Struggling to understand Erhard's jargon? Explore why transformation requires stripping away identity to find freedom beyond our need to be right.

Transformation is not about changing your life, which is just rearranging the furniture; it is about changing the very room you are standing in by realizing you are the clearing in which your experiences appear.
샌프란시스코에서 컬럼비아 대학교 동문들이 만들었습니다
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샌프란시스코에서 컬럼비아 대학교 동문들이 만들었습니다

Lena: You know, Miles, I was looking into Werner Erhard’s work, and I hit a wall almost immediately. People talk about "running rackets," "speaking into the listening," and being "authentic about being inauthentic." It feels like a secret language. Why do we use this "Werner-speak" jargon just to describe our own daily experiences?
Miles: It’s a great question. Erhard actually acknowledged that his syntax is weird, but he argued it’s necessary for a specific kind of precision. He wasn't interested in just "changing" your life—which he called rearranging the furniture—but in "transformation," which is changing the very room you’re standing in.
Lena: So, is it possible that this "veil of words" is actually meant to strip away our old assumptions? He famously said that if you walk out of his training "understanding" it, that’s actually the booby prize.
Miles: Exactly! He wants us to move past intellectual formulas and toward something much more radical. Let’s explore how Erhard uses the concept of "nothingness" to redefine who we actually are.