage hooks we’ve discussed — that block your natural drive to operate at your target stage, you will connect with your passion-driven purpose in that part of your life. You’ll quickly learn how to access the zone where you are able to naturally and effortlessly operate at your highest potential.
Most people view life at the target stages as life at its very best. Thus, the strategies of Stage Climbing focus primarily on managing or removing the hooks to your lower stages… plus accessing that source of wisdom inside of you that contains all the guidance you need to be living life at those target stages.
Stage Six: Mature adult (determined not by chronological age but by the way you conduct your life) with a strong integrity and sense of self. At Stage Six, you rise above your roles, and operate according to your own unique and internally-generated values and passions. This is the stage in which you love, enjoy, excel, and create in your own distinctive way. Stage Six is the first of our two Target Stages. A default stage here breaks you out of the pack, starting in early adulthood, and takes you through the prime of life and beyond. Hooks at Stage Six can begin to appear all throughout life. You are operating out of Stage Six whenever you are doing what you truly were born to do, when you are loving others in your life (or doing “labors of love” for them), being uniquely creative, or when acting in accordance with your passions. At Stage Six, you feel best about yourself and are motivated intrinsically. Some Stage Six luminaries include: Thomas Edison, Isaac Newton, Galileo, Johann Gutenberg, Steve Jobs, Jonas Salk, Shakespeare, Michelangelo, Plato, Mozart, Beethoven, and the Gershwins. Like these greats, we all have something of our own that we can excel at. Stage Six is about finding and living it.
Stage Seven: The highest stage attainable. You are now beyond needing self-gratification, and find fulfillment as a result of your benevolence and your unique contribution to others, to the world, and to how you can be an agent of change in some large or small way. Your Ultimate Goals at Stage Seven are to give back, change the world in some way and to have the greatest possible impact on those around you. Sevens instinctually understand this simple paradox: When you chase happiness for yourself, it often eludes you. But by helping others to find happiness, it finds you effortlessly.
A default stage here in many aspects of life is certainly beyond normal and highly unusual; it would suggest an inordinately high degree of consciousness. But hooks here can also develop at any age. For instance, you are operating at Stage Seven whenever your focus shifts to a problem that does not necessarily affect you directly, but motivates your desire to give back without direct benefits to you. The satisfaction that results becomes your prime reinforcer.This is certainly the best default stage from which to parent, for example.
To reach and stay at Stage Seven, follow your inner voice in whatever way you channel it. It will not mislead you.
I encourage and challenge you to seek more information, via my writings and website and future blogs, to begin your Stage Climbing process in earnest… so that you can enjoy life to the fullest and make your unique impact on humanity and our entire world.